The Home Front

Bunning Blasts Bailout

By Luke Mullins

Posted: May 19, 2008

Hall of Fame pitcher turned Kentucky senator Jim Bunning threw a high-and-tight fastball at bailout supporters late last week when the Republican delivered a sharp rebuke of the Senate's efforts to pass legislation allowing struggling homeowners to refinance into more affordable mortgages.

From his prepared statement (batting helmet required):

If the objective is to help homeowners who need it the most, I would argue that as written this bill does not keep with the spirit of that goal. I would like to point out some of the major flaws I have found in this bill.

First, and probably the most glaring flaw, is that the bill offers no protection against borrowers who lied to get their original mortgage. It subjects the [Federal Housing Administration] to another wave of fraud that these no-documentation loans experienced in the primary market.

This bill also allows borrowers who have vacation homes or investment properties to get a bailout on their primary residence. That is absurd. Should our nation's renters have to pay to bail out a borrower who has a beach house? Of course not.

Additionally, this bill would allow people who have committed mortgage fraud, people who have defaulted on government-issued loans, people who have filed for bankruptcy and have a history of bad credit, and people who are mortgage professionals and should have known better to come to the government trough.

[The Congressional Budget Office] scored the losses to the federal government from the House version of this bill at $1.7 billion. With lending practices such as these, we can be assured that those losses will be much higher.

Also, this bill does not require lenders to have any real skin in the game. When those borrowers, who have already defaulted once, default on their refinanced payments, the FHA, and not the lenders, will be left holding the bag.

The whole idea of bailing out people who took a gamble and lost is an irresponsible way to spend the taxpayers' money. I do not think the people back in Kentucky sent me to Washington to bail out speculators, Wall Street executives, and people who drained the equity in their homes to buy flat screen televisions and new cars.

Financial Disaster

Politicians want to become and stay elected, period.

A bailout is a good strategy, just for the wrong country's national interest...definitely not ours

A nation in debt is a nation controlled. This is what our international enemies see, appreciate, and are counting on.

Bank corporations will financially back the politicians who gave them the bailout to keep us spending and remain in debt as a nation. Many will collapse despite the bailout.

The labor unions will financially, and through their voters, back the politicians voting for the bailout to keep line workers making 75 dollars per hour. They will collapse despite the bailout.

The retail industry will financially back their politicians voting for the bailout so that we continue to spend so that we remain in debt. They will reduce despite the bailout.

The middle east will drop the price for oil in order to lull us back into complacency and continue to consume and spend to build their coffers. They will be the ones winning after the bailout in the long run.

We will remain in debt and our national policy controlled by outside international interests and businesses who have a leash on our debtor nation.

The bailout is adding kindling to a problem.

Rick Caldwell of TX @ Dec 06, 2008 09:47:49 AM

More Common Sense Needed in Washington

It seems like personal responsibility and sacrifice no longer apply in America. I am willing to bet the majority of people requiring help are up to their necks with other debt and would not give up luxury items like a cell phone, cable TV, or the internet to help pay their mortgages. It bothers me to think that more and more people are willing to pay for what they want but want someone else to pay for what they need. Why reward irresponsibility by punishing those who did the right things. We need more common sense in the Senate, thanks Senator Bunning.

Joe Naneville of VA @ Nov 11, 2008 08:52:31 AM

Bailout 2008

Bailout 2008,

Like a bloodied warrior,

laying broken and torn.

Like a dying soldier, hopeless and forlorn.

But the blood, it be green,

the color of money.

And the soldier is an economy,

and it is anything but funny.

Broken are it's people and shattered are their dreams.

Thanks to the ultra rich and their full proof schemes.

It is a tragedy with more pain to come.

Finance will be Hell, and their wills will be done.

Joe of AK @ Oct 19, 2008 23:35:15 PM

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The Home Front

The Home Front

Associate Editor Luke Mullins tracks the treacherous housing market and explains how to unload a five-bedroom McMansion or even find that dream home.

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