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Democrats on path to repeat housing disaster

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
September 22, 2009

(Photos.com)

With all the attention paid to the health care battle, ACORN, and the president's "Full Ginsburg" appearances on five Sunday talk shows, few people noticed a hearing with an exceedingly boring title -- "Proposals to Enhance the Community Reinvestment Act" -- held last week in the House Financial Services Committee. But the session marked a key moment in the ongoing battle between Republicans and Democrats over what caused our current financial woes -- and how we might best avoid getting into the same trouble again.

At the hearing, and in others across Capitol Hill, Democratic majorities are pressing hard to expand some of the very policies that led to the reckless home lending that in turn helped lead to the great financial meltdown. If Chairman Barney Frank and his fellow Democrats have their way, we'll do it all again -- and more.

At issue last week was H.R. 1479, the Community Reinvestment Modernization Act of 2009, sponsored by Democratic Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson. It would expand and strengthen the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act, which required banks to make loans in low-income areas that many lenders had traditionally shunned.

After the meltdown, some conservatives blamed the CRA for almost solely causing the crisis by requiring banks to make risky loans to unqualified borrowers. It was an unfair charge. "CRA had at best an incremental role in the U.S. housing debacle," says J.D. Foster, an economist at the Heritage Foundation. But CRA did help create the conditions in which disaster could occur.

The problems began in the 1990s, when Congress made it harder for lenders to do business if they had not passed the CRA "exam" -- that is, if they had not met the government-imposed standards for loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers.

"From 1995 on, there was an incredible push by the Clinton and Bush administrations in every way they could -- CRA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and other ways -- to increase the homeownership rate," says Russell Roberts, a professor of economics at George Mason University. "What that did was to push up the price of housing, and that made it imaginable to lend money to people you never would have lent money to, on terms you wouldn't have done before."

In particular, Fannie Mae began to aggressively promote homeownership using the Community Reinvestment Act to give loans to people who couldn't afford them. Fannie went to bankers and said, make as many CRA loans as you can; we'll buy them and take them off your hands. "Our approach to our lenders is 'CRA Your Way,' " top Fannie executive Jamie Gorelick told the Mortgage Bankers Association in 2001. "Fannie Mae will buy CRA loans from lenders' portfolios; we'll package them into securities; we'll purchase CRA mortgages at the point of origination. ..."

Fannie promised to buy billions and billions of dollars worth of CRA loans because it was under pressure to do so from the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which in turn was under pressure from Congress, which set ambitious quotas for low- and moderate-income loans.

The policy ended in a lot of people losing their homes. Now, Johnson's bill would ensure more of that by applying CRA's lending requirements not just to banks but to non-bank institutions like credit unions, insurance companies, and mortgage lenders. It would also make CRA explicitly race-based by, in Johnson's words, "requiring CRA exams to explicitly consider lending and services to minorities in addition to low- and moderate-income communities."

Republicans on the Financial Services Committee strongly oppose the plan. "Instead of looking to expand the number of institutions that must abide by CRA regulations, I think we should reassess the role this and other government mandates played in the financial collapse and consider scaling it back," California Rep. Ed Royce said at the hearing.

In private conversation, other Republicans were more emphatic. "There is clearly arguable evidence that the CRA is at the root of this financial meltdown," said one GOP committee member. "So what do they do? They try to expand CRA."

That's an overstatement of CRA's role in the housing mess, but it's right about the Democratic plan. Denying that CRA, Fannie and other institutions played any role in setting the stage for disaster, they're proposing more of what helped get us into trouble in the first place. It's no way to fix the problem.

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts appears on www.ExaminerPolitics.com ExaminerPolitics.com.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Mike

Sep 22, 2009

Apathy will be the demise of America.

 

alheimstead

Sep 22, 2009

There is no hope for this administration.

 

Paulie Goods

Sep 22, 2009

Debt has become the anchor around the neck of our citizens. TARP didn't help and forcing lending won't help. What ever happened to cash?

 

VegasGuy

Sep 22, 2009

After reading the article it's hard to come to the conclusion that the CRA wasn't a major cause of the housing bubble, whose collapse was definitely a major contributor to the current mess. Those "toxic assets" which were supposed to dissappear with TARP? Still around. What are they? Repackaged bad loans. But, CRA bought votes for the Dems, and they will push anything which promotes *that* regardless of destructive effects on the country.

 

Guy Jones

Sep 22, 2009

Unless President Obama's agenda of giveaways to the irresponsible and undeserving is stopped, not to mention the ill-conceived Kafkaesque legislation known as H.R. 3200, this country will be known as the "United Welfare States of America" at the end of his term.

 

Poll Kat

Sep 22, 2009

That doesn't matter to the "Money Tree-Huggers" ya' know ,cause' it's all about the Feel Good Factor .Owning a home ...for awhile anyway.

 

Gene44

Sep 22, 2009

Well now that ACORN is under fire the Democrats has got to find a way to keep their supporters happy. Why not just tell them to pick out a house and move in and be done with it.

 

SA

Sep 22, 2009

What happens when your disgust level gets too high? I need to know.

 

tim c

Sep 22, 2009

I'm in basic agreement but CDS and CDO's along with no PMI combined for the big meltdown.The percentage of bad loans in and of themselves did not crash the system rather it was the stream of bad paper and "las Vegas' rules used to sell CDS that made it a diseaster.

 

Tyler

Sep 22, 2009

As always conservatives will hear this and no one else will. We know what caused the housing crisis. The sheeple are oblivious. Now we hear this and of course the main stream media will ignore it and the sheeple will have no clue. Just look at obamas approval ratings fifty percent approve. He should be in the teens. Fifty seven percent think government is doing to much. It should be in the eighties. Ignorance is bliss.

 

Pensive

Sep 22, 2009

The author's analysis is a bit too metered. Let's be clear - banks that didn't make enough obviously bad loans risked large civil penalties, accusations various -isms, and high-profile lawsuits. Lawsuits brought by, among many others, Barack Obama. To say that the CRA played anything less than an enabling role is being intellectually dishonest.

 

frankg

Sep 22, 2009

Pensive you are absolutely right.
Contact your representative, warn them to oppose this. Write a letter to your newspaper editor. Keep it short, polite, but to the point. That this is a current repeat of a still recent disaster. Anything to call attention to it and stop it.

 

Meezle

Sep 22, 2009

"Fannie went to bankers and said, make as many CRA loans as you can; we'll buy them and take them off your hands."

And now they're doing the same thing with student loans. Seriously, don't they learn from their mistakes?

 

Missing the Point

Sep 22, 2009

Mr. York, the CRA may not have been responsible for a large percentage of the overall collapse, but it is responsible for the change in mindset of the lenders. Once the government began twisting lender arms to do something that they knew was wrong, they began to figure out ways to make the best of the situation... The paradox in market logic led to second and third generation bad decision making. Unintended consequences are the bane of this Congress and the Obama administration. Their inclination to do "good" will beggar us for decades.

 

EJM

Sep 22, 2009

It is amazing that by repeating the same mistakes the democrats believe that they can "fix" things. They have gotten away with this for decades now, and in health care they long to repeat the "successful" cost containment and efficiencies of Medicare in the whole health care system, and of course make it mandatory. Obama and his cohorts talk endlessly of limiting the risk of the private market. What about the risk the taxpapyer incurs of the Federal gov't getting even deeper into the housing market?

The US gov't and taxpayer should never have been involved in promoting these loans in the first place. Their exact role in the housing bubble and collapse will be debated for years, but one thing is clear: if these programs created by democrats did not exist, the public monies squandered and national debt burden would be less, and lien against our children's future would be lower.

 

Obummathesocailistpig

Sep 22, 2009

Two words.....Twenty Ten
I think anyone with at least a portion of brain and commonsense knows what needs to be done in 2010.

 

zanne

Sep 22, 2009

Buy em houses...buy those votes...NOW!!

 

JC

Sep 22, 2009

Just when I think I've heard it all, I read this article. This is beyond outrage. I know this country is center right but we don't control anything but our own lives. The Far Left have made a concerted effort to take charge of gov., schools and the media. We are screwed if something doesn't happen soon to turn the tide. Gov. doesn't produce one dollar on it's on. It just spends taxpayers money as if it were water. ACORN will just move to the CRA. God help us.

 

dennisl59

Sep 22, 2009

By definition, this is Insane.

 

Lee

Sep 22, 2009

That's what happens when "sub-prime" loans are given to illegal aliens.

This mess is the direct result of Marxist depravity and reckless greed on the part of financiers. The Marxists found a way to use the profit motive to destroy.

 

tylermc

Sep 22, 2009

More governemnt giveaways; more looting from the producers in this country; if a person can't put a respectable down payment on a house then they can't afford one. It's pretty simple. I really don't care if the person is black, white, red, yellow. The answer should be tough luck.

 

inthisdimension

Sep 22, 2009

The scary part is that people who re-elect Barney & Friends not only continue to do so, but are even allowed to VOTE!

 

Georgia Appraiser

Sep 22, 2009

The loan originators make money, the mortgage companies make money, the Realtors make money,l the appraisers make money, the closing attorneys and title companies make money, the democrat party buys it's votes, and then the whole thing comes crashing down again and the poor saps who pay taxes are told to bend over and take it where it hurts. It's called insanity!

 

Don

Sep 22, 2009

What ever happened to saving to buy a home? What is happening to self-reliance? I just found out, 76 years later, that my grandfather and family lost their home due to foreclosure during the Great Depression. He just started over, no government program, no complaining.

 

HELEN

Sep 22, 2009

Barney Frank and his gang of idiots have
got to be voted out asap.

 

NJ Low Rider

Sep 22, 2009

2010 baby! We gonna clean the house!

"CAN YOU HEAR US NOW!"

 

Letscheck

Sep 22, 2009

NJ and Virginia voters need to start in 2009 by electing Republican Governors. This is not going to get any better if the same people are left in office.

 

Not Here

Sep 22, 2009

Obama and the dems are just trying to re-inflate the bubble. I think I'll follow Peter Schiff and invest my wad overseas.

 

Gregson

Sep 22, 2009

It is instructive to note that the Democrats will sell the future of America in exchange for the votes. As Margaret Thatcher so plainly put it: "... the trouble with Socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money!"

 

Mtn

Sep 22, 2009

Barney Frank and Eddie Bernice Johnson are not Democrats - they are members of the Democratic Socialists of America party - SOCIALISTS! Remember that when they are up for reelection. We do not want to live in a socialist country. TAKE BACK OUR REPUBLIC.

 

MT Citizen

Sep 23, 2009

Heads Up: Barney frank and Eddie Bernice Johnson are not Democrats; they are members of the Democratic Socialists of America party. SOCIALISTS. Keep this in mind when they are up for reelection. We are the U.S.A. (United States of America), NOT the U.S.S.A. (United Socialist States of America).

 

LMAO

Sep 23, 2009

Open your eyes poor Byron , perhaps it will enable you to read better and not tell porkies about that which is not there or the simple fact that CRA exempts all the Wall Street Dummy Bankers . Oopsie !

 

xGOP

Sep 23, 2009

I love how you slip in qualifiers about how unfair and overstated the GOP claims are about the real impact of CMA on the housing bubble, and then just plow ahead with a breathless attack on it. That's great reporting. The GOP lost me when they stupidly tried to pin the housing mess on CMA and Barney Frank. What a pathetic excuse to pedal as THE reason for the meltdown. You don't seem to buy it, but then you just can't resist the lure of blaming Barney and absolving the virtuous Republicans.

 

SlaveCo

Sep 23, 2009

What a bunch of baloney! You contradict yourself as well as twist your quotes and facts to support your ludicrous ideas! Stop misleading the people. The reason for the economic disaster was under-government regulations of derivatives and other bank products. It was pure greed and/or corruption by the bankers. I'm almost certain it was intentional. Stop blaming government regulations for this. It was de-regulation or lack of regulation that caused it. My dear friends, beware of being played! Both sides are being controlled by the same power brokers. The only losers are US...if we allow it and buy into it.

 

midwest Jim

Sep 23, 2009

I agree that Byron York is placing less blame on the CRA than what it deserves. CRA was the tool used by corrupt Fannie Mae execs like Gorelick and disgraced CEO (and former Clinton budget director) Franklin Raines. Besides the fact that the "goals" of the CRA were what pushed these bad loans to begin with, consider that up until this time, Fannie Mae approved loans were viewed as nearly "risk free" - Is there any surprise that those who bought and resold these loans underestimated the risks of mortgage back securities which were based on them? Credit default swaps and other Wall Street gimics may have acted as an accelerant, but it was the CRA that lit the fire.

 

TN T

Sep 23, 2009

Come on SlaveCo... On one hand congress creates regulations that force insurance companies to make loans to people they know they shouldn't, then they offer a pressure release in terms of a government backed buyout of the bad loans. Yes, there was "greed" in terms of people taking easy money knowing that the citizens of the US were on the hook for any blowups, but without that government provided mandate to sell these loans and a way "out", that greed would never have had an opportunity to be exercised. Why? Because they would not have taken the risk...

 

same mistake over and over

Sep 23, 2009

People these days can not tell the difference between the good and the bad. They will vote for the salesman. The smoothest talker. The one that tells them what they want to hear to get voted in. We should spend time researching our political runners and digging. When in doubt vote no or republican. No carrer politicians. No one can serve more than 4 years period. We keep making the same mistake over and over. At his point only people over 40 should be allowed to vote.

 

Conservo

Sep 23, 2009

If Barney is not arrested for treason and thrown in a cell with George Soros soon, this country of OURS! is history. Barney, YOU SUCK! Literally.

 

Jenny

Sep 23, 2009

Will some Patriotic Senator out there bring charges against this crook before he does any more harm to the future of this great country!!!

 

Moon

Sep 23, 2009

I'm sure it won't be long until we'll be picking up another round of foreclosures. My Sister in Law just got divorced, she's 48 years old, has no education and is unemployed but was given a $50,000 loan to purchase a home. Talk about stupidity, she won't be able to make the first payment.

 

Sep 24, 2009

Isn't Jamie Gorelick the same person in the Clinton Administration who set up the rules that wouldn't let the FBI and CIA share information which led to 9/11?

 

alheimstead

Sep 24, 2009

Will there be anything left of America in 2010?

 

Patriot1

Sep 24, 2009

Barney Frank is one of the most dangerous men in Washington. Failure to recognize indications the GSE's were failing and needed more oversight was his committee's failure; sleeping with the Fannie assistant director I'm sure did not "color" his thinking at all.

I spent 35 years in banking and 20 of those in compliance, and I KNOW the CRA is tantamount to government "red lining" forced upon banks. It did indeed lead to the lending issues that got us here and the number of foreclosures we're experiencing.

It's time Barney and Friends get their blinders taken off and get forced to understand the economics of the marketplace. Congress isn't where you learn business and economics; it's where you learn to ignore them.

Fair and adequate housing is a "right;" home ownership is a privilege, one that has to be earned. They're making home ownership a "right" for anyone. Why work hard all your life?

 

danny

Nov 20, 2009

you have the answer and the power it is in your votes and in your wallet, they will hear you if you take action by claiming all exemptions that you legally can and spread the word a tax revolt is in order and then they will hear you, but they are not listening right now.

 


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