President Trump's latest move to help working Americans achieve the American Dream has Wall Street's corporate overlords scrambling to protect their profit margins – and it's beautiful to watch.
The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, backed by Trump and moving through Congress, would fundamentally reshape America's housing market by banning large financial firms from snatching up single-family homes that should go to actual families, not investment portfolios.
And surprise, surprise – corporate America is absolutely losing their minds over it.
Trump Delivers on Promise to Working Families
On the one-year anniversary of his triumphant return to the White House in January, President Trump signed a game-changing executive order directing his Cabinet to draft rules that would stop Wall Street vultures from pricing out middle-class families.
For too long, massive investment firms like BlackRock have been swooping into neighborhoods across America, buying up homes with cash offers that working families simply can't compete with. The result? Skyrocketing prices that have locked millions of hardworking Americans out of homeownership.
But Trump isn't standing for it. While the previous administration sat on their hands and watched corporate greed destroy the housing market, this president is actually fighting for the people who elected him.
"Housing prices have locked millions of working- and middle-class families out of the market," according to reports on the legislation's impact.
The corporate think tanks are already mobilizing their propaganda machine, churning out studies about why letting Wall Street monopolize housing is somehow good for America. Don't buy it for a second.
Why This Matters to You
This isn't just about housing policy – it's about whether America will remain a country where hard work and saving can still buy you a piece of the American Dream, or whether we'll become a nation of permanent renters serving corporate landlords.
Trump gets it. His America First agenda recognizes that a strong middle class needs affordable housing, not financial speculation that treats homes like stock portfolios.
The establishment's howling over this bill tells you everything you need to know: when corporate America hates something Trump is doing, it's probably exactly what working Americans need.
