A look at the new regulations and incentives in the housing bill set to become law

ONP Summary
President Trump announced Friday he will not sign the bipartisan housing bill that Congress passed with broad support, citing the Senate's inaction on voter ID legislation as his reason. The measure automatically becomes law if he doesn't veto it.
Progressive: Hostage-taking over doomed bill — Progressive outlets portrayed Trump as weaponizing the housing bill to pressure Senate action on voter ID legislation they characterized as anti-democratic and unlikely to pass.
Moderate: Stated refusal with automatic effect — Centrist outlets reported Trump's announcement straightforwardly while noting the bill becomes law automatically without his signature if he doesn't veto.
Conservative: Principled legislative pressure — Conservative outlets presented Trump's refusal as legitimate leverage to demand Senate prioritization of his voter ID legislation.
A sweeping new housing bill is set to become law, even without the president's signature.
The measure passed Congress with bipartisan support, but President Trump refused to sign it in protest of the GOP Senate's failure to approve his election legislation, known as the SAVE Act.
Barring a last-minute veto, the bill will usher in new housing regulations and incentives.
Lisa Desjardins reports. ...
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