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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

House GOP praises plan on housing

Committee chair says party is ready for talks

Geithner
Alan Fram Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration’s plan to gradually dissolve ailing housing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and to shrink the government’s role in the mortgage market drew praise from House Republicans on Tuesday. The GOP chairman of the House Financial Services Committee called the proposal a good starting point for bipartisan negotiations over a housing overhaul.

The positive reaction came as Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told the committee that the Obama administration wants Congress to approve legislation within two years that would slowly dismantle Fannie and Freddie. Failing to do so would worry the financial markets by leaving serious problems unresolved, he said.

“Our hope is Congress will work with us to find a consensus for a long-term solution,” Geithner told the lawmakers.

The hearing was held three weeks after the Obama administration released a report calling for a stark reduction of the federal role in housing. The nation’s housing market has been battered in recent years by low home prices and vast numbers of foreclosures, and politicians from both parties want to find a way to have private lenders – not the government – bear more of the burden.

“You don’t want to run a system where the taxpayer is on the hook when things go bad,” Geithner said.

Even so, there is no consensus – even among members of the same party – over precisely what to do. And it is unclear whether major legislation such as this could be approved during the approach of next year’s presidential election, when partisan divisions intensify.

Fannie and Freddie guarantee or own about half of all U.S. mortgages. Along with other federal agencies, they played a role in nearly 9 of 10 new mortgages over the past year, as private lenders have remained nervous about making new loans. The two companies nearly collapsed in 2008 as the housing market crumbled, but have been kept alive with $150 billion – so far – in taxpayer dollars.

The administration thinks the ultimate cost of that bailout will be $70 billion to $75 billion or less, Geithner said.

In a written statement aides distributed at the hearing, committee Chairman Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., said Republicans are ready to sit down with administration officials “as soon as possible to craft legislation to produce a comprehensive housing finance reform plan.”

Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., another member of the committee, also noted the common ground between Republicans and the administration’s plan, including the phase out of Fannie and Freddie and the move toward a privately financed mortgage system.

“I believe there is an opportunity for us to reach broad based consensus,” Garrett said.

As part of its plan for slowly eliminating Fannie and Freddie, the administration wants to lower the size of mortgages they can buy and raise the fees it charges – proposals designed to help private lenders move back into the mortgage market.

That produced criticism from lawmakers from New York and Los Angeles, who said the lower limits would hurt homeowners in their high-priced districts.

“I don’t know if you create a double-dip recession nationwide, but you certainly do in many areas,” said Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif.

While both political parties concede that changes are needed to protect taxpayers and revive private lending, Republicans tend to want to move more strongly while Democrats express more concerns about maintaining the government’s role in helping lower-income families.

Fannie and Freddie buy mortgages from banks and other primary lenders, package them together and sell them with a guarantee that investors would be repaid in case of default. That system helps keep interest rates lower and provides lenders with fresh cash for additional loans.