The Spring Street Brief
The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act passed the House 396-13, with White House advisers signaling the President would sign the bill in its current form. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott (R-SC) and Ranking Member Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) issued a joint statement pledging to advance legislation — but signaled the Senate's version isn't simply a rubber stamp on the House bill. A key fault line over institutional investor home-buying restrictions remains unresolved between progressive lawmakers in both chambers. Key Takeaways: * The House passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act 396-13, reflecting overwhelming bipartisan support rarely seen on housing legislation. * The White House issued a Statement of Administration Policy indicating presidential advisers would recommend the President sign the bill as passed — a strong pre-signature signal. * Senate Banking Committee Chairman Scott and Ranking Member Warren issued a joint statement committing to continue work toward a bill that can pass the Senate, stopping short of endorsing the House text outright. * The institutional investor single-family home-buying provision remains a point of disagreement between House Financial Services Ranking Member Maxine Waters (D-CA) and Senator Warren — a fault line that could force amendments or a conference process. * The Senate previously passed its own strong bipartisan housing bill, meaning reconciliation between chambers is a live possibility, introducing timeline risk for practitioners. * LIHTC stakeholders should monitor the Senate Banking Committee for markup activity and any targeted amendments to the institutional investor provision. * The bill's momentum is real — a 396-13 vote and White House backing are rare alignments — but Senate procedure and intra-progressive disagreements could slow final passage. This is one of the most significant bipartisan housing pushes in years, and the political window appears genuinely open. For affordable housing investors, developers, and syndicators, the near-term question is whether the Senate moves on the House text or insists on its own version — and how the institutional investor provision gets resolved without fracturing the coalition. Track Senate Banking Committee activity closely over the coming weeks. Subscribe to The Spring Street Brief for daily updates on affordable housing in America.
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