Congress Actually Passed a Based Housing Bill with Zero New Spending, but Trump is Keeping the Swamp Waiting
DC tried to slash construction red tape to let builders build, but the President hasn't swiped right on the bill yet.

Well, look at that. In a shocking plot twist, Congress actually managed to put down the crayons and pass a landmark bipartisan housing bill. But there is a massive catch: President Trump hasn't signed it yet, leaving the entire beltway establishment in a state of suspended animation. It is the classic Washington waiting game, and right now, the ball is entirely in the President's court while everyone else holds their breath.
This piece of legislation is being hyped up as the most significant overhaul of federal housing policy in several decades. And honestly, for once, the hype might be real. Amazingly, the swamp actually agreed to a major reform package that contains absolutely zero new federal spending. Yes, you read that right: no new taxpayer-funded money pits, no massive new bureaucracies, and no massive additions to the national debt.
Instead of throwing billions of dollars of printed money into the wind, the bill actually tries to do something sensible for once: boost the housing supply by making it cheaper and easier to build stuff across the country. It is a rare, based victory for basic economics over bureaucratic red tape. The idea is to stop gatekeeping construction and let developers actually build homes without jumping through a million government hoops.
Naturally, the mainstream media had to call in the experts to explain this sudden outbreak of common sense. Journalist Amna Nawaz sat down with former HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan to dissect what this regulatory shakeup actually means. Donovan, an alumnus of the Obama administration, had to break down the mechanics of how cutting construction barriers could actually help lower prices for regular folks.
During the discussion, it was wild to watch the establishment media wrestle with the concept of supply-side economics. The talking heads are so used to demand-side subsidies that the idea of just letting people build things cheaper seems like black magic. But the math is simple: more supply equals lower costs, and you don't need a massive government budget to make that happen—you just need the state to get out of the way.
The fact that this bill passed with bipartisan support shows just how desperate the situation has gotten. When even the most spending-addicted politicians agree to a housing bill with no new money attached, you know the old system of endless subsidies is running on empty. High housing costs are a national pain point, and deregulation is the only play left on the board.


