During Thursday night’s historic presidential debate broadcast by CNN, housing issues only came up briefly, and only from one candidate. The debate was the first in decades not to be sponsored by the bipartisan Commission on Presidential Debates, the first presidential debate with a commercial break and the first television debate between a current and former president.
In his introductory remarks, President Joe Biden came right out of the gate mentioning housing costs as an issue he wants to address if he’s elected to a second term.
“We’re going to be able to reduce the price of housing,” Biden said of a potential second term in the debate’s opening moments. “We’re going to make sure we build 2 million new units. We’re going to make sure we cap rents so corporate greed can’t take over… corporate greed is the reason why we’re in this problem right now.”
Later, during a question about issues facing Black Americans, Biden mentioned challenges including “segregation that exists among these corporate operations that collude to keep people out of their houses.” He also mentioned his proposal for a $10,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers.
The Biden administration has been vocal about housing issues this year, including in a dedicated section of the president’s State of the Union address this past March. In the lead-up to that speech, the White House released a housing plan that included an annual tax credit that would give eligible beneficiaries $400 a month for two years to put toward mortgage payments.
He also proposed cutting the requirement for title insurance on some loans, a controversial element of the plan, though it only applies to refinances.
Former President Donald Trump did not specifically mention housing during the debate, nor did any question from moderators Jake Tapper and Dana Bash specifically focus on it. As of Thursday evening, housing is not present on the “issues” section of Trump’s campaign website.
WASHINGTON — The Senate Banking Committee will consider the nomination of Christy Goldsmith Romero to chair the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on July 11, the panel announced.
Goldsmith Romero, who currently sits on the board of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, was just recently announced as the Biden administration’s pick to lead the FDIC in the wake of a workplace misbehavior scandal at the agency.
The committee, in the same hearing, will also consider the nominations of Caroline Crenshaw to be a member of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Kristin Johnson to be assistant secretary of financial institutions at the Treasury Department and Gordon Ito to be a member of the Financial Stability Oversight Council with expertise in insurance.
The Senate Banking Committee hearing marks the first official step in the process to confirming Goldsmith Romero’s nomination — a race against the clock at this point with a limited number of legislative days left in Congress. Goldsmith Romero would replace current FDIC Chairman Martin Gruenberg, who announced he would resign upon the confirmation of a successor.
Should the nominations pass the Senate Banking Committee, they will go to the full Senate.
While Goldsmith Romero hasn’t triggered any pushback so far from Republicans, the confirmation of her nomination is still far from guaranteed.
Democrats have enough votes to usher her and the other nominations through the Senate, but only if they remain united in their support — including among those seeking reelection in vulnerable seats in the 2024 elections. Republicans have been unusually successful in sinking the nominations of the Biden administration’s financial regulatory nominees in the past, pulling Democratic support, for example, from picks like Sarah Bloom Raskin and Saule Omarova.
Should she make it through the confirmation process, Goldsmith Romero would inherit an FDIC that not only is still reeling from the public revelation about the agency’s culture, but that has a busy regulatory schedule.
On Thursday — in what could very well be Gruenberg’s final board meeting as chairman — the agency finalized a rule bolstering resolution plans for large regional banks. Other key rulemakings, like the Basel III endgame proposal, are still pending.
Goldsmith Romero potentially would have only a limited number of months with a Democratic board. Should Donald Trump win the presidential election, Goldsmith Romero would not necessarily have to step down as chairman, but would be up against a 3-2 partisan split that would make governing the agency difficult.
Would Donald Trump’s return to the White House be good for the mortgage industry? Experts aren’t so sure.
The majority of mortgage professionals voted Republican in 2020 and say they’ll do the same this November, according to a recent Arizent survey. Many housing finance players still support President Biden, but the business is about the most Republican-leaning group among their financial services peers also surveyed.
No matter who’s in the Oval Office over the following four years, stakeholders suggest neither leader will directly help lenders and origination activity.
“We’re not assuming the election changes anything significantly for the mortgage industry,” said Bose George, managing director at Keefe, Bruyette and Woods.
Lenders are most worried about interest rates, a number the president, despite any past criticisms, has no control over. Experts who spoke to National Mortgage News about a possible Trump second term pointed to the small impacts his potential second term could deliver.
With the upcoming presidential debates scheduled between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, it’s essential to consider how fact-checkers will play a crucial role in ensuring transparency and accuracy during these discussions. As Mr. Trump has a history of making false or misleading claims, having independent moderators like CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, as well as ABC’s debate moderators, will be critical in maintaining the integrity of these events.
During the debates, fact-checkers will have to swiftly address any untrue statements made by the candidates, helping viewers understand which claims are based on accurate information and which are not. In doing so, they’ll contribute to a more informed public discourse and help protect the credibility of those participating in the debates.
In conclusion, as Trump continues to take credit for achievements he did not contribute to and as Biden’s accomplishments are scrutinized under the microscope of fact-checking, it is essential that debate moderators prioritize accuracy and transparency. This will ensure that voters can make informed decisions based on reliable information provided during these crucial events.
In recent developments pertaining to the Trump immunity cases, U.S. District Judge Aileen M. Cannon has signaled her intention to hold a substantial hearing on the matter of special counsel Jack Smith’s appointment. This marks yet another successful delay tactic employed by former President Donald Trump and his legal team. While Cannon’s apparent interest in the subject is noteworthy, it also feeds into the two chief criticisms of her handling of the case: that she’s slow-walking it and treating Trump’s delay tactics more seriously than they deserve.
This effort to question the legality of special counsels has been spearheaded by prominent conservative lawyers, including former Reagan administration attorney general Edwin Meese III. These legal experts have argued for years that special counsels like Mueller and Smith aren’t authorized under the law because they are not confirmed by the Senate. Critics maintain that special counsels should be considered “principal” rather than “inferior” officers, thus requiring Senate confirmation.
Despite Cannon’s apparent interest in this line of argument, it has fared poorly with regard to Robert S. Mueller III. Two U.S. district judges, including a Trump nominee, rejected a similar claim about Mueller’s appointment. Later, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit unanimously upheld the decision.
However, in our current political and legal climate, nothing can be ruled out. As Katy Harriger, an expert on special counsels at Wake Forest University, points out, “As has been made clear in other areas, commitment to earlier precedent for precedent’s sake is not an animating value of this Court.” With the current majority on the Roberts Court generally hostile to appointment arrangements that limit presidential control over executive actors, there is uncertainty as to whether a special counsel like Smith meets the requirements for an “inferior officer.”
Critics of Trump’s continued immunity claims may deride the Supreme Court for taking up these issues after they were roundly rejected by a unanimous appeals court panel. However, in this instance, the court seems more inclined to decide on guardrails rather than actually sparing Trump from prosecution.
As we move closer to a potential second Trump term in which he’s poised to further test the limits of the chief executive, it would seem less drastic for courts to sign off on the idea that Smith’s particular appointment was unlawful. And if Cannon’s latest controversial decision is any indication, this outcome may be in play. The question now is whether the historically conservative Supreme Court might ultimately take a similar stance. Only time will tell how this saga unfolds and what impact it may have on the future of special counsels in America.
Older voters in the battleground state of Pennsylvania are poised to make their presence — and preferences — felt in the upcoming fall elections that will determine control of the White House, the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate. Chief on their minds are issues that include Social Security and aging in place.
This is according to a poll of voters within the state conducted by AARP Research, which tabulated survey data from voters ages 50 and older. The organization enlisted a “bipartisan polling team” from Fabrizio Ward (described as a Republican pollster) and Impact Research (described as Democratic) and got perspectives from roughly 1,400 voters across the state.
This included “a statewide representative sample of 600 likely voters, with an oversample of 470 likely voters 50-plus and an additional oversample of 328 Black likely voters 50-plus, between April 24–30, 2024,” AARP Research explained.
In addition to the insights into issues driving older voters’ preferences, AARP Research also found that “Pennsylvania voters 50 and older are the most committed age group for voting in the 2024 election and appear to be on track to be deciders” in the contest, according to the organization.
The top six issues isolated to voters 50 and older include Social Security (79%); Medicare (73%), aging in place (or “policies to help seniors live independently at home as they age, 68%); utility costs (67%) and housing (59%).
For those that named aging in place as a concern, 37% of respondents described it as “extremely important,” while 34% said it was “very important.” That’s only 2% to 3% lower than the split for the Medicare issue, according to the survey.
Sixty-three percent of older voters also said they were “very worried” about their own personal financial situation, with older women (69%) more concerned than older men (59%). Republican voters found themselves more worried (73%) about it than Democratic voters (51%).
In terms of candidate preferences, voters in Pennsylvania stated they are more likely to support former President Donald Trump over President Joe Biden on both a full ballot that includes certain third-party candidates (46% to 41%) and on a direct two-way ballot (49% to 45%).
“Trump is ahead in large part due to more consolidated support from Republicans than Biden is getting from Democrats, while Trump also has a slight edge with Independents,” the report explains. “There are large gender, race, education, and regional differences in [the] planned 2024 vote for president.”
According to research from Penn State Harrisburg released in 2017, “the elderly population’s (age 65 and over) growth occurred at [a] rate over 20 times that of the state’s general population — an increase by 16.3 percent from 2010 to 2017.”
The cost to buy a home has reached historic highs in the U.S. — the median price of a home is $420,800, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis — and housing and mortgage costs are increasingly turning into a November election issue.
Home shoppers today need to an annual income of $114,000 in order to comfortably afford a typical home in the U.S., according to Redfin, nearly double what was needed to afford a typical home in 2020. That figure is far above the 2022 median household income of $74,580, according to the Census Bureau.
Higher monthly payments are driven by higher home prices as well as significantly higher interest rates. Mortgage interest rates, which dipped to an historic low of 2.65% on a 30-year fixed mortgage in 2021, have soared beyond 7%, higher than they’ve been since 2001. Interest rates are set by the independent Federal Reserve, and President Joe Biden has insisted on the Fed’s independence. The Federal Reserve has been raising interest rates since 2021 in order to combat stubborn inflation.
smaller, entry-level homes, several experts agree.
Once interest rates are removed from the picture, “then you’re left focusing mainly on the supply shortfall,” said Jim Parrott, fellow at the Urban Institute and former Obama White House economic adviser.
The housing market has seen a severe shortage of smaller starter homes, Parrott said. Builders, he said, are incentivized to build large, often mansion-like homes, which more easily turn a profit.
“The cost of building larger homes tends to be quite high, and it’s easier to recoup those costs if you’re making big, expensive homes,” Parrott said.
The federal government needs to “make the math for building homes at the bottom of the market more favorable” for developers, Parrott suggested. And Congress can do this with the tax code. One approach would be to give a tax cut to any builder who constructs a residence for a first-time home buyer at below the median home price, Parrott said.
“You need to provide some sort of tax benefit for building homes in the parts of the market where we need them the most,” Parrott said.
But getting this divided Congress to work together on something like this would be challenging, Parrott said.
“I’m afraid that the legislative environment right now just isn’t conducive to this sort of big, bipartisan effort,” Parrott said. “Hopefully after the election we’ll see a reboot that provides a more hopeful window.”
Withhold funding from localities that don’t change zoning laws
Most of the control over zoning lies with state and local governments. And states have been working to overhaul zoning to ease restrictions on denser residential construction. But the federal government isn’t entirely powerless on zoning.
Parrott said the federal government has used a carrot approach to encourage localities to rezone in favor of denser housing, but now he thinks maybe it’s time to use a stick. For instance, any federal funding for communities could be conditioned on how zoning decisions are made. Communities receive substantial financial support from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the Transportation Department and other agencies for projects, Parrott noted.
“If federal policymakers were to condition even a little bit some of that funding on whether or not local decision-making is supportive of or prohibitive of more density,…then you could begin to change things at the local level in a way that would really matter,” Parrott said.
Such a move would be almost certain to trigger strict opposition from localities and unions. But more states have already been enacting legislation to supersede local zoning rules, said Alex Horowitz, director of housing policy at The Pew Charitable Trusts. Horowitz said nine states have passed laws allowing accessible dwelling units or ADUs — like small, independent, mother-in-law suites — on homeowners’ properties.
Sell federal land to use for housing
“The federal government owns hundreds and hundreds of millions of acres, and we’re not talking about the National Parks here,” said Edward Pinto, co-director of the American Enterprise Institute’s Housing Center.
But that’s a proposal that Congress would need to authorize.
It has been tried. Sen. Mike Lee’s HOUSES Act of 2022 would have approved the sale of federal land to states and localities for below-market rates for housing projects. The federal government owns two-thirds of the land in Lee’s home state of Utah, and the gap between median household income and median home cost is largest in the West, according to HUD.
But his bill went nowhere. The Bureau of Land Management, which oversees federal land, said in written Senate testimony that it would be forced to “sell land without sufficient evaluation of the values to the public or to future generations, or sufficient compensation to the American taxpayer.”
The sale of unused land could also attract opposition from environmentalist groups, though sometimes that can be overcome. In March, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed a law that will allow that state’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to transfer some of its property to localities to build affordable housing.
Washington state GOP Rep. April Connors, who introduced the bill, noted that that the DNR had 7,000 acres of land that was unusable for timber harvesting because it was too close to developed land. Building housing on it could ease the shortage of homes in Washington, Connors noted in a statement, pointing out that the state has the “fewest housing units per household in the nation and nearly half of renters spend a third of their income on rent.”
Improve consumer access to financing for manufactured housing
Manufactured homes are factory-built residences built after 1976 — formerly known as mobile homes — that can be placed on land. The average new manufactured home sold for $126,600 in November 2023, according to the Census Bureau.
But loans are harder for homebuyers to secure for manufactured homes than for traditional ones, Horowitz said. And since manufactured housing usually involves shipping over state lines, the federal government plays a big role. HUD controls access to financing for manufactured homes, and rules are stricter than they are for traditional homes.
Interest rates are typically also higher for manufactured home loans than for traditional home loans, in part because unlike traditional homes, which tend to appreciate in value over time, manufactured homes can depreciate. The structures are also viewed as riskier than conventional homes because they’re usually harder to sell on the market. Horowitz suggests HUD could make it easier for borrowers to access loans.
Eliminate tax breaks for second (and third) homes
Congress could increase the national housing stock over time by eliminating tax breaks for any homes that aren’t a primary residence, said AEI’s Pinto.
Getting rid of the mortgage interest rate deduction for non-primary residences would eventually encourage many homeowners to sell, Pinto said.
“Why should they be subsidized by the tax code,” Pinto asked.
Without that tax break, hundreds of thousands of homes would come back onto the market as primary residences, Pinto said.
“It would cost the federal government basically nothing,” Pinto said. “They’d actually save some money on the tax savings, and it would not increase demand at all.”
This isn’t likely to happen soon though. Such a measure would have to be passed by Congress — and many lawmakers own second and third residences. And a number of their constituents and donors own multiple homes. Realtor interest groups would oppose it, too, Pinto said.
The most Congress has done in recent years to address tax breaks for expensive residences was in 2017, when the GOP-controlled Congress capped the deduction limit for state and local income taxes, which hit coastal, heavily Democratic states like New York and California particularly hard.
Still, eliminating the tax break for secondary homes is “low-hanging fruit,” and would increase supply and reduce demand simultaneously, Pinto said.
Economists mostly doubt that action by the Federal Reserve to significantly lower interest rates would help much.
“If the Fed were to cut rates in a way that allowed mortgage rates to fall to the 4% range, we would see both supply and demand increase in the housing market,” said Chen Zhao, who leads the economics team at Redfin.
And whether home prices rise or fall would depend on what then happens to housing supply and demand.
“If demand increases more, then prices would grow at a faster rate than they are currently,” Zhao said. “However, it’s also possible that supply would increase more because sellers have been so locked in by low existing mortgage rates. If that’s the case, then price growth could fall. I think it’s unlikely in either case that prices would fall outright.”
Would Biden or Trump’s policies help or hurt housing costs?
Former President Donald Trump hasn’t offered policy suggestions to address housing affordability yet, although he criticizes mortgage interest rates and home prices under President Biden.
The president has proposed giving a $10,000 tax credit to first-time middle class homebuyers, and up to $25,000 to first generation home buyers. He’s also introducing a $20 billion fund that in addition to helping build affordable rental units, is meant to peel away local barriers to housing development and spur the construction of starter homes.
Down payment assistance may help home shoppers in the near term, although the tax credit probably falls short of the traditional 20% down payment on most homes. With monthly payments at record highs, this down payment assistance would not lower monthly costs. And down payment assistance could have unintended consequences, Pinto said: “It would increase the price of entry level homes.”
The effect down payment assistance or a buyer tax credit would have on the housing market is complicated in a supply-constrained market, Horowitz said.
While Trump hasn’t made specific proposals on housing, his proposals in other policy areas would likely drive home prices up, Parrott said. Mass deportations of undocumented migrants, for instance, could drive the cost of labor higher, and raising tariffs on China could drive up material costs, Parrott said.
“The things that Trump has said relevant to housing almost all cut the wrong way,” Parrot said.
How home costs could affect the election
The cost of home ownership is a top concern for Democrats and Republicans, city dwellers and rural residents alike, said Parrott. Once an issue has broken through the barriers of red and blue, metro and rural, “then it changes the probability of something happening,” Parrott said.
“Housing has found its way to the grownups table, in effect, for the first time,” Parrott said.
And even though it’s the Fed that controls interest rates, Mr. Biden could be held accountable by voters.
“President Biden’s reelection is closely tied to the cost of homeownership and thus, the fixed mortgage rates,” Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics predicted. “The fixed rate is currently just over 7%. If it rises above 8% for any length of time, his reelection odds will fade, and if it falls closer to 6% his odds will increase meaningfully, all else equal.”
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Kathryn Watson
Kathryn Watson is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital based in Washington, D.C.
Former President Donald Trump has been out of office for three years.
That means the nation’s gone three years without Melania Trump’s audacious Christmas decorations.
She’s received flack for years for her decorations, but let’s be real: they were pretty great.
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For four years, between 2017 and 2020, former President Donald Trump and his administration made headlines on a near-daily basis with outlandish tweets, legally questionable executive decisions, and committing social faux pas.
And though she mostly kept to herself during his tenure in office, Trump’s wife Melania made news of her own each year for her White House Christmas decorations — mostly negative in nature.
“Melania’s Christmases, Ranked from Most to Least Haunted,” one headline from 2020 read. “There’s no comfort & joy in Melania Trump’s bleak and impersonal Christmas decor,” says another.
While her decorations were a bit atypical than those of past years, I think it’s reasonable to say years later that they weren’t all that bad.
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Much of the criticism appears to stem from her leaked comments in 2020, where she belabored being compared to her husband’s child separation policies at the border and the expectations of being First Lady. She said she had “worked her ass off on the Christmas stuff,” despite not caring about the responsibility.
“Who gives a fuck about the Christmas stuff and decorations?” Melania asked in the recording, “But I need to do it, right?”
Though it seems she may have detested the task, Melania ultimately put creative spins on the White House’s typical, traditional holiday decorations that were, well… unique.
And not necessarily in a bad way.
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As my Pulitzer Prize-winning editor — a former culture writer — told me, “If the White House doesn’t look like ‘Sleep No More’ at Christmas, I think the First Lady fucked up.”
Even my nerdy, usually Trump-detesting roommate had positive words for Melania’s decorations. “It seriously looked like Doctor Doom was into Christmas,” she said.
With that in mind, below are the highlights from Melania’s Christmas decorations from the East Colonnade:
Don Jr, Eric, and Ivanka Trump have taken out a combined $22M in mortgages on their new swanky homes in Florida since relocating from New York over the last two years
DailyMail.com can reveal Ivanka and Jared Kushner lead the siblings with the highest mortgage, borrowing $15M against their $24M Indian Creek Island home which was finally completed last month
In Jupiter, about 85mi north on Florida’s east coast, Don Jr, 45, and fiancée Kimberly Guilfoyle, 54, snapped up a $9.7M pad with a $4.8M home loan, while Eric, 39, and wife Lara borrowed $2.4M on their $3.2M house
By Chris White For Dailymail.com
Published: 07:12 EST, 26 November 2023 | Updated: 19:02 EST, 26 November 2023
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He has an estimated net worth of $2.6billion according to a Forbes report last month – but Donald Trump’s fortune is pitted against $200million worth of debt from his portfolio of luxury real estate, resorts, and golf courses.
And just like their famous father, Don Jr, 45, Eric, 39, and Ivanka Trump, 42, have followed suit in taking out massive loans to invest in their own swanky mansions and property.
DailyMail.com can reveal the three oldest Trump siblings took out massive mortgages, all at virtually the same time two years ago, totaling over $22million.
The hefty investments came when the family left New York and began putting down roots in Florida – where Trump relocated after losing the 2020 presidential election.
DailyMail.com can reveal Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner took out a $15million mortgage on their $24million fixer-upper on Indian Creek Island in April 2021, a few months after they moved from Washington, D.C. to Miami. The couple’s monthly payment on their home loan is around $111,000
Miami Beach’s exclusive Indian Creek Island is known as ‘Billionaire Bunker’. The couple spent two years and spared no expense when they gutted and redesigned their new residence, which boasts six bedrooms and eight-and-a-half bathrooms
Jared and Ivanka finally moved into their newly renovated mansion with their three children, Arabella, Joseph, and Theodore in October.
And now, DailyMail.com can reveal that Ivanka and husband Jared Kushner took out the highest mortgage out of all the Trump kids for their new Florida digs.
The couple borrowed $15million for the $24million property they purchased in April 2021 on Miami Beach’s exclusive Indian Creek Island, known as ‘Billionaire Bunker’.
The home loan was obtained from Bank of America through an LLC linked to Kushner’s general counsel, Christopher Smith.
The deal is for 15 years and at the time would have been secured at a 3 per cent going interest rate, working out to a payment of around $111,000 a month.
Trump and Kushner, both 42, took more than two years and spared no expense when they gutted and redesigned their new residence, which boasts six bedrooms and eight-and-a-half bathrooms.
The extensive renovation project on the 1.3-acre estate was finally completed last month, just in time for Ivanka to celebrate her 42nd birthday with a dinner party at the palatial property.
Donald Trump Jr. and fiancee Kimberly Guilfoyle took out a $4.8million mortgage on the 11,000-square-foot mansion they snapped up in the exclusive gated community of Admirals Cove, in Jupiter, for $9.7 million in March 2021
The home loan for the six-bedroom, 11-bath mansion was obtained by Valley National Bank for 30 years and breaks down to approximately $29,500 a month, plus property tax
The political power couple joined the list of rich and famous residents in Admirals Cove, located just 20 miles from Mar-a-Lago
New aerial images of the resort-style property show its expansive sun deck, perfect for enjoying the balmy Florida heat year-round.
The private 300-acre Indian Creek Island’s wealthy residents include retired NFL legend Tom Brady and, most recently, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, who purchased two neighboring mansions for $79million and $68million in the last three months.
The island has 34 homes, around 42 residents, and its own private 13-person police force that guard the single bridge to get on and off the estate, as well as a 24-hour marine patrol.
Meanwhile, about 85 miles north on Florida’s east coast, Ivanka’s older brother Donald Trump Jr, 45, and fiancée Kimberly Guilfoyle, 54, snapped up a $9.7million pad in March 2021 in the celeb-enclave of Jupiter, home to numerous sports stars such as Tiger Woods and Serena Williams.
Documents obtained by DailyMail.com show the pair took out a $4.8million mortgage on the property.
The home loan is with Valley National Bank for 30 years with the first 20 being at 3.25 per cent before increasing to the Federal funds rate. This is approximately $29,500-a-month plus property tax.
Younger sibling Eric, 39, and wife Lara, 41, picked up a $3.2million estate also in Jupiter near his older brother, in March 2021
The couple’s $2.4million 30-year mortgage from Valley National Bank works out at just over $10,000 a month plus taxes. The 7,715-square-foot home has five bedrooms, five bathrooms and is in his dad’s gated Trump National Golf Club
Just like his older siblings, Eric had been mainly based in New York before he and wife Lara followed his family down to Florida in March 2022 (pictured in April 2023)
Eric and Lara Trump’s $2.4million mortgage
The 11,000 square foot mansion is in the exclusive gated community of Admirals Cove, 20 minutes from his father’s primary residence of Mar-a-Lago, and boasts six bedroom, 11 bathrooms, pool, gym and games room.
Meanwhile, younger sibling Eric, 39, and wife Lara, 41, picked up a $3.2million estate, also in Jupiter in March 2021. It comes with a $2.4million mortgage from Valley National Bank.
Like Donald Jr, his mortgage is over 30 years, initially at a 3.125 per cent rate for 20 years, then at the Federal funds rate. This works out at just over $10,000 a month plus taxes.
The 7,715-square-foot home has five bedrooms, five bathrooms and is in his dad’s gated Trump National Golf Club.
The only grown up sibling not to have made an real estate investments in Florida just yet is Tiffany, 30 – Trump’s daughter from his second marriage to Marla Maples.
She was reported to have been house hunting in Miami Beach a couple of years ago, but it’s not clear if she ever went through with a purchase. She married
A 2,855-square-foot unit is up for grabs in one of only a few condominiums located on the prime stretch of Central Park West.
And it has a coveted perk that’s hard to find in the middle of a bustling city: Park views from nearly every window!
The corner unit is located directly across the street from Central Park, between 88th Street and 89th Street on the Upper West Side, surrounded by lush greenery that can make you forget you’re in the very heart of one of the world’s busiest cities.
The condo unit is in the 279 Central Park West building, a 24-story, full-service condo designed by acclaimed architect and designer Costas Kondylis.
If the name sounds familiar, that’s because the prolific architect helped shape the New York skyline, designing over 85 buildings, many of them for former U.S. President Donald Trump. Specializing in luxury buildings and residential skyscrapers, Constantine “Costas” Kondylis was President Trump’s go-to designer, before passing away in 2018.
The 3 bedroom, 3.5 bathroom duplex home — listed for $7,750,000 with Harriet Kaufman of Coldwell Banker Warburg — offers kitchen and entertaining areas on the lower level and private bedrooms on the upper level.
The 279 Central Park West condo welcomes guests and residents with a charming foyer with a powder room, before leading them into an expansive 35-foot living and dining area, adorned with oversized bay windows that open up to panoramic Central Park views.
The oversized kitchen features top-of-the-line appliances, plenty of storage and counter space, and a large eat-in area with a south-facing window.
An elegant staircase then leads to the upper level, where we find the condo’s 3 bedrooms (all featuring en-suite baths) and a home office.
Future owners of the 279 Central Park West condo will get to enjoy the building’s many amenities, which include a gym, indoor/ outdoor playroom, bike room, and private storage.
But the biggest draw is by far the building’s stellar location and proximity to Central Park and all the best New York City has to offer.
And if extra bragging points are needed, a Rockefeller also lived in the building.
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