Kamala Harris has a new advertising push to draw attention to her plan to build 3 million new homes over four years, a move designed to contain inflationary pressures that also draws a sharp contrast to Republican Donald Trump’s approach.

Harris, the Democratic nominee for president, highlights her plan in a new minute-long ad that uses her personal experience, growing up in rental housing while her mother had saved for a decade before she could buy a home. The ad targets voters in the swing states including Arizona and Nevada. Campaign surrogates are also holding 20 events this week focused on housing issues.

In addition to increasing home construction, Harris is proposing the government provide as much as $25,000 in assistance to first-time buyers. That message carries weight at this moment as housing costs have kept upward pressure on the consumer price index. Shelter costs are up 5.1% over the past 12 months, compared to overall inflation being 2.9%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“Vice President Harris knows we need to do more to address our housing crisis, that’s why she has a plan to end the housing shortage” and will crack down on “corporate landlords and Wall Street banks hiking up rents and housing costs,” said Dan Kanninen, the campaign’s battleground states director.

  • distantsounds@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    It will not fix anything. There are plenty of homes already. Corporate greed is the cause of the housing crisis. There needs to be legislation that makes it unprofitable to own and hold unused properties

    • KRAW@linux.community
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      There are plenty of homes already.

      Plenty of homes where? In my city, which is a major job center, there are hardly any houses for sale. It doesn’t really matter if there are plenty of houses 1+ hours away from my job.

      • Riven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Hardly any houses for sale doesn’t mean there aren’t plenty of empty houses available. They’re just fucking bought up by corpos to sit on as investments or for rentals.

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        How many of the 3 million houses will be built in your area and what impact do you think they will have?

        The problems that are causing the crisis are corporate greed and Airbnb-esque rentals.

        Are you looking to fight the symptoms or the cause?

        Edit: I live in a major city and there is plenty of housing, just not affordable

        • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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          “Affordable” doesn’t exist in a constrained market.

          The price will rise to whatever the richest person without a home can afford to pay.

        • KRAW@linux.community
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          I’d be curious to get some good numbers on this. From a cursory search I got the impression that a very small proportion of homes are AirBnB rentals, but I’m definitely open to looking at conflicting data. Corporate ownership of homes is definitely a problem, and I certainly hope that part of this plan is to prevent these homes from being sold to investors rather than residents. No one is saying we can’t build more homes and address the underlying cause of the shortage at the same time. I know that 3 million homes is not a lot relative to the country’s population. However I am not ready to write them off as useless, since strategically placing these homes in the right areas may still have a significant impact.___

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          I live in a small city outside a major city. I do not know what Harris plans but I have hope for a recent state law encouraging multi-family housing near transit. We do have a train station at the center of town that’s also a bus hub and a great walkable area with shops and restaurants. We already have larger condo and apartment buildings here, and more of those are our best hope to affordability. While those new places won’t be affordable, all the surrounding older three deckers should drop in price, with increased supply

          • distantsounds@lemmy.world
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            Going from suburban to urban was a major quality of life upgrade for me. It still blows my mind how much safer cycling is in the city than in suburbia. I’m hoping the 15min city idea gains momentum because it’s such a better use of space. Transit and micromobility initiatives would be a great thing to hear more about from Harris.

            • AA5B@lemmy.world
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              Yeah, just this past weekend I was driving to a different town out in suburbia and got caught behind an emergency response. While I couldn’t take time to look, given all the action, it surely looked like someone hit a cyclist.

              The road in question gets quite a few cyclists, especially that day and I can see how it would be a good ride. However it winds through the woods with a lot of turns and reduced visibility distance; traffic is heavy as a major route through suburbia; it has no obvious protected lane nor even a shoulder.

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        In my city, there’s hundreds of empty homes for sale, valued at 250k-500k more than what they were a decade ago.

        The houses an hour away in the burbs are all in the middle of nowhere, supported by stripmalls and a single big box store. Those houses are also the same price.

      • TheHiddenCatboy@lemmy.world
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        Have you checked to see how many AirBNB houses you have in your area? There are over a thousand in the area where I live. Of course, AirBNB knows how bad the real number would make them look, so they obfuscate it, but every AirBNB listing can represent a house where a couple might get started. But why sell a home at even 400k when you can rent every room in that house for $250 a night. $250 * 3 (Bedrooms) * 7 * 52 = 273k a year to START, and that number keeps going up and up and up…

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        Same here. Prices are high because so many more people want to live here than there are houses for. There’s almost no unoccupied buildings, but also no undeveloped land. So housing prices are high but no one wants to sell until interest rates come down. Average home prices are racing toward $1M …. And we’re the “affordable” town surrounded by expensive places.

        Sure, I’ve seen places with empty houses …. In the Adirondacks where there are no jobs, in the upstate NY town I grew up in where there are no jobs, where my cousin lives near Buffalo where there are no jobs, etc. Do you see a pattern?

    • ted@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Both. Supply is a real issue, building homes and preventing corporate uptake are both needed to solve this crisis.

    • criticon@lemmy.ca
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      Where? In my area as soon as they announce a new development a few weeks later they have a sign that says “lasts houses left” and a few after that they remove the sale sign

      These are giant ranch houses too, we need lots of small and medium houses

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        Are those houses then listed as corporate rentals? Because that’s super common.

    • zeekaran@sopuli.xyz
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      Supply is absolutely an issue! Many cities have growing populations. Empty homes in the sticks aren’t doing us any favors.

    • Corvidae@lemmy.world
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      There are 258 million adults and 144 million homes in the US. Even if vacant housing is reduced to 0, there’s still not enough housing.

  • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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    It’s such a complex problem, it’s going to take a long time to fix. Part of the problem is people don’t really understand what the real problem is. They think the problem is that there aren’t enough detached, single family homes being built. I get why people would focus on single family homes because that’s what Americans want. The “American Dream” is to own your own home in the suburbs, and if you think that everyone who wants a single family home should be able to buy one, then, yeah, you’re going to see the problem as one of not enough single family homes being built. However, I would argue that the American dream itself is the problem.

    Suburbs are expensive, and inefficient, bad for the environment, and bad for our physical and mental health. Suburbs necessitate car dependence, and cars themselves require a lot of expensive infrastructure. I know a lot of Americans don’t like to hear it, but we really do need to be living in higher density urban areas. Higher density, mixed use urban areas allow people to walk and bike more, which is better for our health. It’s also less expensive. The farther apart everything is, the more you’ll need to drive, and that means owning your own car, which is expensive.

    I don’t think people even necessarily know why they want a single family home. I think Americans want single family homes because we’re told from day one that is what we should want. It’s our culture. You grow up, get married, buy a home in the suburbs, and start a family. You own at least two cars, you drive everywhere, that’s the American dream. I think we need to start questioning if this is really what’s best, and if we should really want it. I know I have, and I’ve decided it isn’t best. I think I would be happier and healthier living in a mixed use urban area, where I could walk or bike to a lot of places, or take public transportation, and if I needed to drive somewhere, maybe I’d take a taxi or rent a car or use some car sharing service.

    Very few places like these exist in the US, and that’s because too many people still want to live in a single family home in the suburbs, and many of those people, also have most of their personal wealth in their home, so they push for restrictive zoning laws and other regulations, limiting how much higher density housing and mixed development can be built, thus making such areas relatively rare and thus expensive. There’s a battle going on between people who want single family homes and people who want higher density, mixed use areas.

    I know people don’t want to talk about that, because they don’t want to make it an us vs them thing, but it just is. Our desires are mutually exclusive, due to the finite nature of land. A given piece of land cannot be both a low density, single family suburb and a higher density, mixed use area, simultaneously. It must be one or the other. How we “fix” the housing crisis depends on which we choose to prioritize. We either find ways to build more and more suburbs, or we eliminate single family zoning and invest in building many more, higher density, mixed use urban areas. I know which one I choose.

    • aubeynarf@lemmynsfw.com
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      living in a city with a lot of housing demand, people definitely don’t all want a single-family house. The big push is for zoning changes that allow higher density development: townhomes and small multifamily construction on what were single family lots with setbacks, accessory dwelling units, mixed use apartment buildings with less parking, etc.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      Meh my suburb definitely helps my health. I border open space, have a great trail that goes all the way to the city center, and to a state park in the other direction. I either ride my bike or use a convenient bus line to get around, unless I have explicit cause to drive. Many of my friends live within a mile or so of me and we regularly meet at the neighborhood fenced off leash dog park, or walk over to the nearby brewery or coffee shop. My grocery store is easy biking distance.

      It’s not all suburbs, many are just built shitty. I love where I live and I am definitely enriched by my neighborhood.

      That said, it’s not for everyone, and to your point lots of higher density housing should be made.

      Probably best not to do widely generalize what all Americans want, or suffer from. Edit the larger problem is corporate gobbling of houses as investments when homes should be a wellness, social stability thing.

      • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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        Certainly some suburbs are better than others. I’m glad that your suburb does not negatively impact your mental and physical wellbeing. Indeed, I am generalizing. However, I would argue that even the best suburbs are still more expensive and worse for the environment than the best urban areas. The more concentrated human population centers are, the more wild land there can be, and that’s better for the planet.

        That being said, I don’t necessarily want to outlaw detached, single family homes, or force people to leave their suburb and move into densely populated urban areas. If your suburb works for you, you should be able to stay there. I do think any tax policies that result in urban areas subsidizing the costs of suburban areas should be eliminated, though.

        • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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          I think we can find shared agreement on the need to attack zoning and land use in urban areas where office space should be converted to housing.

          We can also agree that rewilding open space, increasing the quantity and quality of public transit, modern energy production, polyculturing the suburban yard (from a grass monoculture) are all great things that reduce the impact of suburbs. In my area those topics are increasing popular. I’m regularly seeing people ripping out their grass, for example. But I acknowledge the current status quo of many suburbs which are just grass, detached pickup truck storage.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      Mostly agreed! But here’s my tale:

      I’m exactly where I want to be, home on the edge of a suburb, countryside a mile to the north. The neighborhood was about half developed, half woods. There’s been a few dozen new home built in the past several years, and I’m not happy about it.

      Know those complexes having a couple of hundred apartments? Yeah, losing my home and having to move to one is my nightmare. I hate living packed in like rats and following bullshit rules. Can’t wash your car outside! What if one of your fellow rats slips?

      • drosophila@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        You live on the edge of the developed area, with suburb on one side and countryside on the other.

        And more homes went up, transforming the area that you’re in into more suburb, and cutting you off from nature.

        Do you think the people who moved into those houses also wanted to live with suburb on one side and nature on the other? Conversely, how do you think the people living near the previous edge of the suburb felt when your house went up?

        Do you see the problem with this kind of development?

      • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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        I understand. I don’t necessarily have a problem with relatively restrictive zoning in rural areas. But, I do think restrictive zoning becomes a significant problem, the closer you get to population centers, or the centers of towns and cities. Limiting higher density housing in city and town centers kind of necessitates people moving into suburbs and even, eventually, rural areas. If there isn’t enough suitable, affordable, relatively dense housing where the jobs and schools and shops are, the suburbs will grow and spread. So, if you want to keep your area as rural as possible, you need to make sure people have plenty of housing options in the city and town centers. Unfortunately, much of the land in many city and town centers is currently zoned exclusively for single family homes. That has to change or sprawl will continue.

    • ji17br@lemmy.ml
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      You can’t understand how someone wouldn’t want to live in a sardine can?

      Some people like having space.

      • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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        I don’t think people should have to live in sardine cans, I think people should have the opportunity to live in apartments or condos that meet their needs.

        • ji17br@lemmy.ml
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          All I’m saying is that people absolutely know why they want their own house. Pretending otherwise is a little ridiculous.

          If people want to live in an apartment that’s great, but it should be a choice.

          There should always be suburban and country living.

          • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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            All I’m saying is that people absolutely know why they want their own house. Pretending otherwise is a little ridiculous.

            All I’m saying is I think people’s preferences are influenced by the prevailing culture, which certainly impresses on people that owning a home should be the ideal. We’re all influenced by culture, and we’re not necessarily always consciously aware of it.

            If people want to live in an apartment that’s great, but it should be a choice.

            It should be, I agree. And that’s a big part of the problem: in many cities, a large percentage, or even a majority of the land is zoned exclusively for single family development. There is no choice to build anything else. If the zoning was changed to allow any and all forms of housing to be built, I’m sure neighborhoods of detached, single family homes would still exist, but there would likely be far fewer of them, and/or they would be further from the city center.

  • ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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    Cripple the speculative housing bubble by making corporate property ownership of single family or multifamily dwellings limited to maaaybe 100 properties. Probably less, like 50.

    Give them 5 years to unload assets that are in excess of this legislation and get it passed.

    Doesn’t affect business. Doesn’t affect developers, doesn’t affect anyone but vulture venture capitalists.

    • Fosheze@lemmy.world
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      Why let them own any? That will just lead to multiple holding corps being made. Just ban corporate ownership of single/multi family homes all together.

      • ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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        There’s gonna be some edge cases like charitable corporations that own property for homeless or something we aren’t considering. Blanket bans are rarely the answer.

        Even Japan doesn’t ban guns. You need to pass tests, have a license, and be subject to storage requirements and inspections of that storage. But it is not banned.

  • Pacattack57@lemmy.world
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    This does nothing to address the root cause of housing price increases. Black rock will buy 2.5 million of these homes.

    • Wogi@lemmy.world
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      The way you address that is build 3 million homes, and rent them out at rates 60% lower than market rate, rather than sell them.

      This does not increase ownership, no. But it does force landlords to compete. Why rent from slumlord Paladino, when I could rent a new unit from the US government at half the price?

    • Mirshe@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Exactly this. We already have enough empty dwellings between homes, apartments, condos, etc to house our unhoused population. The issue is affordability, not amount.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago
        1. No, there are not enough places to live, where people want to live
        2. Supply and demand drive pricing. Whether we should have enough or not, a larger supply should reduce prices
        • commie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Supply and demand drive pricing. Whether we should have enough or not, a larger supply should reduce prices

          this is storytelling. it is not science.

  • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    as long as corporations and land horders are allowed to keep buying home and lands to keep the market scarce and rent and sell prices high, it doesnt matter how many homes you build.

    and if you issue an immediate ban on mass home hording, and issue massive monthly fines for exceeding the limit, fines that are multiples of the profit that they make, not fractions, enough homes will immediately flood the market and will bring prices and rent down

    • BedSharkPal@lemmy.ca
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      We all must be missing something. This is too obviously the path forward for there not to be some sort of issue with implementing it ASAP.

      • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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        The issue is that implementing it would basically require an act of God, because the property owners are the ones bribing the lawmakers who would be writing the laws.

        When you look at whether a piece of legislation is popular vs whether it’ll be passed, it’s basically no correlation if you’re poor. The graph is basically a flat line, with about a 30% pass rating regardless of how popular it is. Regardless of whether it’s extremely popular or horribly unpopular, the bill has about a 30% chance of getting passed.

        But if you look at the graph for people who are rich, the graph looks more like a 1:1 line, where pass rates increase as popularity increases. And conversely, the pass rate decreases as it’s less popular with the rich.

        Money talks, and the SCOTUS has legalized bribery. A bill that penalizes landlords would be unpopular with the rich, so it would have a near 0% chance of passing.

      • WarlordSdocy@lemmy.world
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        The issue is rich people don’t want it to happen cause they invest their money in real estate and want the value to keep going up. So they’re gonna make sure neither party pushes for anything like that.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        You all are missing the fact that the problem existing makes you vote for those who promise to solve it. The problem being solved stops that.

  • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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    Building more homes and offering subsidies will only put more money into the builders’ pockets. We already have too many homes. The issue is companies owning hundreds or even thousands of homes, only to refuse to sell or rent 75% of them so they can charge 400% more for the 25% they do sell or rent. It’s blatant market manipulation.

    Begin a vacant property tax, (based on having more than 30 days in the calendar year with the property empty) which ratchets up as you own more vacant properties. So people can have a summer and winter home if they want, without their tax increasing too much. After all, it’s only one vacant home. But when you own a dozen vacant properties, you’re gonna get fucked hard by the IRS.

    It will incentivize companies to actually rent or sell their vacant properties, instead of letting them sit vacant for years at a time. And that 30 days of vacancy should be any 30 days, so people who rent are incentivized to offer longer lease terms and change tenants less than once a year. Meaning short term rentals (AirBnB) will also be less attractive, because they typically only operate at ~50% occupied, as they’ll typically have a few days between rentals. Since short term rentals have been cannibalizing the long term rental markets recently, (lots of landlords have moved towards having properties be full time AirBnBs, which means there are fewer places left for actual tenants,) it will also help correct the rental markets which are overvalued.

    • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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      Begin a vacant property tax, (based on having more than 30 days in the calendar year with the property empty) which ratchets up as you own more vacant properties.

      Property tax should already ratchet up based on how many properties owned, regardless of if they are occupied or not.

    • odelik@lemmy.today
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      All the data I’ve seen in the last 5-10 years suggests that we don’t have enough homes. Even with vacant homes accounted for and how much burden that would relieve.

      That’s one of the reasons why there’s a growing push to bring back the missing middle housing and businesses into our population centers by removing zoning laws that got rid of them in the first place.

      That’s not to say that we shouldn’t also be doing away with corporate ownership of housing and taxing individuals with 3/4+ homes, especially if they’re vacant.

      We need a multi-pronged attack on resolving the housing issue, including the 3m planned homes from a Harris admin.

  • Furbag@lemmy.world
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    We need more than just that. I’m continuing to email the Biden administration monthly about implementing a vacancy tax for private owners with 3 or more single family dwellings. I’ll continue to do so under the Harris administration.

    My only shot at every being able to afford a house is if the billionaires and real estate corporations get taken out of the equation. Taxing them for sitting on empty properties is much better than building more for them to snap up because they won’t be priced fairly to begin with due to market manipulation.

  • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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    No anti-monopoly action promised again.

    “Build a fuckload of subsidized homes” and “lower prices” (that’s what she says, just in smarter words, cause building a lot with budget means will actually increase inflation in all of economy).

    If I were American, I’d think I’m being disrespected with such non-sophisticated promises.

    “See, if it’s not me, it’s that delusional anti-vaxxer fascist over the street, nobody else needs you and I love you.” - Something like that.

    I mean, yeah, if that’s your only other choice.

  • Fisherman75@lemmy.world
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    We need to look at this thing called ‘adapting in place’. I think this is just such a complicated situation that people just need to figure out what’s going on around them, at least for the time being. Radical simplification - corporate greed, yes, but it’s still complicated as to what exactly we do about it.

    • rocket600@lemmy.world
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      Step one: rebel. Final step: live free.

      Be nice to your neighbors and survive long enough to experience change.

  • Fedizen@lemmy.world
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    ironically the quickest way to curb the housing crisis would be to hike the capital gains taxes