The Hill is reporting that the Senate just passed the 2008 Fannie & Freddie Prop Up bill (72-13). The monster housing bill will now go to the White House for W’s Johnny Hancock. For what it’s worth, all 13 ’no’ votes were GOP-ers. Senator DeMint (R-SC) had delayed the bill over objections to F & F lobby rights, but in the end the R’s struck a deal with the Dems and passed it.
The bill will allow re-fi’s of up to $300 billion in distressed mortgages, give tax breaks galore in order to help the market, tighten future oversight of F & F – and (this is the real kicker) give the Treasury temporary authority to approve an unlimited line of credit for F & F. Now isn’t that sweet?! We, the taxpayers, are going to foot the bill for a bottomless pile of cash for two government-sponsored enterprises being run by people of questionable judgment.
If you wish to see this in a positive light, just read the first paragraph of today’s Washington Post story which says, “In a rare weekend session, the Senate today ended months of legislative wrangling and gave final approval to a sprawling housing bill that seeks to halt the steepest slide in home prices in a generation, rescue hundreds of thousands of families from foreclosure and restore confidence in the nation’s largest mortgage finance firms.”
(GAG!!)
Why-oh-why is it the job of Congress to interfere with the natural forces of the market, rescue people from foreclosure because they financed over-priced houses with adjusable-rate mortgages they now cannot afford, and restore confidence in two companies that probably deserve to fail due to poor management? Where in the Constitution does it say that the State is responsible for protecting its citizens from the natural consequences of their own poor judgment?!!
The Nanny State gets fatter while our dependence upon her grows…


Tags: Congress, DeMint, dependence, Fannie, foreclosure, Freddie, Housing Bill, lobby rights, market, mortgages, Nanny State, rescue, Senate, tax breaks, unlimited line of credit, Washington Post
In the interest of letting Senator Ensign speak for himself on his energy-efficiency tax credit amendment, you can click here for the full text of his Senate Floor Speech (given Thursday).
For those of you who don’t have time to read all 1,216 words, here’s the sum-up:
Ensign refers to the high cost of energy and says we need smart policy for both our economic and national security. He claims his amendment offers tax credits that will encourage more development of alternative, renewable energy (solar, wind, and geothermal).
In answer to those who say his bill has nothing to do with housing, Ensign claims his bill will help create between 100,000 and 200,00 jobs and encourage billions of dollars worth of investment, which will strengthen the economy including the housing market.
Ensign also says the tax credits will reward people who produce their own electricity by going solar, who build or buy an energy-efficient home, or who buy energy efficient appliances…and says these are all related to housing.
In re: to the “not paid for” objection, he claims there are “$2.4 billion in tax-related items that are not paid for in [the housing] bill” and that he therefore challenges the Democratic leadership’s claim that his energy amendment won’t pass in the House.
Ensign asks how the Democrats expect their “not paid for” housing bill to pass if the House is truly not accepting bills that aren’t paid for. (Indeed!)
Finally, Ensign says he is pushing for this now because (1) the private financing of solar, geothermal, and wind power projects is critical to their development, (2) his proposed tax credits will allow private businesses to predict and rely on their return on investment, and therefore (c) investor confidence will immediately rise and more clean/renewable energy projects will happen sooner.
Tags: Blogs of Nevada, Energy Policy, Housing Bill, John Ensign, Renewable Energy, Senate, Tax Credit, Washington
In an unexpected move this week, Nevada Republican Senator John Ensign single-handedly delayed a vote on the Housing Stimulus Bill. His motive? Many are saying Ensign’s demand that a renewable-energy tax credit amendment be piggybacked onto the housing bill is sheer stubbornness over a pet project. But at least one housing industry insider has a different take, and his answer may surprise you.
As reported by Reuters, Democratic Illinois Senator Richard Durbin said the Housing bill was being hindered because of Senator Ensign’s “insistence on an unrelated amendment.” The bill’s chief architect, Connecticut Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd of the recent Doddy-wide VIP Mortgage Scandal, said, “one United States senator has decided we shouldn’t do anything but HIS bill.” Senate Majority Leader Reid was displeased with the delay and applied pressure by threatening to extend the Senate session into the weekend.
Lobbyists for the Housing Bill chimed in as well. Yesterday afternoon, I spoke to Ken Gear, Vice President of Government Affairs for Pulte Homes, Inc., one of the nation’s largest home builders. Mr. Gear said, “This bill is too important for the country to be playing politics with. The market continues to deteriorate and the Senate needs to work in a bipartisan fashion to get it done immediately.”
When asked whether he was accusing Senator Ensign of delaying the housing bill for political reasons and what those reasons might be, Mr. Gear declined to elaborate. I spoke to another high-level industry insider who was willing to say more if I would agree to withhold his name:
“This isn’t about housing. Ensign’s play to attach an energy efficiency tax credit amendment to the bill is purely political because the tax credit is going to cost $8 billion to implement but is not “paid for.” The House has said it won’t pass any bill that doesn’t specify where the money will come from, and Ensign’s amendment doesn’t include this, so the Democratic leadership knows the bill won’t pass.
Ensign knows this, too, but he’s trying to score political points by forcing the Democrats to vote against an energy efficiency bill in an election year in which energy policy is going to be a huge issue.”
Stand by for Part Two of Our Series: “Method or Madness: John Ensign Stalls Housing Bill Over Energy Amendment”
Tags: Chris Dodd, Energy Policy, Housing Bill, John Ensign, Ken Gear, Politics, Richard Durbin
Posted by E!!
on June 26, 2008
Uncategorized /
1 Comment
I’m working on what is shaping up to be the Very interesting scoop on the stalled Housing Stimulus Bill, the real reason Senator John Ensign is blocking it, what Majority Leader Harry Reid is trying to do about it, and what a high-level and in-the-know executive at one of America’s largest homebuilders had to say about it all.
It’s going to be good stuff, folks, so tune in later tonight!
Update (12:07 p.m. here in Vegas): Well, it looks like this story is going to wait until tomorrow to see the light of day. Came across new info and since I refuse to do like the Drive-By Media and post what’s easy, obvious and/or incomplete, I’ve got some more fact-checking and investigating to do before I’m ready to post.
Tags: Harry Reid, Housing Bill, John Ensign