Barack Obama pushed banks to give subprime loans to Chicago’s
African-Americans
Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2012/09/03/with-landmark-lawsuit-barack-obama-pushed-banks-to-give-subprime-loans-to-chicagos-african-americans/#ixzz25Qfjo3ih
Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2012/09/03/with-landmark-lawsuit-barack-obama-pushed-banks-to-give-subprime-loans-to-chicagos-african-americans/#ixzz25Qfjo3ih
President
Barack Obama was a pioneering contributor to the national subprime real estate
bubble, and roughly half of the 186 African-American clients in his landmark
1995 mortgage discrimination lawsuit against Citibank have since gone bankrupt
or received foreclosure notices.
As few as 19 of those 186 clients still own homes with clean
credit ratings, following a decade in which Obama and other progressives pushed
banks to provide mortgages to poor African Americans.
The startling failure rate among
Obama’s private sector clients was discovered during The Daily Caller’s review
of previously unpublished court information from the
lawsuit that a young Obama helmed as the lead plaintiff’s attorney. [RELATED: Learn about the 186 class action plaintiffs]
Since the mortgage bubble burst, some of his former clients are
calling for a policy reversal.
“If you see some people don’t make enough money to afford the
mortgage, why would you give them a loan?” asked Obama client John Buchanan.
“There should be some type of regulation against giving people loans they can’t
afford.”
Banks “were too eager to lend to
many who didn’t qualify,” said Don Byas, another client who saw banks lurch
from caution to bubble-inflating recklessness. [RELATED:
Obama's Citibank plaintiffs hit hard when housing bubble burst]
“I don’t care what race you are. … You need to keep financial
wisdom [separate] from trying to help your people,” said Byas, an autoworker.
Nonetheless,
Obama has pursued the same top-down mortgage lending policies in the White
House.
Obama’s lawsuit was one element
of a national “anti-redlining” campaign led by Chicago’s progressive groups,
who argued that banks unfairly refused to lend money to people living within
so-called “redlines” around African-American communities. The campaign was
powered by progressives’ moral claim that their expertise could boost home
ownership among the United States’ most disadvantaged minority, African-Americans. [RELATED:
Obama's African-American clients got coupons, not cash]
Progressive activists’ ambition instead contributed greatly to a
housing bubble that burst in 2007, crashed the nation’s economy in 2008, wiped
out at least $4 trillion in equity, kept unemployment above 8 percent for four
years, and damaged the intended beneficiaries of looser mortgage lending
standards.
In the White House, Obama has continued to intensify regulatory
pressure on banks to provide more risky loans to African-Americans and Latinos.
He has used lawsuits to fund his allies. And taxpayers are now unwittingly
contributing to a re-inflation of housing prices.
Meanwhile, the president has blamed the housing bubble on supposed
GOP deregulation, even though President George W. Bush expanded the
regulation-expanding, anti-redlining policies established by
progressives during Bill Clinton’s presidency.
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