At V.P. Debate, J.D. Vance and Tim Walz Scapegoat Immigrants, 'Corporate Speculators' for High Housing Costs
Both candidates mentioned the importance of new supply to bring down housing costs. But their focus was firmly on their chosen boogeymen.

Both candidates at tonight's vice-presidential debate agreed that housing costs are too high. And both Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz had their favorite scapegoats to blame the problem on.
For Vance, it was immigrants.
"You've got housing that is totally unaffordable because we brought in millions of illegal immigrants to compete with Americans for scarce homes," said the Republican vice-presidential nominee.
Instead of "blaming migrants for everything on housing, we could talk a little bit about Wall Street speculators buying up housing and making them less affordable," responded the Democrat.
Neither candidate's answer is particularly surprising. Vance has blamed immigrants for raising housing costs throughout the campaign. The GOP party platform claims that deportations will help bring housing costs down.
Meanwhile, the Democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, has repeatedly blamed "corporate landlords" and "Wall Street" for rising rents and home prices. As a solution, she has endorsed capping rents at properties owned by larger corporate investors and using antitrust law to stop landlords from using rent-recommendation software. Walz was merely aping his running mate's rhetoric.
Vance, to be sure, has also repeatedly blamed institutional investors for raising Americans' housing costs.
There's a straightforward logic to both candidate's claims. Increased demand for housing, whether from immigrants or corporate investors, would be expected to increase prices.
But increased demand should also be expected to increase supply, bringing prices back down.
Corporate investors and immigrants also play an important, direct role in increasing housing supply. Investors supply capital to build new homes. Immigrants supply labor for the same.
At least one study has found that the labor shortages caused by immigration restrictions do more to raise the cost of housing than they do to lower it through reduced demand.
Higher demand fails to translate into supply when the government restricts homebuilding through regulations that limit where and how much housing developers can build.
California and New Jersey have the same percentage of foreign-born residents. California also has a lot more regulatory restrictions on home building than New Jersey. The median home price in New Jersey is 30 percent cheaper as a result.
Vance cited a Federal Reserve study showing that immigration increased housing costs, promising to share the paper later on social media. (The campaign has thus far shared remarks, not studies, from Fed officials, to the effect that immigration has increased demand for housing, which duh.)
Contra Walz, one study has found that restrictions on investor-owned rental housing raised rents and raised the incomes of residents in select neighborhoods by excluding lower-income renters. Studies on the effects of rent-recommendation software have found mixed effects on housing costs. In tight markets, such software raises rents. When supply is loose, it lowers them.
As always, the ability of builders to add new supply is what sets the price in the long term. Both candidates gestured at this in their own way, although Walz was more explicit about the relationship.
"We cut some of the red tape," he said, referencing Minneapolis' experience of liberalizing zoning laws and seeing housing costs fall. Walz's pro-supply remarks were nevertheless sandwiched between calls for spending more on affordable housing and down-payment assistance.
On the supply side of the equation, Vance referenced Trump's plan to open up federal lands for more development, saying the feds own lands "that aren't being used for anything. They're not being used for national parks. They're not being used and it could be places where we build a lot of housing. And I do think that we should be opening up building in this country."
In some Western states, the federal government is the largest landowner and its undeveloped lands act as a de facto urban growth boundary. Vance is right that opening up those lands for development would add supply and lower prices.
Unfortunately, his support for residential development on currently federal-owned land was immediately succeeded by a call to kick out the illegal immigrants who are competing for homes.
So there you have it. Both candidates recognized the role that home building and home supply plays in reducing housing costs. But both were also keen to single out scapegoats—immigrants for Vance, Wall Street for Walz—for increasing demand and prices.
Walz acknowledged tonight that there's not a lot the federal government can do to reduce locally set land use regulations. He's right. But the federal government does have a lot of other levers they can pull to make housing costs worse, from immigration restrictions to nationwide rent control.
And both candidates indicated that they'd pull those levers.
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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Walz to the ballz needs to blame Biden and Harris. A bloated government trying to be too many things instead of focusing on its core (Constitutional) obligations.
"And both Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz had their favorite scapegoats to blame the problem on. For Vance, it was immigrants."
Was it immigrants or illegal immigrants, Britschigi, you dishonest hack?
Because Vance's wife and mother of his children is Usha Bala Chilukuri, born of a Telugu Brahmin immigrant family who came from Andhra Pradesh, India, to the US in the 1980s.
Weird that Vance would be scapegoating actual immigrants rather than scofflaws given his family. Lets see:
"You've got housing that is totally unaffordable because we brought in millions of illegal immigrants"
Welp, there it is Britschigi. In a fair world you'd be working for Weekly World News.
Yeah, well Vance is still wrong because they aren’t competing for a scarce resource.
They’re getting it handed to them on a silver platter. Like in Maine.
Was it immigrants or illegal immigrants, Britschigi, you dishonest hack?
Immigrants. Because Vance lied about which ones are here legally or not. The migrants in Springfield are here LEGALLY. The migrants claiming asylum are here LEGALLY. Vance made it quite clear that HE doesn't think they are here legally but he is wrong. It is Vance and your team which conflates legal and illegal immigration and seeks to redefine legal immigration as only the type that your team personally approves of, and not as according to the law as written.
And what do you suppose happens to a community when you dump a foreign population equivalent to 30-50% of the original population into it?
Also, Vance addressed that before the moderators panicked and shut off his mic.
https://x.com/unusual_whales/status/1841292891945324567?s=46&t=qeA47-JjK6vq0pfnxg60dA
“Immigrants. Because Vance lied about which ones are here legally or not. The migrants in Springfield are here LEGALLY. The migrants claiming asylum are here LEGALLY.”
Morning, you humanity-hating Nazi fuck. Where did the questioner or Vance say anything about Springfield?
And Vance was very clear that he was talking about illegals:
“You’ve got housing that is totally unaffordable because we brought in millions of illegal immigrants”
You always try to slip in an extra condition that wasn’t there like “pets” or “Springfield” so you can lie for your bosses. What a disgusting creep you are.
Vance did talk about Haitians in Springfield, that the Biden/Harris administration basically wrote a new law and fast tracked them. Waltz tried to say it was on the books in the 90s but he's wrong
Illegal you hack. Vance was right, CBS and Timmy where wrong. But I know you can't do a bit of research.
Hey, did you miss how the Fed called out illegal immigrant too.
Being fair, both answers were decent enough. Big investors like Blackrock buying up and controlling such a large portion of residential housing stock drives up prices. Britches' claim that increasing demand automatically increases stock to an equilibrium point doesn't follow. Unlimited illegal immigration absolutely causes shortages. I saw a few Reason writers on twitter last night being too retarded to understand simple market economics.
Identifying part of the problem is not scapegoating. It's assessing. The retard writers at reason got their Marxist coke marching orders and are sure doing their best to lie
Britches couldn’t work for the Weekly World News. They were more honest than Britches could ever be.
I love that Reason thinks adding tens of millions more people will have zero impact on housing prices.
In this area ONLY do the laws of supply and demand not actually work.
True, just look at Canada. Trudeau is bringing in so many immigrants that the country cannot absorb them economically or even culturally. There are other factors of course, especially regulations. However, it’s straight up wrong that immigration isn’t one part.
No, in a fair world he'd be on a soap box under a bridge ranting at clouds.
The author cites, quote, “one study” at least twice, without even naming the study, and never really proving that either candidate’s statements were wrong.
Who writes this stuff?
The best was Ronald baily. Most of his "citations" were previous articles he has written
Maybe Psaki is his ghost writer.
"Immigrants supply labor"????? RU sure?
At least one study has found that ... 51% are on welfare.
So according to that study; immigration is actually a net-negative on the labor supply.
Maybe the 38% of welfare leaches already here could "supply labor". Eh?
At least one study has found that … 51% are on welfare.
There we go. This is referencing that study from CIS that Jesse always loves to cite, and this response right here is the intended response that CIS and Jesse want to generate from that study. That statement above is completely misleading in two ways: (1) the overwhelming majority of welfare that immigrants use consist of school lunches and medical care, and (2) the study counted participation in welfare by HOUSEHOLD, not per capita. So if one person in the household that is headed by an immigrant - say, an elementary school student receiving school lunches - and that student may very well be a US citizen him/herself - receives any welfare, then the ENTIRE HOUSEHOLD is counted as if they are ALL "on welfare". That is misleading and wrong.
But they don't want you to look at the fine print, they want to be able to generate a statistic like "51% are on welfare!" and then just let you assume that 51% of immigrants are lounging around collecting food stamps and housing vouchers. That is not true. The actual participation rate of immigrants on what we would colloquially refer to as "welfare", like food stamps, is IIRC something around 10-15%. Still too high, but way lower than HALF.
“…..the overwhelming majority of welfare that immigrants use is……”
My god, the selective nuance in this is off the charts. So….. you’re saying that they are, in fact, using welfare?
Pretty consistent for you Jeff, given your take that a little bit of rape and murder, along with a lot of taxpayer money is A-ok as long as you get to keep virtue signaling.
Virtue signaling and stealing votes by registering all of the illegals to vote.
Because roping in any use of welfare without comparing the relative cost tells you nothing about the relative burden of immigrants.
Governor Tim Walz in a word is quite frankly "Weird". Senator JD Vance is no where near a "Weird" as Governor Tim Walz.
Out of the 4 candidates on the 2 tickets, Senator JD Vance is the least "Weird" and Governor Tim Walz is probably the most "Weird".
The problem with mass immigration is how it upsets the balance before the immigrants (legal, illegal, or temporary) have a change to assimilate into the local culture. This is a real problem for both the existing citizens and for the immigrants (legal, illegal, or temporary).
Like drug legalization criminal justice reform, there can be no negative downstream effects of high levels of immigration. Anything that appears negative is a coincidence or a bad faith criticism. This seems to be a pattern where the public has soured on policies Reason has favored.
No one has ever claimed that there are zero negative consequences from immigration. This is a strawman that just refuses to die around here.
If you want to discuss seriously any topic of public import, such as housing prices, and if you want to do it in a good-faith manner, then you had better be prepared to have other talking points than "ThE IlLeGaLs!". Because if that is your only answer, then yeah, you are scapegoating them for a problem that is much larger and much more complex than that.
I heard some of Vance’s comments and he was stating that housing prices have a number of variables. That being said, immigration policy is one of te variables the federal government has some legitimate authority to influence.
Again you hack. Everyone likes legal immigration. You know that is where you chose the skills you want, vet the people, and are able to absorb them.
It's illegal immigrant! Why should did skip the line? I know people that immigrant though the process - it takes a long time and hard work.
You don't like the process change it. It's still doesn't excuse having no border.
Tell me hack, how many 'undocumented' immigrants are you housing or you just virtue signaling? Like NY City, Chicago and all the other sanctuary cities.
Well, if you look at the situation from a selectively nuanced position, the complete bastardization of the asylum process technically makes anyone who wants to come here legal, but it also makes places like Springfield Ohio a shithole.
Um, no wait, the selectively nuanced position demands that you ignore the bastardization and shithole observations. My bad.
Contra Walz, one study has found that restrictions on investor-owned rental housing raised rents and raised the incomes of residents in select neighborhoods by excluding lower-income renters.
That study couldn’t be comparable to anything in the US. NL, like much of central Europe (Switzerland, Germany, Austria), requires that rental property investors impute a rental income on their property for tax purposes. Meaning – they can’t just leverage the property up with debt for purposes of either speculating on the house price or using debt on that property to lower taxes on other sources of income. They have to rent it out.
Overall – this also means that ‘homeownership’ is not seen as a tax advantage in those countries – and mortgages require higher down payments. In three of those countries (not NL), homeownership rates are very low (Switzerland is 42%, Germany is 49%). They don’t build wealth via mere homeownership. Rental investors actually have to be good at the business of renting property or they sell to someone who is good at it or sell to an owner-occupier.
Restrictions here in the US only serve to reduce speculation on housing prices.
Location, location, location. State and local economies influence housing supply and demand, and hence prices, far more than the federal government does. That's why housing markets vary so widely from place to place.
Subprime, subprime, subprime. We know what can happen when Wall Street geniuses and their shareholder puppet masters take over housing markets. If these people plus immigrants are prime movers in housing markets, then why aren't they getting us out of our housing problem now? Probably because they can't figure out how to invest in widely variable housing markets.
And by the way, if houses will sell for $400,000, what real incentive will builders have to bring prices magically back down to $300K? Why wouldn't they simply start selling for $390,000? That's what competition is all about, isn't it?