Las Vegas Sun
 
Romney, GOP fail to see Americans’ need for help in  foreclosure crisis
 
Sunday, Oct. 30, 2011 | 2 a.m. 
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney got in trouble recently when he came 
to  Nevada and started talking about housing. Nevada has the highest 
foreclosure  rate in the country, and Romney, a front-runner for the Republican 
presidential  nomination, showed little sense of compassion or desire to help 
ease the  foreclosure crisis. 
In an interview with the Las Vegas Sun, Romney said _“the key thing for me 
is let the market do its work. Get the  foreclosures washed through the 
system ... let the market rebound from the  bottom that it hits, and get people 
back into homes.”_ 
(http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2011/oct/23/gop-candidate-discuss-hot-topics/) 
 
In other words, Romney doesn’t want the government involved but instead 
wants  the market left on its own. And he wants it to move quickly by having  
foreclosures “washed through the system,” meaning even more foreclosures. 
Romney is not alone proposing a hands-off approach to the foreclosure 
crisis.  Arguing to let the market “do its work” has become something of a 
conservative  mantra. Nearly all of the Republican presidential candidates have 
said similar  things. 
Conservatives are loath to talk about any type of government help or  
intervention. They have offered a number of economic explanations about how  
letting the market work supposedly makes sense, but does anyone see a problem  
with leaving the market on its own to correct itself? After all, it was the  
market — fueled by lax oversight — that got the country into this mess with 
its  risky practices. The result is that millions of Americans have faced 
job loss  and foreclosure. 
And the idea that foreclosures need to be “washed through the system” 
quickly  is ludicrous. Did the Republican presidential candidates fail to 
notice 
what  happened as the banks scrambled to foreclose on properties? There 
were serious  problems. In Nevada, for example, state Attorney General 
Catherine Cortez Masto  has alleged that one major bank essentially railroaded 
homeowners, ignoring its  own procedures to foreclose on properties when it 
didn’
t have the right to do  so. 
What makes the Republican presidential candidates’ advocacy of a hands-off  
approach even more troubling is that it leaves consumers with nowhere to 
turn.  Wall Street made billions in profits by breaking and bending the rules, 
and  Americans are paying the price. It is galling that the Republican 
approach would  only further this injustice. This is the time government should 
be involved. 
Nevadans understand how devastating the situation is. In addition to the  
highest rate of foreclosure, the state also has the highest rate of  
unemployment. 
President Barack Obama was in Las Vegas last week to unveil his plan to 
help  ease the foreclosure crisis. The plan will allow people who owe more than 
their  home is worth, or who have a small amount of equity, to refinance. 
To qualify,  the mortgages have to be owned or backed by Fannie Mae or 
Freddie Mac, and  homeowners have to be current with their loans and have a 
strong 
record of  making payments on time. 
Estimates say as many as 2 million homes could qualify, and critics have  
tried to dismiss the plan, saying it won’t help much, if at all. The plan  
certainly isn’t perfect, but it’s at least a step in the right direction — 
and  it’s more than anyone else has offered.

-- 
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