IT
WAS less than a month ago that a spokesman for retired neurosurgeon Ben
Carson told reporters that the erstwhile GOP presidential candidate
would not be serving the
Trump administration in anything but an unofficial advisory capacity.
“Dr. Carson feels he has no government experience,” Armstrong Williams
said, “he’s never run a federal agency. The last thing he would want to
do was take a position that could cripple the presidency.”
On that basis
alone, President-elect Donald Trump’s announcement Monday that
Mr. Carson would be his choice to head the Department of Housing and
Urban Development was baffling. Add the fact that Mr. Carson has no
relevant expertise whatsoever (secretary of health and human services,
the previous job for which the highly accomplished physician was
mentioned, might have been a different story) and Mr. Trump’s pick goes
well beyond baffling.
In an op-ed last year, he called new Obama administration regulations linking housing aid to more ambitious neighborhood desegregation efforts “government-engineered attempts to legislate racial equality” and suggested that they would be “downright dangerous.” As HUD secretary, he would be in charge of federal fair-housing enforcement.
Mr. Carson’s nomination is the second puzzling sign about where housing policy might be headed under the Trump administration. The first was Treasury Secretary-designate Steven Mnuchin’s comment that “we’ve got to get Fannie [Mae] and Freddie [Mac] out of government ownership. It makes no sense that these are owned by the government and have been controlled by the government for as long as they have.” That could mean Mr. Mnuchin will argue for a total overhaul of the government’s mortgage guarantee business that finally ends the system of private gain, public risk that prevailed before the government took over the failing Fannie and Fred in 2008. Or, it could be interpreted as support for the efforts, so far thwarted by courts and Congress, of hedge funds to make a killing through a Treasury-blessed “privatization.” Certainly it would help if the next HUD secretary were an expert on the housing market capable of weighing in against the more dubious plans being floated for Fannie and Freddie.
Read more on this topic:
The Post’s View: This Fannie-Freddie resurrection needs to die
Bethany McLean: Government-backed mortgage lenders are awful — and essential
Jennifer Rubin: How to treat Trump’s nominees
Eugene Robinson: The GOP’s scariest candidate
Richard Cohen: Ben Carson, gifted fabulist
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