John
McCain will direct his Treasury Secretary to implement an American Homeownership
Resurgence Plan (McCain Resurgence Plan) to keep families in their homes, avoid
foreclosures, save failing neighborhoods, stabilize the housing market and
attack the roots of our financial crisis. America’s families are bearing a heavy
burden from falling housing prices, mortgage delinquencies, foreclosures, and a
weak economy. It is important that those families who have worked hard enough to
finance homeownership not have that dream crushed under the weight of the wrong
mortgage. The existing debts are too large compared to the value of housing. For
those that cannot make payments, mortgages must be re-structured to put losses
on the books and put homeowners in manageable mortgages.
The McCain Resurgence Plan would purchase mortgages
directly from homeowners and mortgage servicers, and replace them with
manageable, fixed-rate mortgages that will keep families in their homes. By
purchasing the existing, failing mortgages the McCain resurgence plan will
eliminate uncertainty over defaults, support the value of mortgage-backed
derivatives and alleviate risks that are freezing financial markets.
The McCain resurgence plan would be available to
mortgage holders that:
- Live in the home (primary residence only)
- Can prove their creditworthiness at the time of the original loan (no falsifications and provided a down payment).
The new mortgage would be an
FHA-guaranteed fixed-rate mortgage at terms manageable for the homeowner. The
direct cost of this plan would be roughly $300 billion because the purchase of
mortgages would relieve homeowners of “negative equity” in some homes. Funds
provided by Congress in recent financial market stabilization bill can be used
for this purpose; indeed by stabilizing mortgages it will likely be possible to
avoid some purposes previously assumed needed in that bill.
The plan could be implemented quickly as a result
of the authorities provided in the stabilization bill, the recent housing bill,
and the U.S. government's conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It may
be necessary for Congress to raise the overall borrowing limit.

