119 HR 827

Homeowners’ Defense Act of 2025

Congress119
ChamberHouse
TypeHR
Number827
Introduced2025-01-28
Cosponsors2

Latest Action

Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.

2025-01-28

Read the Bill

Primary sources on Congress.gov:

Persona Takes on This Bill

Constituent Impact (Pressure Desk)

Hormuz friction is a household energy-cost event and a potential mortgage-rate event simultaneously; the CFPB rollbacks quietly remove fair-lending protections for the borrowers least able to self-advocate.

The legislative cluster on Iran matters to households in a way the vote-count frame undersells. The intel roundtable tells us what the bills are really about at ground level: if Iran moves from declaratory Hormuz interdiction to intermittent enforcement, the transmission mechanism is insurance and freight cost repricing on Gulf shipping — and that repricing flows directly into gasoline prices, home heating oil, diesel for freight, and LNG spot prices feeding European utilities. American households don't need to understand Hormuz geography to feel it at the pump. Analysts in the roundtable cite a 30-40% increase in shipping costs for Cape of Good Hope rerouting. That's not abstract — that's the difference between stable and spiking diesel costs for every small business owner running a delivery route. For renters and homeowners, the secondary channel is interest rates. If energy price spikes reignite inflation expectations, the Federal Reserve's rate path shifts, and mortgage rates respond. A household refinancing or buying in this environment faces compounding headwinds from a geopolitical standoff their representatives are producing resolutions about but cannot actually resolve legislatively. Rep. Slotkin's gas price tracker resolution (119hconres90) is politically shrewd precisely because it makes visible what consumers are already experiencing — but it is a thermometer, not a thermostat. On the CFPB front: the two disapproval resolutions (119hjres160, 119hjres161) are defending rules that directly protected borrowers from discriminatory lending and from predatory financial products. If those CFPB rule withdrawals are allowed to stand without congressional disapproval — which the math suggests they will be — the segments most exposed are first-time homebuyers, minority borrowers, and households with limited banking relationships who depend on CFPB oversight as their primary consumer protection backstop. The headline says 'regulatory reform.' The fine print says those borrowers lose a layer of protection with no replacement offered.

2026-05-13

Markets vs Bill

Computed consensus across 1 related market

Yes Probability (volume-weighted)20%
Verdictleaning no
Momentumflat (+0.0pp)
Total Volume99.8K
polymarket Expires 2026-12-31
NATO x Russia military clash by December 31, 2026?
Yes: 20% Volume: 99.8K Source →
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"119 HR 827: Homeowners’ Defense Act of 2025." Apprised.news. Accessed 2026-05-13. https://apprised.news/bill/119hr827.

BibTeX

@misc{apprised_119_hr_827_homeowners_defense_act_of_202,
  title = {119 HR 827: Homeowners’ Defense Act of 2025},
  publisher = {Apprised.news},
  url = {https://apprised.news/bill/119hr827},
  note = {Accessed 2026-05-13}
}