Politics & Government
GOP Candidates Agree Less Government Will Help Housing Crisis
Although they hurled personal attacks at each other, Republican presidential candidates seemed to have similar ideas on decreasing foreclosures.

The federal government should be less involved in the housing crisis, according to all four Republican presidential candidates.
During aΒ Β at theΒ Β Monday night, each candidate said that before the housing bubble burst, owning a home in the United States was too easy.
According toΒ CNBC, Florida is theΒ sixth in the nation in housing foreclosures. One in every 396 households is in foreclosure.
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βYou have to get government out of the mess,β said Mitt Romney.
The housing market isnβt going to improve unless the employment rate improves, Romney said. The way to help those facing foreclosure is to help the economy.
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Later in the debate, Romney said President Barack Obama doesnβt understand how to improve the economy.
Ron Paul said interest rates were kept too low for too long, and the bubble was easily seen ahead of time.
βWe need to get out of the way,β he said of government, adding that housing debt has to be liquidated.
Newt Gingrich said the government should repeal theΒ Dodd-Frank Act, which was passed in 2010 and reformed financial regulations in the United States.
Rick Santorum said that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have done more harm than good. He said banks should be allowed to realize their losses.
βLet capitalism work,β he said.
Santorum also talked about a plan he has to let homeowners deduct their losses from the sale of their homes. He said the plan would allow people the freedom to get out from underneath the mortgage debt of homes that have lost their value.
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