Care to try and back that statement? I would argue quite the opposite. It was the lack of government intervention and regulation specifically by the GOP led House from 1995 - 2006 that caused this mess, not the aforementioned. Intervention and regulation falls sqaurely in the laps of Congress and in this matter Republicans were a complete and total failure as usual. I would even argue further that Bush himself was a major cause of this meltdown with his so-called "Amercian Homeownership Challenge" policies.Your own statement backs up mine. Do you think this would have occured if the government had not encouraged the lending policies? If Fannie Mae had not bought the loans?"For years there were bills in Congress to try to address what they called predatory lending, perhaps that was a prejorative -- lax lending -- but it was bad lending, whatever type of adjective you want to put on it. And they just couldn't get the political momentum to get anything done. And I think that was because everybody was making money. Even borrowers were making money if they could keep refinancing."
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl...wegothere.html
"Republicans were in power from 1995 through 2006 in the House, and they had complete control over what legislation did or did not pass."
“...in the years the Republicans wish to ignore because they cannot defend what happened – is that the Bush administration pushed for even more subprime lending, Alan Greenspan refused to use congressional authority he’d been given in 1994 to regulate it, and the House Republicans blocked any efforts to legislate against it. In fact, as quoted in a story in the Bloomberg News, when the Bush administration ordered Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to increase significantly the number of loans they bought for people below median income..."Originally Posted by F-Sharp
http://www.house.gov/apps/list/press...s0312092.shtml
And of course there was this back in 2002:
"In June, President Bush announced the national goal of increasing the number of minority homeowners by at least 5.5 million by the end of this decade. Meeting the President's goal will not only help more Americans enjoy the benefits of owning their own homes it will also help strengthen America's economy. According to a study released today by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, meeting the President's goal will involve $256 billion in economic activity in the form of construction and remodeling jobs, spending on household goods, and other benefits."
http://www.policyalmanac.org/social_..._housing.shtml
You might be right that Bush deserves more criticism than I give him but if you do the same research on idiots like Barney Frank I bet you would find plenty to blame them for also.
As you have probably noticed unless you have a 60 vote majority in the Senate no one party controls Congress. Just for the record I like it that way. If you can't get 60% of the people to agree on something then it probably should not be done. I would actually prefer a higher percentage.