Housing Rescue Bill Passes Key Senate Hurdle

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JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS | June 24, 2008 10:55 PM EST | AP

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Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, left, accompanied by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, June 24, 2008, regarding the housing and mortgage crisis on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

WASHINGTON — A massive foreclosure rescue bill cleared a key Senate test Tuesday by an overwhelming margin, with Democrats and Republicans both eager to claim election-year credit for helping hard-pressed homeowners.

The mortgage aid plan would let the Federal Housing Administration back $300 billion in new, cheaper home loans for an estimated 400,000 distressed borrowers who otherwise would be considered too financially risky to qualify for government-insured, fixed-rate loans.

An 83-9 vote put the plan on track for Senate passage as early as Wednesday, but President Bush is threatening a veto, and Democrats are fighting each other over key details. Those challenges will probably delay any final deal until mid-July.

The bill advanced as separate reports underscored rising economic anxiety: Consumer confidence slid to its lowest level in more than 16 years, and closely watched indices showed a continuing decline in home values.

At the Capitol, Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, D-Conn., the Banking Committee chairman, said the lending measure "would allow us to begin to put a tourniquet on the hemorrhaging of foreclosures in this country."

"We need to demonstrate to people in this country that have lost an awful lot of faith in almost everything, but certainly in (Congress), that we can get something done, that we can put aside differences and make a difference in their lives," Dodd said.

Still, conservative Democrats known as "Blue Dogs" are concerned about how to pay for the measure, and members of the Congressional Black Caucus call it unacceptable, arguing it doesn't do enough to address the needs of black Americans.

Congressional leaders also are divided on how high to place loan limits that apply to government mortgage insurance and financing. The Senate bill sets those limits at $625,000 while a House-passed version puts them at $730,000 _ a crucial difference in high-cost housing markets like California, home to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

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Lawmakers have been negotiating behind the scenes with the Bush administration to avert a veto. Dana Perino, the White House spokeswoman, told reporters the Senate measure has "some really good aspects" and Congress is "on the right path."

"We have been working closely with them to try to change the bill in a way that we think that it could be something that the president could sign," Perino said.

Borrowers would be eligible for the housing rescue if their mortgage holders were willing to take a substantial loss and allow them to refinance, and if they could show an ability to make payments on the new loan. They would ultimately have to share with the government a portion of any profits they made from selling or refinancing their properties.

The bill also would tighten controls and create a new regulator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage giants that provide huge amounts of cash flow to the home loan market by buying loans from banks.

It would provide a $14.5 billion array of tax breaks, including a credit of up to $8,000 for first-time homebuyers who buy in the next year. And it would boost low-income tax credits and mortgage revenue bonds. The measure falls $2.4 billion short of covering the costs of those tax items, a sort point for Blue Dogs who oppose initiatives that add to the deficit.

Mixing in a controversy involving lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats on the Ethics Committee proposed adding mortgage disclosure requirements for members of Congress to the bill following a flap over reports that Dodd and Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., got preferential home loans from Countrywide Financial Corp., a lender at the center of the subprime mortgage mess. The proposal by John Cornyn of Texas, the senior Republican on the committee, and Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., the chairman, would remove an exception that currently allows lawmakers to omit home mortgages from their annual financial disclosures.

On the broader bill, the 42 House members of the Black Caucus said in a letter to Democratic leaders last week that it has "glaring omissions," including affordable housing funds for states affected by Hurricane Katrina and grants for states and localities to buy and fix up foreclosed properties.

To draw GOP support, Senate Democrats diverted the affordable housing money to pay for the foreclosure aid program.

Some Republicans, however, are still vehemently opposed to the legislation, which they describe as a government giveaway for reckless lenders and investors.

"They expect the federal government to turn their backs on responsible lenders and borrowers and renters waiting _ waiting _ to become first-time homeowners, and support those groups that have pushed our housing market into decline with bad loans and bad investments," said Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo. "This bill is a federal government bailout."

The Senate bill would provide $3.9 billion in grants to deal with foreclosed properties _ a House plan would provide $15 billion _ but the White House singled out the funds in its veto threat, and Blue Dogs are demanding that the money be offset with cuts elsewhere.

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., the Financial Services Committee chairman, has said he'd be willing to jettison the money and add it to a separate measure in the interest of a deal.

WASHINGTON — A massive foreclosure rescue bill cleared a key Senate test Tuesday by an overwhelming margin, with Democrats and Republicans both eager to claim election-year credit for helping ha...
WASHINGTON — A massive foreclosure rescue bill cleared a key Senate test Tuesday by an overwhelming margin, with Democrats and Republicans both eager to claim election-year credit for helping ha...
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- WFV I'm a Fan of WFV 13 fans permalink
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So they diverted funds away from affordable housing programs to bail out people who can't afford their homes and are too risky for government-backed loan programs.

Wow, this makes a lot of sense to me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 PM on 06/25/2008
- olephart I'm a Fan of olephart 113 fans permalink

"Gentlemen, we need to protect our phony baloney jobs."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:06 PM on 06/25/2008
- elbzee I'm a Fan of elbzee 22 fans permalink
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You're gonna need a bigger boat

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:01 AM on 06/26/2008
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"The Senate bill would provide $3.9 billion in grants to deal with foreclosed properties _ a House plan would provide $15 billion _ but the White House singled out the funds in its veto threat, and Blue Dogs are demanding that the money be offset with cuts elsewhere."

This is PEANUTS compared with the multi trillion dollar loss in property values. It's going to have an much effect as the present puny $168 billion 'stimulus' that is to say no measureable effect at all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 PM on 06/25/2008

I love the photo for this story. What is the "American Dream"? Be fiscally irresponsible, don't read the fine print, make risky investments and the Democrats and Republicans will bail you out? What's the "American Wet Dream"? The government will just keep printing money backed by absolutely nothing?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 06/25/2008

Housing and inflation are linked. THe foolish attempt to re-inflate one bubble is creating the other. Here is how:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/max-fraad-wolff/our-love-hate-relation-to_b_108970.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 PM on 06/25/2008
- Wilburrr I'm a Fan of Wilburrr 16 fans permalink
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Borrowers are not the only guilty parties in this. Mortgage companies saw an opportunity to issue paper to borrowers, dump the paper to financial companies who purchase huge lots of mortgages at a time with no accountability or check on the validity of those loans. Mortgage companies that issued loans and dumped the paper made out like bandits.

A contract is supposed to be an agreement between equal parties but the fine print in a mortgage contract, like the fine print on your credit card contract, is verbiage that no one understands. Taking out a mortgage contract is not a venture between two equal parties; the mortgage company is at a distinct advantage. Everyone wants to buy a home and when a mortgage company lies to their customers, insisting that a home is an affordable investment, the borrower has to realize that the lending institution is not acting as their agent. How is a minimum wage employee going to have the sophistication to make the proper decision in a case like that? This is a failure of un-regulated capitalism. Milton Friedman be damned; private corporations require government regulation to prevent situations like this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 AM on 06/28/2008

Excellent points: Those who broke the rules (mortgage lenders and consumers) are to get bailed out by -- essentially --by those who didn't break the rules. But there's more to the story: The incessant, obscene and partisan political bickering of the elected morons. Just one example from the posted story: "....but President Bush is threatening a veto, and Democrats are fighting each other over key details." The truth is that while these egotistical, self-important, agenda-driven gasbags bicker about this issue and others, the people of America suffer. Anyone who inspected Congress in the search for Truth surely would run away screaming in agony. When will we learn to throw these selfish children out of office and let them bicker and whine in a setting in which they can do us no more harm?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:52 AM on 06/25/2008

Hello potential homeowner. We understand you are looking for a mortgage. Let's just review your credit history.

Well you failed to pay off your credit cards in a timely manner.

Your cable and telephone companies report you are late with your payments.
Your car has been repossessed.
Although your income is enough to cover the mortgage, you'll have no money left for property taxes.

I think you are a perfect fit. Let's go ahead and give you, although you are a huge credit risk, a new adjustable rate mortgage.

And you are shocked and amazed these SUB PRIME loans aren't being paid.

I know, let's pass a huge bailout program of the big lenders that were going to be sitting on foreclosed property's

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:04 AM on 06/25/2008
- VivaZapata I'm a Fan of VivaZapata 64 fans permalink
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This is not a fixable problem at this point: In the end these measures will amount to little more than throwing good (and I say this with tongue firmly in cheek) money after bad. The houses were too big. The taxes were too taxing. The heating/cooling of these monstrosities was too suffocating. The other expenses expanded. If the jobs didn't evaporate, the wages stayed too low with little prospects for a raise. This bill will assist certain businesses but few homeowners in the final settlement.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 AM on 06/25/2008
- mlaiuppa I'm a Fan of mlaiuppa 41 fans permalink
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Too little too late.

The PEOPLE who would have benefited from this have already lost their homes.

So the banks will pull up to the Government trough to gorge just like Bear Sterns.

VOTE THE REPUBLICANS OUT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 PM on 06/24/2008

Why did they lose their homes? In most cases, they got ARM's they couldn't afford. Didn't figure the taxes, or insurance, or upkeep, or heating/cooling.

The majority, not all were credit risks. Thus the term SUB PRIME. This is no ones fault but their own.

The banks are benefitting, true, but the last time I looked, democrats held control of both House and Senate. Funny how they could have stopped this bailout, but didn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:07 AM on 06/25/2008
- elbzee I'm a Fan of elbzee 22 fans permalink
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Agreed, for that reason, I suggest you visit http://www.kickthemallout.com/

In the last election 85% of the people in Congress got to keep their $14,108 a month jobs (which includes a $4,100 raise they just gave themselves!) despite the fact that it was the worst, do-nothing Congress in history and the bulk of them were responsible for authorizing the wars we're in and everything else that has massively eroded our standard of living, security and of course our liberties and freedoms since 9-11. They ALL took an oath to defend and protect the Constitution and our Bill of Rights. They did not take an oath to defend and protect their political party and the interests of transnational corporations and cartels.

FIRE DA BUMS!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:09 AM on 06/26/2008
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I'm so glad to see that banks are being given our hard earned tax dollars as a reward for their reckless behavior.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:49 PM on 06/24/2008

I am curious as to if those of us who were responsible in their home purchases and 1) Did not buy more than we could afford and 2) Budgeted properly to afford our house will be "rewarded" with a new loan or lower rates.

Alas, no. We will just pay more in taxes to support the other saps who are irresponsible. And in a few years when it happens again, I can pay even more!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 PM on 06/24/2008

Don't cloud the issue with facts and logic. It just destroys their arguments.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 AM on 06/25/2008
- EinChicago I'm a Fan of EinChicago 37 fans permalink

or, better yet, sandiegoconservative, you can not do anything, watch your home value crash , teh economy fail and taxes go even higher! what a bargain!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 06/25/2008

My home value is fine. We JUST got the point where our mortgage and home value are about equal, but I am not leaving for probably 5 years, so it will go right back up. And I am not affected by the economy right now. Business is doing well and I gave myself a small raise and got another one at my 9-5 job.

If I had a serious accident or my wife was very sick or we lost our jobs, we would still be ok for at least 6-8 months before there was need to worry. It's all about responsible planning and budgeting.

Do you know why real estate is such a hot commodity? Becuase the value always increases over time. If I bought thinking I was moving out in a year or two, I would be a fool, unless there was a great reason to buy for such a short period of time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 06/26/2008

This bill bails out the greedy mortgage speculators who artificially drove up the price of housing to make a killing on real estate mortgages while causing the rest of us to go broke, just like the oil speculators. It just doesn't make sense, are mortgage and real estate speculators who ruined the housing market somehow better than oil speculators!?!?

The VERY SAME representatives and senators who are screaming about greedy oil speculators artificially driving up the price of oil to make a killing on oil while causing the rest of us to go broke support this bill.
The mortgage investment banker protection act of 2008.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 PM on 06/24/2008

I am reminded of Ross Perot's famous statement about "that giant sucking sound" with which he characterized the loss of American jobs to NAFTA. http://www.ontheissues.org/Save_Your_Job.htm

This time I think I hear that sound but it is the American dollar which is going south, and I don't mean to Mexico.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 PM on 06/24/2008
- FredOCal I'm a Fan of FredOCal 3 fans permalink

I never thought I'd side with Bush, but please, veto this bill!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:55 PM on 06/24/2008
- dgscol I'm a Fan of dgscol 4 fans permalink
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The nation is broke, and they want to give low cost loans to people who cannot afford the homes they moved into. What is wrong with this picture?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 06/24/2008

You are painting with an enormously broad brush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 PM on 06/24/2008
- imsosure I'm a Fan of imsosure 29 fans permalink
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Here's where you get your attitude from, Right?

http://www.watchingyou.com/woowoo.html

You're definitely not as cool as you think you are taking a name from a great band like Pink Floyd and then spewing out your low level rhetoric, they'd be ashamed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 06/24/2008
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The money is ultimately going to the banks, not the borrowers.

The same banks that KNOWINGLY loaned money to people that didn't qualify. They knew that they could either sell the bad debt off to some other schmucks or that they would be able to lobby the Bush crime organization into bailing them out. I think they succeeded on both fronts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 06/24/2008
- elbzee I'm a Fan of elbzee 22 fans permalink
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Amazing, isn't it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 AM on 06/26/2008
- jupitor I'm a Fan of jupitor 2 fans permalink

But the nation will be worse off with out this bill! The Department of Human Services has now gone into the bussiness of helping these people pay for other houseing.Thats folks state by state! Because the unfair credit card practice's and rediculouse high interest, that no one could ever for see becomeing this high, they have a second problem that is hitting these people! these people are victims of a greedy society, and a terrible goverment who's failed to regulate our nation and reign in the thiefs! the thiefs in washington, that is! this bill will help temperarly! but when obama gets in, we need a over haul of the whole darn system, includeing those creedy leaders in washington and their blasted lobbyist that are putting us all into the poor house with sending all our money and goods over sea's at a time were in a desperate recession. It isn't just one area this goverment has failed to regulate in the last 8 years! If Mccain can't use the computor, and isn't computor savy, how is he going to figure out the schematics of where we are, and where we need to get to over haul our goverment? Tons of Data needs to be reviewed! Our nation is broken people and it will take more than what Mccain offers to fix it, and a lot more intelligence thane he has to get us there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 06/25/2008
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