Trump undecided on housing bill sent to White House

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Trump said he had not decided whether to sign a bipartisan housing bill already sent to the White House.

Why this matters

The bill addresses housing supply and affordability, and its fate now depends on whether Trump signs, vetoes, or takes no action within the review period. The standoff also reflects broader pressure on Senate Republicans over Trump's separate voting legislation.

President Donald Trump said Monday he had not decided whether to sign a bipartisan housing bill that Congress has sent to the White House.

Trump told reporters he would decide after receiving the measure, though a House Republican aide said it had already been formally transmitted. Once delivered, the bill starts a 10-day period, excluding Sundays, for the president to sign or veto it. If he takes no action, it becomes law.

Trump again criticized the housing measure and contrasted it with voting legislation he has urged the Senate to pass.

Last week, Trump canceled a planned signing ceremony for the housing bill, which passed the House and Senate by wide margins.

The legislation would limit large institutional investors’ ownership of single-family homes, streamline rules for factory-built housing, and encourage local governments to remove barriers to construction in an effort to increase housing supply.

The bill’s uncertain status comes as Trump presses Senate Republicans to change chamber rules to pass a voter ID measure. Republican leaders have said they do not have the votes to pass the voting bill or make rule changes.

The delay also denied lawmakers in both parties, and Trump, an opportunity to highlight action on housing affordability before November’s midterm elections.

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said the uncertainty over the bipartisan bill was due only to a “Donald Trump temper tantrum.”

Republican leaders have promoted the measure as part of an affordability agenda focused on rising costs.

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