The Act
End Corporate Ownership of Single-Family Homes
The Policy
Corporations and institutional investors may not own single-family homes. Existing corporate owners must divest to owner-occupants within 2 years.
Why It Matters
- •Wall Street firms have purchased hundreds of thousands of single-family homes since 2008
- •Institutional buyers pay cash, outbidding families who need mortgages
- •Corporate ownership converts homes from shelter into financial assets
- •Rent extraction replaces homeownership, trapping families as permanent tenants
What History Tells Us
- •Before 2008, institutional ownership of single-family homes was negligible
- •The American Dream of homeownership was achievable for middle-class families
- •Many states already restrict corporate ownership of farmland—the same logic applies to homes
Implementation
- •2-year divestment period for existing corporate holdings
- •Sales must be to owner-occupants (verified by residency requirements)
- •Aggregate beneficial ownership to prevent shell-company workarounds
- •Exemptions: Small landlords (under 10 properties), family trusts, nonprofits
Reduce Immigration by 90% for 10 Years
The Policy
Reduce all immigration categories by 90% for a period of 10 years. After 10 years, reassess based on housing availability and wage data.
Why It Matters
- •The U.S. admits over 1 million legal immigrants annually, plus hundreds of thousands more through other channels
- •Housing construction cannot keep pace with population growth
- •When demand exceeds supply, prices rise—this is basic economics
- •A temporary pause allows housing supply to catch up with existing population
What History Tells Us
- •The Immigration Act of 1924 dramatically reduced immigration for 40 years
- •During this period (1924-1965), the American middle class expanded dramatically
- •Wages rose, homeownership became widespread, and inequality decreased
- •A tight labor market gives workers bargaining power
Implementation
- •90% reduction across all visa categories
- •10-year duration with mandatory reassessment
- •Existing legal residents and pending applications grandfathered
- •Reassessment criteria: housing affordability index, wage growth, homeownership rates
End H-1B Visa Program, Restore H-1
The Policy
Terminate the H-1B visa program and restore the original H-1 visa framework with strict requirements: direct employment only, no staffing agencies, genuine specialty occupations.
Why It Matters
- •H-1B has been captured by staffing firms and body shops that exploit the program
- •Companies use H-1B to pay below-market wages, suppressing pay for all workers
- •American tech workers are laid off while companies sponsor H-1B replacements
- •The lottery system treats visas as a commodity rather than a tool for genuine talent
What History Tells Us
- •The original H-1 visa (pre-1990) required genuine specialty occupations
- •H-1B was created in 1990 and has been repeatedly expanded and exploited
- •Studies show H-1B workers are paid 17-34% less than comparable American workers
- •Top H-1B employers are outsourcing firms, not innovative companies
Implementation
- •Immediate halt to new H-1B applications
- •Restore H-1 with requirements: direct employment, no staffing agencies, genuine need
- •Employers must demonstrate they cannot find American workers at market wages
Transition Rules for Current H-1B Holders
- •Less than 5 years on H-1B: Visa expires within 1 year. May apply for H-1 visa under new requirements to remain.
- •5+ years on H-1B: Must convert to H-1 visa or Green Card within 2 years.
End Foreign Ownership of Residential Property
The Policy
Non-citizens may not purchase residential real estate unless they hold a Green Card (permanent resident status). Existing foreign owners must divest within 2 years.
Why It Matters
- •Foreign buyers use U.S. real estate as a safe-haven asset and money-parking vehicle
- •Cash purchases by foreign buyers outbid American families who need mortgages
- •Properties often sit vacant or are used as occasional vacation homes
- •Foreign capital flows drive up prices without adding to the productive economy
What History Tells Us
- •Many countries restrict foreign ownership of residential property (Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Switzerland)
- •U.S. states have historically regulated land ownership by non-citizens
- •Housing was more affordable when homes were purchased by people who lived in them
Implementation
- •Green Card minimum required for residential property purchase
- •2-year divestment period for existing foreign-owned properties
- •Close LLC and trust loopholes through beneficial ownership disclosure
- •Exemptions: U.S. citizens living abroad, those actively pursuing permanent residence
Increase Housing Construction
The Policy
Partner with local municipalities to dramatically increase housing construction through federal incentives, streamlined permitting, and infrastructure support.
Why It Matters
- •The U.S. is short an estimated 3-5 million housing units
- •Local zoning and permitting processes block new construction
- •NIMBY opposition prevents housing even where demand exists
- •Reducing demand alone is not enough—supply must also increase
What History Tells Us
- •Post-WWII America built housing rapidly through federal programs and streamlined processes
- •Levittown and similar developments made homeownership accessible to the middle class
- •Japan and other countries with permissive building rules have lower housing costs
Implementation
- •Incentive Funding: Bonus federal funding for jurisdictions that exceed housing production targets
- •Reduced Funding: Cut federal funds for jurisdictions that systematically block development
- •Model Permitting: Federal fast-track approval templates for municipalities to adopt
- •Infrastructure Support: Federal investment in water, sewer, and roads for new development areas
- •Public Land: Make federal land available for housing development
- •Technical Assistance: Federal support for local zoning reform efforts