appeal (noun)
6.29.21
In their emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, the moratorium’s challengers said landlords have been losing $13 billion a month in unpaid rent and won’t ever recover all of that money. They said the ban on evictions is less justifiable now that the U.S. is easing Covid-19 protocols in light of declining case numbers and the growing vaccinations of Americans.
—Brent Kendall & Andrew Ackerman, "Supreme Court Declines to Lift National Eviction Moratorium," 29 Jun. 2021 {9:44 PM ET}
In their emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, the moratorium’s challengers said landlords have been losing $13 billion a month in unpaid rent and won’t ever recover all of that money. They said the ban on evictions is less justifiable now that the U.S. is easing Covid-19 protocols in light of declining case numbers and the growing vaccinations of Americans.
—Brent Kendall & Andrew Ackerman, "Supreme Court Declines to Lift National Eviction Moratorium," 29 Jun. 2021 {9:44 PM ET}
10.19.20
One case involves Trump’s appeal of a June ruling by a federal appeals court in California that his administration’s use of Pentagon funding to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border is illegal.
—John Kruzel, "Supreme Court to review Trump border wall funding, asylum policies," 19 Oct. 2020 {9:41 AM EDT}
One case involves Trump’s appeal of a June ruling by a federal appeals court in California that his administration’s use of Pentagon funding to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border is illegal.
—John Kruzel, "Supreme Court to review Trump border wall funding, asylum policies," 19 Oct. 2020 {9:41 AM EDT}