'Unhinged' 'Scum' Ramaswamy Shows His YIMBY Side
"Land use restrictions are constricting the supply of housing," said Ramaswamy at tonight's GOP presidential debate in Miami.

Entrepreneur and GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy promised an "unhinged" performance at the third 2024 Republican presidential debate tonight. He attacked the media and Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel in his first minute of speaking. He irritated former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley enough that she called him "scum."
He also took a rightful stab at zoning regulations.
"Increase the supply of housing," said the 38-year-old entrepreneur at tonight's debate in Miami. "Land use restrictions are constricting the supply of housing. That's making housing more expensive for ordinary Americans across this country."
Ramaswamy delivered these remarks in response to a question about how he would improve the financial situation of Americans suffering from inflation.
"Increase the supply of everything. It's the law of supply and demand," he said. In addition to repealing land use regulations, Ramaswamy advocated for increasing the supply of energy from all sources, including coal, oil, fracking (of natural gas), and nuclear energy.
He also suggested increasing the supply of labor by not "using our taxpayer money to pay people more to stay at home instead of to go to work."
Though neither candidate mentioned it, Ramaswamy's comments put him partially at odds with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. The governor's administration sued the government of Gainesville, Florida, for approving an ordinance legalizing four-unit developments in single-family-only zoned neighborhoods.
On the flip side, just a few months after suing Gainesville, DeSantis signed into law Florida's Live Local Act, which includes significant regulatory relief for developers trying to build residential projects in commercial and industrial areas.
Ramaswamy is certainly opposed to his "mentor" Donald Trump who, bizarrely enough, made a defense of single-family-only zoning and the American "suburban lifestyle dream" a centerpiece of his failed 2020 reelection campaign.
Perhaps Ramaswamy has learned the lesson that running as the nation's NIMBY in chief is not a winning electoral strategy. At a minimum, he's grasped a basic economic logic that if the supply of homes is limited by government regulation, the price of homes will increase, and the ability of the average American to afford a home will fall.
Housing is a potential wedge issue for any presidential candidate. Traditional partisan alliances are easily scrambled by questions of whether to liberalize zoning regulations. Republican and Democratic lawmakers both have introduced (and passed) bills peeling back land use regulations at the local and state levels. Those same bills have encountered bipartisan opposition.
In an election where voters are suffering increasing costs of living, advocating for straightforward supply-side solutions that appeal to voters of all parties is worth a try.
In a debate that mostly centered on whether we should bomb Iran or Mexico first, Ramaswamy's comments were a rare breath of fresh, economically numerate air.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Ramaswamy is gonna ronna aggressive campaign.
Can you translate your comment into English so it’s understandable? Bonus points for proper grammar and punctuation.
Humor is lost on the slow ones.
I'm making $90 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning 16,000 US dollars a month by working on the connection, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply.
Everybody must try this job now by just using this website... http://www.Payathome9.com
KAAAAAHHHHHNNNN
No, he kahn't translate that for someone like you.
LMAO...nice one.
But will he Runasaway with it?
It wasn't that long ago a candidate like Mr. Ramaswamy would have been laughed out of the race as a fringe contender. But the bar has been set so low, anyone who can string two sentences together seems more qualified than the current President.
I don't know, the government, clerisy, big business and the media have become far more fringe than Vivek. He's just pointing it out.
I wish you were wrong about that.
He would have been laughed out by the MSM and political class, because he's a threat to their power. They tried the same thing with Trump. On the other hand, Trump did it to Rand Paul in the first debate saying he shouldn't be there, IMHO because Trump saw Paul as his main competition for conservate voters' votes. Still, I'm not mad at Trump, because IMHO Trump was the most libertarian president we've had in the past 70 years. And Rand Paul is only 60, and I wouldn't be surprised he gets Trump's endorsement in 2028.
Listen to his long form interviews on podcasts. He is one of the most knowledgeable. He has impressed Bill Maher, Tim Pool, Dave Smith. Dont rely on short 2 minute answers during debates or Reasons coverage here where they have seemed to be directed to prop up Haley.
Yeah, for a main-stream party candidate, he's the best since Ron Paul, I'd say. He really stands for the principles that MAGA's project on Trump.
He is very sharp and well spoken. And amazingly good at dealing with hostile press.
Vivek on part of the problem spoke about how easy it is to take things out of context. There are a lot of people that do not know this
The alternative is Dick Cheney in 3 inch heels (looking at Haley, DeSantis).
That was pretty f'ing funny.
I think most people missed that sharp dig. I loved it even though I am not a fan of Ramaswamy.
I always thought that Reason was a Libertarian site. Now I realize that it is a Democrat site disguised as Libertarian site. All you have to do is watch the "comments' on Republicans versus those made about Democrats. That's before taking into account the juvenile writing used to convey those comments.
As usual the reality is far weirder.
When the Tea Party imploded, disaffected Republicans felt they needed a new home and started calling themselves libertarians. These LARP'ing LINO's came to Reason to learn about their new hobby. Those that weren't terribly bright didn't learn a thing about what (l)Libertarianism actually is, and didn't realize that they are still Republicans, and so they stayed. Those that were smarter realized that libertarianism is a terrible hobby and departed.
Reason's largest donors are the Koch brothers, so it is suspected that there is a strong incentive among the writers to please their backers. It is unknown if the influence is covert or overt, but it is felt.
Among the writers there are a few of the "old school" (l)Libertarians remaining. But mostly they have been supplanted by younger, dumber, more liberal, Statist symps. I don't think they view themselves that way, but IMHO that is because the (re)Education System has moved so far Left that anyone that still holds even a minimally individualistic world-view is considered "PROBLEMATIC."
So the comments section is comprised of a mix of clowns, jokers, trolls, pedos, neckbeards, rightists, leftists, drunks, etc. but all Old Guys/Gals. I can't think of a single poster that is of the age group served by the new Reason writers - Funny.
Now the Libertarian Party? That's a whole 'nother ball of wax.
To sum up, we libertarians are irrelevant, we have no representation in D.C. and we've been diluted and infiltrated by imbeciles. Why are you even here jimc5499?
I know libertarians are against zoning.
But when a group of voters pass ordinances through their elected officials, why does the state get to prevent them from keeping their town the way they like it.
They want single family homes.
Why do they have to have apartment buildings?
I remember Obama trying to put section 8 housing in the suburbs.
Forcing the (Republican) locals to have ( Democratic) multiple unit housing seems like a way to transform safe middle class neighborhoods into democratic run hellholes.
Just like in the city center!
No, libertarians are not against zoning; progressive authoritarians masquerading as libertarians are against zoning.
100% a curse of using government instead of HOA contracts. It’s just best to leave the gov-guns alone for anything but ensuring Liberty and Justice for all. ‘guns’ were never meant to be in a service or planning position. Do 'guns' make sh*t? Do 'guns' plan?
Realizing the only tool in 'governments' toolbox would be a huge step to putting this nation back on it's tracks.
Yeah? So what? How is that a justification for state/federal guns to come in and force people to comply with their wishes?
It's entirely not okay but it is but a consequence of "government" zoning in the first place.
State/federal government overriding local decision making is authoritarian.
The difference between local government zoning and an HOA's CC&Rs is largely who gets to vote for it; in the case of government zoning, it's all local residents, in the case of an HOA, it's local property owners.
State/federal interference in zoning does nothing to change this violation of property rights, it compounds it, since the wishes of property owners are diluted even further.
Overriding local preferences by state and federal fiat is soooo libertarian! /sarc
100% a curse of using government
And that justifies state/federal "gov guns" imposing their preferences on people... how?
Are all zoning laws a bad thing? So we should allow strip clubs next to elementary schools? We should let the pig-excrement-methane production plant next to the hoity-toity golf club? You want a strip club/off-track-betting business right next to YOUR house, right? Oh, let's put a homeless shelter with attached soup kitchen on your street too. And one of those 'safe injection sites' right in your neighborhood. Down for that?
What I want and what is acceptable for government to impose on people are two different things.
Right now, the government is usually the one imposing the homeless shelter or safe injection site on your neighborhood.
My state has an insane law: build whatever the STATE government orders your town to, or lose your funding. I don't want my town turning into a bunch of apartment complexes, because that's what a city is for, and if I wanted to live in a city, I'd already be f***ing doing that.
Basically NOBODY would buy a house if someone could just up and put a stinky, noisy, polluting factory right next door. In fact I could argue building something that negatively affects my property and quality of life like that (odors, noise, pollution) IS a NAP violation.
Finally the real problem with housing is corporate cash buyers and the obsession with monetizing EVERYTHING to nickel and dime people to death. Want a house where I live? Cash buyers win. Nearly every time. Except most ordinary people don't have $800k in the bank (and that's what it takes for just the smaller, far outer suburbs, 2 story suburban homes!). I ran the numbers and even with a decade of accumulated home equity plus $100k cash on top of that, if I moved, the mortage would nearly double, due to the prices+interest rates. And I'm in the top 20% where I live, top 10% nationally.
Even if I went for that, I'd probably get outbid by a corporate "small investor" shell company cash buyer anyway, for anything that isn't decrepit.
Ironically, where I live we have strip club so close to an elementary school that people use the school to give directions to the club;)
Where's that?
West Virginia just off Rt 11? If not, it's sad that this isn't a one-off. If so, then howdy neighbor!
Right. And Omg the world is melting... /s
99.9% emotional drama and 0.01% legitimate concern.
The question Libertarians should be asking is how could removing the laws make things worse than they already are.
We already have those situations existing because of zoning. So we pay taxes to not get the property protections zoning is supposed to provide.
Also, where is it written that you have an inalienable right to expect property values to always rise? I don't see anything like that in.my pocket constitution.
I know of a neighborhood that contains 1.6 acres, and 11,400 square feet of mega mansion space occupied by one of the candidates that will be excepted from this so called '...law of supply and demand...'.
He also suggested increasing the supply of labor by not "using our taxpayer money to pay people more to stay at home instead of to go to work."
Nice!!!!! I wondered if I'd ever hear such clarity from anyone running for office.
I wonder if anyone at Reason is smart enough to figure out why the debate fixated on bombing Iran and how that relates to Ramaswamy's most viral remarks.
No one at Reason is gonna ask why *Presidential candidates* are talking about managing housing? Something that should be completely within state purview?
Like, its nice that Ramaswamy is a YIMBY - but it shouldn't matter as he shouldn't even be dreaming about interfering at the state level.
You can rest assured that nothing disagreeable is going into Ramaswamy's backyard.
Ramaswamy is a "YIYBY" kind of person: "Yes In YOUR BackYard".
Oh, definitely. Like his opposition to 'consequences culture' when it comes to Harvard grads getting blacklisted because of their actions - *he'll* never have to deal with those people and even if he hired a law firm one of them worked at you can bet that that law firm would still be able to furnish a nice Jewish lawyer on demand for any client who requested such.
I see zero rationale for the fed gov to get involved in local zoning issues (or education or just about anything else).
+1000000000.