Weekly Address
The White House
President Barack Obama Weekly Address August 3, 2013 (Video/Transcript)
Hi, everybody. For the past few weeks, I’ve been visiting
folks across America to talk about what we need to do as a country to
secure a better bargain for the middle class.
I’ve been laying out my ideas for how we can build on the
cornerstones of what it means to be middle class in America. A good
job. A good education. Affordable health care when you get sick. A
secure retirement even if you’re not rich. And the chance to own your
own home.
This week, I went to Arizona and California, two of the
states hit hardest when the housing bubble burst, triggering the
recession. All across the country, millions of responsible Americans
were hurt badly by the reckless actions of others. Home values
plummeted. Construction workers were laid off. And many families lost
their homes.
Over the past four years, we’ve worked to help millions of
responsible homeowners get back on their feet. And while we’re not
where we need to be yet, our housing market is beginning to heal. Home
prices and sales are rising. Construction is up. Foreclosures are
down. Millions of families have come up for air because they’re no
longer underwater on their mortgages.
Now we have to build on this progress. Congress should
give every American the chance to refinance at today’s low rates. We
should help more qualified families get a mortgage and buy their first
home. We should get construction workers back on the job rebuilding
communities hit hardest by the crisis. And we should make sure that
folks who don’t want to buy a home have decent, affordable places to
rent.
As home prices rise, we have to turn the page on the
bubble-and-bust mentality that created this mess, and build a housing
system that’s rock-solid and rewards responsibility for generations to
come. We need to wind down the companies known as Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, make sure private capital plays a bigger role in the
mortgage market, and end the era of expecting a bailout after your
pursuit of profit puts the whole country at risk. We need to preserve
access to safe and simple mortgages like the 30-year, fixed-rate
mortgage. We need to keep laying down rules of the road that protect
homeowners when they’re making the biggest purchase of their lives. And
finally, Congress needs to confirm Mel Watt to be our nation’s top
housing regulator, so that he can protect consumers and help responsible
lenders provide credit.
No program or policy will solve all the problems in a
multi-trillion dollar housing market, and it will take time to fully
recover. But if we work together, we can make a home a source of pride
and middle-class security again. And if Washington is willing to set
aside politics and focus on what really matters, we can rebuild an
economy where if you work hard, you can get ahead.
Thanks, and have a great weekend.
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