Democrats should ease up on landlords

Not every landlord is a slumlord. There are even some Democrats who hold leases and collect rent.

Yet landlords are the presumed enemy as Democrats fret over what to do about the end of the federal eviction moratorium. As of August 1, there’s no longer a federal barrier to landlords evicting tenants who can’t pay their rent. Some states and cities still ban evictions, but that only covers about one-third of the country, leaving several million tenants who are behind on their rent newly vulnerable to eviction.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention used emergency powers to impose the current eviction moratorium last year. But a June 29 Supreme Court decision indicated the court would strike down any extensions of the moratorium past July 31, unless Congress passes legislation making it federal law. That would require at least 10 Republican votes in the Senate, to overcome the filibuster, and those votes don’t seem to exist. So Democrats who have narrow majorities in both the House and the Senate probably can’t pass a law preventing evictions, and President Biden says he lacks authority to do it by executive action.

Democrats are now squabbling among themselves about whom to blame for the lapsed renter protection, with the usual liberal-moderate split. They haven’t attacked landlords yet, but that seems inevitable with evictions now underway and the media sure to begin highlighting the plight of newly homeless tenants. Landlords are not the enemy, however, and lost in the political posturing is the fact that landlords have bills to pay of their own, including mortgages, utilities and property taxes. If landlords are supposed to provide free housing during recessions, then somebody needs to rewrite most of the leases in America.

Kate Barrington, a rent relief case manager from Crossroads Rhode Island, left, talks with Luis Vertentes, a tenant from East Providence, R.I., second from right, during a meeting prior to an eviction hearing, Monday, Aug. 2, 2021, in Providence. Rhode Island tenants facing eviction after the lifting of a federal moratorium on being ousted for unpaid rent plead their case in court. Vertentes agreed to leave his residence, which he has not paid rent on in four months, in about three weeks. At right is landlord Roy Loiselle, second from left, is attorney Murray Gereboff. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Kate Barrington, a rent relief case manager from Crossroads Rhode Island, left, talks with Luis Vertentes, a tenant from East Providence, R.I., second from right, during a meeting prior to an eviction hearing, Monday, Aug. 2, 2021, in Providence. Rhode Island tenants facing eviction after the lifting of a federal moratorium on being ousted for unpaid rent plead their case in court. Vertentes agreed to leave his residence, which he has not paid rent on in four months, in about three weeks. At right is landlord Roy Loiselle, second from left, is attorney Murray Gereboff. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

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There are undoubtedly some ruthless landlords who want nothing but their money and will do anything to get it. Bigger corporate landlords have access to other aid programs Congress has established, and many of those can probably afford to continue offering forbearance. But most of the nation’s landlords are individual investors, including “mom and pop” landlords who own a few units as their primary source of income. Some rely on those properties to fund retirement. While some landlords unfairly harass their tenants, there are also tenants who are abusing the eviction moratorium to dodge rent, with no intention of ever paying it back. No single anecdote captures the complexity of the problem.