Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 10
Trump Lets Major Housing Bill Take Effect Without Signature Over Voting Curbs
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 10

Trump Lets Major Housing Bill Take Effect Without Signature Over Voting Curbs

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 10

Summary

  • The 21st Century Road to Housing Act will take effect at midnight Saturday without Trump’s signature, after a 10-day deadline expired with no veto.
  • Trump said he was withholding his signature to protest the Senate’s failure to pass the Save America Act, a voting-restrictions measure that lacks enough support to break a Democratic filibuster.
  • Large bipartisan majorities in Congress approved the housing package last month, making it the biggest federal policy shift for buyers, renters and homebuilders in decades.
  • Democrats said Trump was subordinating housing affordability to election politics, while his push for the voting bill has intensified scrutiny of his administration’s midterm preparations.
  • That scrutiny deepened Thursday when Trump fired the last three commissioners of an independent federal body that helps administer elections nationwide.

Insights

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21st Century ROAD to Housing Act Enacted Without Trump’s Signature; SAVE America Act Gridlocked: Implications for Housing and Voting Rights in 2026

Overview

The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act became law on July 10, 2026, after passing the House with strong bipartisan support and being sent to the White House by Speaker Mike Johnson. President Donald Trump chose not to sign or veto the bill during the 10-day constitutional window, allowing it to take effect automatically. This unexpected inaction surprised lawmakers, as many had anticipated a clear endorsement or rejection. The process highlights both the broad consensus on housing reform and the complex political calculations at play, especially as the nation heads toward important elections.

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