- President Trump refused to commit to signing a bipartisan housing bill that passed both chambers by wide margins, calling it “so unimportant” compared to the Save America Act voter ID bill — deliberately withholding his signature to pressure Senate Republicans who say they lack the votes to pass the voting measure.
- The housing bill has been formally transmitted to the White House, starting a 10-day clock (excluding Sundays) in which Trump must sign, veto, or let it become law without his signature — giving him legal leverage even without a formal veto.
- The legislation would curb large institutional investors’ ownership of single-family homes, streamline factory-built housing rules, and incentivize localities to remove construction barriers — provisions designed to boost housing supply and address the US affordability crisis.
- Trump scrapped a planned signing ceremony last week, now claims the bill is “more advantageous to Democrats,” and is using it as a bargaining chip even as GOP leaders have positioned it as a centerpiece of their affordability agenda ahead of November’s midterm elections.
What Happened?
President Trump told reporters Monday he has yet to decide whether to sign the bipartisan housing bill, which passed both the House and Senate by wide margins. He dismissed the legislation as “so unimportant” compared to his preferred priority, the Save America Act voter ID bill, and accused Democrats of needing the housing bill because their own policy record is weak. Trump scrapped a planned signing ceremony last week. The housing bill has now been formally transmitted to the White House by a House Republican aide, triggering a 10-day window in which Trump can sign, veto, or — if he takes no action — allow it to become law by default.
Why It Matters?
The housing bill represents one of the most significant bipartisan legislative achievements of this Congress: it targets institutional investors’ concentration in single-family homes, accelerates factory-built housing approvals, and removes local zoning barriers to new construction. For millions of Americans struggling with housing affordability, it offers meaningful near-term relief. By withholding his signature, Trump is essentially using the housing crisis as a political hostage to extract a Senate vote on voter ID — a move House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries called a “Donald Trump temper tantrum.” With November midterms approaching and voters giving Trump poor marks on the economy and consumer prices, the political risk of blocking the bill is real for both parties.
What’s Next?
The 10-day clock has started. If Trump neither signs nor vetoes, the bill becomes law automatically — a face-saving off-ramp if Senate Republicans don’t move on the voting bill. A formal veto would require a two-thirds override vote in both chambers, a high bar even for popular bipartisan legislation. Senate GOP leaders say they lack the votes for the Save America Act and any rule changes needed to pass it, suggesting Trump’s leverage play may simply delay the housing bill’s enactment rather than achieving his voting measure goals.
Source: Bloomberg













