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WINNING: Trump's Housing Boom CRUSHES West Coast Affordability Crisis - Even Liberal Strongholds Can't Fight Economics

Gary FranchiFebruary 6, 2026239 views
WINNING: Trump's Housing Boom CRUSHES West Coast Affordability Crisis - Even Liberal Strongholds Can't Fight Economics
Photo by Generated on Unsplash

The Trump effect is already delivering results where it matters most - your wallet. Just ten days after President Trump's inauguration, even the notoriously expensive West Coast is witnessing something Democrats said was impossible: housing is actually becoming more affordable.

While leftist politicians spent years blaming everything from capitalism to climate change for their housing disasters, Trump is proving once again that smart policy and economic confidence can move mountains - even in deep blue strongholds like California.

Trump Homes Initiative Sparks Market Response

The latest proof comes from major homebuilders who are already responding to Trump's pro-growth agenda. As trader @Nugget_Trades reported on social media: "@Lennar and other homebuilders report 'Trump Homes' proposal β€” potentially up to ~1M entry-level homes aimed at improving affordability."

That's right, Patriots - while Democrats were busy regulating construction into oblivion and driving costs through the roof with their green new scam policies, Trump is unleashing American builders to do what they do best: build homes Americans can actually afford.

"If affordability improves, housing turnover will re-accelerate," the market analyst noted, highlighting how Trump's policies create a positive cycle of economic growth.

This comes despite the howling from leftist politicians who apparently haven't figured out they can't repeal the basic laws of supply and demand - though knowing these economic illiterates, they'll probably try.

West Coast Wins Despite Itself

The most remarkable part? This is happening in the very states where Democrat governors have spent decades making housing unaffordable through endless regulations, environmental extremism, and anti-business policies. Yet even their bureaucratic maze can't stop the Trump boom.

From reducing regulatory burdens to unleashing American energy independence, Trump's America First agenda is creating the economic conditions that make housing development profitable again. Meanwhile, developers are responding with plans for potentially one million new entry-level homes.

The question isn't whether Trump's policies work - we're seeing the results already. The question is: how long before even the most stubborn Democrat voters admit that putting America First delivers results their party never could?

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Gary Franchi

Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.

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SmallBizOwnerVerifiedjust now
My real estate agent in Portland - yes, PORTLAND - just told me there are actually multiple new developments breaking ground this month. When's the last time we heard good news like that from Oregon?
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AmericaFirst2024Verifiedjust now
WINNING! πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ
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EconMajor88Verifiedjust now
This is basic economics 101 - increase supply, prices stabilize. Trump's deregulation efforts are removing the red tape that was strangling new construction for decades.
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BuilderBobVerifiedjust now
As someone in construction, I can confirm the permit process has gotten much smoother in the past year.
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TaxpayerFredVerifiedjust now
Liberal policies created this mess with endless regulations and NIMBY attitudes. Now sound economic principles are cleaning it up, even in their own backyard.
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PatriotMike2024Verifiedjust now
Finally! Trump's pro-business policies are showing real results where it matters most - housing affordability. Even the blue states can't argue with supply and demand economics.
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ConservativeVoterVerifiedjust now
Exactly! The free market works when government gets out of the way.
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CaliforniaExodusVerifiedjust now
I moved from San Francisco to Texas two years ago because I couldn't afford a decent home. Now I'm seeing friends back there actually talking about being able to buy again. Is this housing boom really reaching the Bay Area too?