Washington, D.C., is at it again. The Senate just pushed through a so-called “bipartisan” housing package, claiming it will somehow fix the housing crisis every American family feels in their wallet. But let’s not kid ourselves—this is Washington’s latest empty gesture, led by out-of-touch politicians who have never worried about making rent or putting food on the table.
Of course, you’ve got liberals parading around, pretending they’re doing Americans a favor. They love to talk about “lowering costs” and “boosting supply.” But every time big government gets involved, costs go up and quality goes down. That’s not some theory—it’s what happens every time these elites meddle with American markets. Americans are tired of virtue signaling and empty “bipartisan” labels. They want real results, not just flashy headlines that help politicians’ re-election campaigns.
Let’s be honest: why is housing unaffordable? Because of overregulation, skyrocketing taxes, unchecked illegal immigration, and years of failed liberal city policies. Yet, instead of getting government out of the way—reining in spending, cutting red tape, and letting hardworking Americans provide for themselves—the Senate jams more bureaucracy down our throats. This is what “bipartisanship” looks like in the swamp: Democrats push socialism, and too many Republican enablers go along to “get something done.”
Don’t buy the hype that this housing bill is a silver bullet. Conservatives in the House have already made it clear—they’re not signing off unless this package gets real changes. And that’s a good thing. Someone needs to stand up to these arrogant elites who think central planning is the answer to everything. America was built on hard work, not government handouts and top-down schemes that funnel money to special interests and globalist developers.
The only way to fix our housing crisis is to stop punishing success and start unleashing the private market. Get the feds out of the way. Secure our borders so communities aren’t overwhelmed. Cut the red tape strangling builders. Restore common sense. Anything less is just more D.C. theater—another episode of liberals pretending to be heroes while hardworking Americans pay the price. Maybe next time Congress should try freedom instead of more government. Now, wouldn’t that be a real bipartisan breakthrough?
Source: Washington Times
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