Mr. President: Fire this man!

The director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Edward DeMarco, continues to use his power to protect Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the companies that hold half the mortgages in the country. President Obama has finally put forth plans to relieve homeowners, but they will inevitably reach a roadblock: Edward DeMarco is determined to deny attempts to rein in Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, no matter how many Americans’ homes are on the line.

There’s only one solution – President Obama must fire Edward DeMarco! Next week, during Congress’s recess, President Obama has the opportunity to make a recess appointment and replace DeMarco immediately. Tell the President to fire DeMarco today:


Dear friend,

Meet Edward DeMarco. As director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, his job is to do everything in his power to help Americans avoid foreclosure. But DeMarco seems to think his job is just the opposite. In fact, in our fight to get justice for homeowners across the country, Edward DeMarco might just be enemy number one.

DeMarco is a holdover from the Bush administration. He has a very powerful position: he oversees Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which hold half the mortgages in the country. DeMarco has used his position to repeatedly side with Wall Street, and he’s blocked requests by Congress and the Obama administration to help struggling homeowners by reducing principals on loans. Principal reduction — which means resetting underwater mortgages so they’re closer to fair market value — is an essential solution that millions of families need, but DeMarco is dead set against them.

Now here’s the good news: Next week, during Congress’s recess, President Obama has the opportunity to make a recess appointment and replace DeMarco immediately. Let’s ask the President to do just that.

Tell President Obama to fire Edward DeMarco this week and appoint a new director that won’t stand in the way of relief for homeowners.

DeMarco has come under harsh criticism from members of Congress, and for good reason. He is absolutely opposed to principal reductions on loans, a measure that’s been touted by economists and U.S. government officials as the best way to help homeowners who are underwater on their mortgages.

But it doesn’t end there.

A recent news investigation revealed that, under DeMarco, Freddie Mac invested billions of dollars in Wall Street securities that bet against homeowners’ ability to refinance their loans, while at the same time raising fees that made it harder for homeowners to refinance.

Let’s be clear: DeMarco isn’t just doing a bad job. He is actively working against the interests of American homeowners and the government’s efforts to help them. That’s an outrage, and it’s time for President Obama to fire him.

Sign the petition and demand DeMarco be fired and replaced immediately.

The President made a strong recess appointment when he installed Richard Cordray recently as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, selecting someone we could rely on to serve the interests of people over Wall Street. We need a similar leader at the helm of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, and Edward DeMarco isn’t it.

With enough signatures, we can send a message to President Obama and remove a major obstacle in our mission to get justice for homeowners.

Thank you,

Natalie

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3 Responses to Mr. President: Fire this man!

  1. Guy that didn't buy an overpriced home says:

    I don’t understand the concept of an “underwater” home and why this is a bad thing. A house is two things: 1) a home for you and your family, and 2) an investment that outside of a bubble should on average maintain value or lose value slowly (not gain value, this is bubble thinking, it will still be the same house).
    Regardless of the current assessed value of your house it is still filling its requirements as a home, meaning #1 is met. Regarding #2, an investment, many people that bought at the height of the bubble owe more than the current market value. However, this has no bearing on what the home will sell for in 5, 10 or 30 years (the length of most mortgages). If your home is “underwater”, don’t sell it now. Wait until the market recovers and the home is worth about what you paid for it. Its current value in relation to what you paid is really irrelevant.

  2. Retired Realty Appraiser says:

    I think FHA and FHFA should realize that “Reverse Mortgages” are just as toxic as unregulated subprime mortgages. They are just like “strategic defaults”. What elderly person would spend money to maintain a home that they have already signed away on? Stop Reverse Mortages – they are as bad as No Income No Asset Mortgages that were a major part of the Meltdown.

  3. Julia Littell says:

    The Obama Administration needs to demonstrate its commitments to the rights of ordinary citizens over corrupt power players (banks, Wall Street firms, lobbyists, etc.). There is so much that you can do to right the wrongs of the recent past. We are watching. We had Hope. With you, we wanted that Hope to be realized. It’s your turn again. We are counting on you. Don’t disappoint us.

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