Biden vs. Trump: Housing Policy Edition
How do the two major party candidates stack up on housing policy?

Happy Tuesday and welcome to another edition of Rent Free. This past week's news has been dominated by questions about whether President Joe Biden will remain the Democratic candidate for president or drop out in favor of a younger, healthier alternative.
I tend to agree with my colleague Robby Soave that Biden isn't going anywhere.
Whether or not he does stick around, I figure now is as good a time as any to take a longer look at the president's housing policy record over his first term, how that stacks up with former President Donald Trump's own time in office, and what we might expect from both men in a second term.
Obviously, housing hasn't been the main issue in the 2024 campaign. Still, elections have consequences, even for housing policy. This week's newsletter tries to flesh out what those consequences will be.
Joe Biden's Housing Record
The federal government has little direct say over the land use regulations that impact housing production the most. Zoning, permitting, environmental reviews, impact fees, building codes, and more, are all mostly set at the state or local level.
Nevertheless, the Biden administration has shown some interest in prodding local and state governments in a more pro-supply direction.
You are reading Rent Free from Christian Britschgi and Reason. Get more of Christian's urban regulation, development, and zoning coverage.
Biden has said the country needs millions of new homes to bring housing costs down. His administration has released numerous "housing supply action plans" aimed at boosting housing production.
Having a White House that at least recognizes the country's need to build more housing is a good thing. On a practical level, however, the White House's efforts to encourage zoning reform have been a big flop.
Zoning Reform Flops
In 2020, Biden campaigned on a (relatively) aggressive policy of conditioning major federal housing and transportation grants on localities liberalizing their land use regulations.
Once in office, the administration scaled back these plans considerably.
A "Housing Supply Action Plan" released by the White House in May 2022 called for retooling a handful of smaller, discretionary transportation grant programs to factor in localities' pro-supply policy changes when selecting awardees.
No one really expected those changes to move the needle much on housing supply. The list of eventual grantees offered little evidence that the White House was spending much time looking at jurisdictions' housing production stats when awarding money.
For instance, San Francisco received a $20 million grant from the Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity (RAISE) program—one of the ones allegedly retooled to focus on zoning reform—a few days after the state of California announced they'd be auditing the city's atrociously slow, unproductive housing policies and practices.
In budget requests to Congress, Biden's Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) proposed a $10 billion grant program to incentivize reductions in "affordable housing barriers."
A program of that scale didn't happen. But Congress did eventually allocate $85 million for a Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing (PRO) grant program.
The statutory language creating the PRO grant program gave HUD a huge amount of discretion to decide which jurisdictions would get this relatively small pot of money.
Nevertheless, few of these grants have gone to jurisdictions that have made productive changes to their housing laws. As last week's Rent Free covered, several cities were given money for adopting "inclusionary zoning" policies that act as a tax on new housing production.
Biden's Fair Housing Re-Regulation
While the federal government has little responsibility over zoning policy, it does play a much larger role in policing housing discrimination.
The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits "discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, disability, national origin, or familial status (the "protected classes") in the sale, rental, or financing of dwellings and in other housing-related activities."
The actual text of the Fair Housing Act is pretty short, leaving the president with pretty broad authority to define what counts as housing discrimination, and craft regulations to enforce those definitions.
On this front, Biden has been an aggressive re-regulator.
He's revived Obama-era "disparate impact" regulations (scrapped by Trump) that ban housing practices that have a discriminatory effect on those protected classes, even when there's no discriminatory intent.
The Biden administration has issued regulatory guidance declaring that landlords' blanket refusal to rent to someone with a criminal record violates the Fair Housing Act. It's also given out grants to fair housing organizations that make a business of suing housing providers for having policies with an allegedly disparate impact, such as not renting to people with past evictions.
Reasonable people can disagree about the proper scope of federal fair housing laws. Nevertheless, the less landlords are able to decide for themselves if they want to rent to people with criminal and/or eviction histories, the riskier the rental business becomes for them. On the margins, that will mean fewer people end up renting out their properties.
Biden's Other Policies That Make Housing More Expensive
There are a lot of federal policies that don't directly regulate housing but can still have a major impact on how much housing costs and how much of it gets built.
Biden, often with the acquiescence of both parties in Congress, has been a profligate spender. His administration has added $4.3 trillion to 10-year borrowing costs, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.
All that additional spending and debt has helped to drive up inflation during his first term, in turn prompting the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates. The upshot of that is that it's much more expensive to borrow money to buy a new home.
When fewer prospective homebuyers can afford financing, less new housing gets built.
The Biden administration has also hiked tariffs on Canadian lumber and Chinese steel. Higher tariffs on materials needed for home construction naturally mean higher home construction costs. The knock-on effect of that is higher home prices and lower rates of housing production.
In his State of the Union speech, Biden also accused landlords of "price-fixing" to drive up rents. His administration has said that the use of third-party rent recommendation software violates federal anti-trust laws.
In fact, rent recommendation software often encourages landlords to slash rents more quickly when demand falls. To the extent that software is telling property owners to raise rents, it's because demand is rising and zoning laws prevent supply from keeping pace.
The Trump Alternative
Yesterday, the Republican Party released its 2024 platform to "Make America Great Again." It includes a plank on housing affordability that would seem to include a few productive ideas.
"To help new home buyers, Republicans will reduce mortgage rates by slashing Inflation, open limited portions of Federal Lands to allow for new home construction, promote homeownership through Tax Incentives and support for first-time buyers, and cut unnecessary Regulations that raise housing costs," reads the platform.
Minus the language about tax incentives (and the random capitalizations), that all doesn't sound too bad.
Huge portions of lands in western states are owned by the federal government, and thus off limits to new development. In places like Las Vegas and Salt Lake City, federal lands act as de facto urban growth boundaries.
Opening up federal lands to housing construction is an under-discussed, underrated idea for increasing housing production. Sen. Mike Lee (R–Utah) has proposed a bill that would do just that. (Trump has also floated a more fantastical proposal to create new "freedom cities" on federal land.)
Trump's record on housing policy during his first term doesn't inspire much optimism.
Trump's Terrible Zoning Rhetoric
Zoning reform is a bipartisan issue. For Donald Trump, it's a bipolar issue as well.
During his first term, our first developer president went from proposing solid YIMBY-inflected policies to running for re-election as the nation's NIMBY-in-chief.
Early in his term, Trump's HUD Secretary Ben Carson promised localities could get more federal grants by reducing regulations on apartment construction.
Then in 2020, Trump reversed course sharply. In campaign season op-eds, tweets, and speeches, the former president started warning that Democrats wanted to end the "suburban lifestyle dream" by ending single-family-only zoning and forcing multi-family development onto low-density neighborhoods.
In terms of policy, this rhetorical switch had only a small impact. Trump dropped plans to use federal housing rules to encourage land use regulation, instead choosing to give out HUD grants with no strings attached.
That was more of a missed opportunity than a huge blow to housing production. Rhetorically, it's incredibly unhelpful to have a president go out of his way to lionize zoning regulations specifically because they stop new apartments.
Spending, Tariffs, and Deregulation
Under Trump, the White House repeatedly asked Congress to cut spending on federal housing programs. The actual budgets Congress approved grew these programs instead. It was the same story across the federal government.
While Biden has a bad record on debt and deficits, Trump's was even worse. During his four years in office, Trump signed into law $8.4 trillion in new debt. Close to $5 trillion of that had nothing to do with emergency COVID-19 aid.
While inflation spiked under Biden, Trump's deficit spending didn't help matters. He too bears responsibility for the higher inflation, higher interest rates, and higher mortgage costs we're experiencing now.
On tariffs, there's little daylight between Trump and Biden. The Trump administration also hiked tariffs on lumber, steel, and other building materials, helping to drive up the costs of housing.
Elements of Trump's deregulation drive likely had a more positive effect on housing supply and housing prices. His efforts to limit the scope of federal clean water rules would make some greenfield development more feasible. His paring back of Obama-era "disparate impact" regulations lessened legal liabilities for housing providers.
Mass Deportation as Housing Policy
While the 2024 GOP platform has some good housing policy ideas, it also has an incredibly worrisome idea. In a couple of places, the platform suggests housing can be made more affordable by deporting "illegal immigrants" and tightening immigration restrictions. Trump himself has promised to deport millions of people.
Whatever other criticisms one might level at Trump's mass deportation plans, it is true that they would reduce demand for housing. But they would also likely reduce the supply of housing. While immigrants live in houses, they also build a lot of them.
If we want to see more homes getting built, it would be incredibly counterproductive to deport the people who'd actually do that work.
Four More Years?
The benefit of Trump and Biden each having already been president for one term is that we have a pretty good idea of how both candidates will perform in office.
Rhetorically at least, they're very different. The Biden administration talks a good game about zoning reform and the need for new housing supply. Trump has a history of defending the most restrictive zoning regulations specifically because they stop new apartment construction.
On more concrete policies, there's not too much daylight between both candidates. The Biden administration wants more expansive federal fair housing regulations. The Trump administration wants looser ones.
Both men support tariffs that drive up construction costs. Both support runaway spending that drives up interest rates and mortgage costs.
Biden likes to scapegoat "price-fixing" landlords for driving up rents. Trump likes to scapegoat immigrants for doing the same.
With major party candidates like this, you can understand why some people's election yard signs are running afoul of local sign code regulations.
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.
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How cute. An article that pretends that voters care about policy anymore.
Housing policy no less. Let me know when the last time Housing Policy registered as a federal issue was.
You didn't criticize Republicans while attacking Democrats.
That means you're a leftist.
FFS Drunky, you can’t even keep your bullshit ravings straight. Must be hitting the bottle early today.
Lmao, you can’t even keep your shit straight.
That IS in the looter playbook.
I’m assuming this is a Reason ‘Boaf Sidez’ article. Is that correct?
Yeah, which additional demands the feds do more regarding markets.
So, the libertarian way……. As Reason says anyway.
Well, one side understands the question, the other side is slobbering.
Trump vs. Who? Is the real question. And housing policy is a local issue, the more local the better, despite Reason cheerleading for Sacramento to take more power over California cities.
Under Trump: could afford a home
Under Biden: can't afford a home
That is all people know and care about.
Everyone beyond the kook blue haired 259 lb. Lesbian radicals and affluent progtarded wine moms.
"Reasonable people can disagree about the proper scope of federal fair housing laws."
Not until you can cite a part of the constitution that specifically allows the feds into housing.
All of HUD is as unconstitutional as the Department of Education, and a bunch of others.
Reason is for “special” libertarians.
^THIS +10000000000000
So Biden isn't going anywhere...good; he is the Democrat most likely to lose this election.
It's not that I like Trump [who does?]; but past experience has shown me that he will cause me the least damage in terms of my personal liberties [whereas Democrats seem to love things like gun control, censorship, imposing DEI initiatives, expanding government regulations and overreach, to name a few] and in terms o financial outcomes [inflation, cost of living]. Past experience has also shown me that he will much more likely secure our border. I also think he is the least likely, for all of his bombastic rhetoric, to get us into a war in which we have nothing to gain.
Those are reasons enough; but if you just love government and cannot get enough of it [probably because you believe it will make others do as you wish], then D is your party.
I like Trump.
1. He is funny
2. I think he means well for the average US citizen.
Maybe he is a better salesman to me than I expect, but I like the man who can stand against the slime thrown at him.
Just as a reminder, a house is the least liquid investment you can make.
Yes, it will actually keep you warm and dry, which stocks don't, but you also can't make one call and be rid of it.
The major reason supply is down is a gazillion and a half people have mortgages 'to low to give up', and CAN'T sell.
When interest rates drop, along with a reduction in the dems rampant inflation, things will look better.
But seriously, find out what the mortgage payment on that dream house would be, then go rent what you need to live (not want to have) and invest the difference. At the end or 15 years, you will be better off, and never have skinned a knuckle on a stubborn sink nut, or suffered a stroke mowing the lawn in July.
If I walked away from my house and gave it the next penniless, drug added homeless guy, he would be forcibly evicted for not paying taxes. I "own" my home (no longer any bank involved) but I still pay $200 a month to the government in property taxes
"then go rent what you need to live (not want to have) and invest the difference."
Great idea. How do you invest negative money, by the way?
The federal government has little direct say over the land use regulations that impact housing production the most. Zoning, permitting, environmental reviews, impact fees, building codes, and more, are all mostly set at the state or local level.
Little direct say - but zoning and land use exists the way it does now because the feds created the 'model law' - the Standard State Zoning Enabling Act of 1922 - that framed exactly how states and munis would create the laws re zoning. The feds then geared 100% of all spending, tax distortions, etc over the last century related to states/local to support that particular implementation of zoning law. Everything from highway spending to banking regulation to 'urban renewal' and eminent domain use to tax distortions re real estate. Trillions of dollars of everything. Not so much because there is some cabal of globalists in DC but because once a single model law re zoning passes everywhere in the US, then all reps in Congress will end up seeing the world zoned the same way and will make sure their legislation supports that.
It is the reason this image of a road is one that every single American will recognize as existing in their town. And yet it exists mostly only in the US (and Canada). Nowhere else in the world. The decisions (and money) that go into creating that infrastructure were not made 'bottom-up' at the local level. They were made top-down. And that top-down decision making is also why there are almost zero Americans who even understand that this is all top-down. That image is just the way the world works. Of course it could never be different.
“…It is the reason this image of a road is one that every single American will recognize as existing in their town. And yet it exists mostly only in the US (and Canada)…”
JFucked, bullshitting again. Canada did not enact the law you claim causes this, but the US and Canada are among the few countries with spaces large enough to encourage that sort of infrastructure.
FOAD, lying pile of lefty shit.
You’re such a dolt. Canada used the same enabling process as the US. With the same zoning system – called Euclidean in both places – named after the US Supreme Court case Euclid v Ambler (1926). With the same alignment over time as Canada too began to subsidize its muni land use and both economies (particularly the auto industry) integrated from the 1920’s to the 1960’s/70s. Including a history of redlining in both.
Canada is likely to move beyond Euclidean zoning long before the US does. But as of now, the reason they look the same is because of laws which incentivize sprawl. Not geography. Plenty of countries have lower density than the US – and the vast vast majority of Canada is basically unpopulated not sprawling.
Yeah, has nothing to do with the size of the countries. If you were a dolt, it would be an improvement.
FOAD asshole.
How does Reason miss major Biden policies like his energy efficiency standards for construction making housing much more expensive? Oh. Because it matches dreamy Polis.
Why is Reason treating this as a national fedetalized issue instead of a federalist state by state issue? You want one size fits all federal solutions as usual.
How about cut all federal funding and regulations that should be determined at the local fucking level?
Freeing up federal lands back to states is the best solution given in the article. The rest is continued federal meddling in housing.
I also love how they dismiss the effect illegal immigration has on housing.
"Whatever other criticisms one might level at Trump's mass deportation plans, it is true that they would reduce demand for housing. But they would also likely reduce the supply of housing. While immigrants live in houses, they also build a lot of them."
Under Biden there have been almost 9 million illegal aliens released into the USA. Has there been enough new housing built in the USA to house them? If not they have increased pressure on the housing market.
It is about 30k illegal immigrant construction workers when I last looked it up. A small drop compared to 9M.
"Election yard signs" in the last sentence links to the wrong article. It should link to https://reason.com/2024/07/08/tennessee-womans-fuck-em-both-2024-sign-is-protected-speech-rules-district-court/, not https://reason.com/2024/06/25/realpage-conspiracy-theories/.
GOOD CATCH! Voting libertarian does exactly that in that it lets you go ON RECORD FOREVER as having voted for what you actually want--even if a bunch of the other kits are happy trading that leveraged opportunity for a sharp stick in the eye. Think of it as a "poll with teeth."
Thanks for the link to God's Own Prohibitionist Platform. Pretending the choice of geezer is important--but comparing the platforms isn't--is precisely the approach taken by Kleptocracy infiltrators clueless as to what the LP offers. To them it is a source of fools with votes, else why would they bother to sell their message. That message is: vote AGAINST what you want; that's wasted. Vote instead for stuff that gets jobs 'n loot for OUR boys. In the real world, casting spoiler votes that expose looters to losing CHANGES their planks and laws.
Anybody remember when The Constitution of The United States of America was amended to grant the Federal Government power over housing?
Me neither.
"the former president started warning that Democrats wanted to end the "suburban lifestyle dream" by ending single-family-only zoning and forcing multi-family development onto low-density neighborhoods."
He's not wrong about that, though. The Democrats HAVE seriously advanced proposals like that, and understandably, because they almost inevitably end up in political control of places with high population densities, so every suburb they can convert into an urban warren is more power for them
And he's not wrong about the fact that zoning changes allowing individual property owners in single family housing areas to build multi-family high density housing WOULD be the death of suburbs.
You can take a "Well, then they should die." position if you want, but he's right about all of that.
"Whatever other criticisms one might level at Trump's mass deportation plans, it is true that they would reduce demand for housing. But they would also likely reduce the supply of housing. While immigrants live in houses, they also build a lot of them."
Deporting illegals who work in the housing construction industry would not reduce the supply of housing. It would reduce the rate at which the supply grows.
But if you're deporting several million illegal immigrants a year for the next 4-5 years, you wouldn't NEED the supply to grow, because the demand would be shrinking.
So that actually makes sense, too, the only objection being if you don't want illegal immigrants deported. Which, sure, is Reason's position, but Reason's position on illegal immigration isn't terribly popular.