President Trump seems to love comparing himself to historic leaders, and this time he’s invoking Franklin D. Roosevelt.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump suggested that, just like FDR had introduced the 30-year mortgage during the Great Depression, it was now his turn to fix America’s housing crisis by introducing a 50-year mortgage (1).

But almost instantly, the proposal came under attack from all sides. Mortgage brokers called it impractical, economists called it ineffective and even some Republicans — including members of Trump’s own administration — called it a bad idea (2).

The backlash has been swift and revealing. While millions of Americans are currently priced out of homeownership and desperate for relief, many believe the 50-year mortgage not only doesn’t solve the problem, it could actually make things worse.

Trump’s pitch was simple: longer mortgage terms mean lower monthly payments. But experts say that extra time comes at a serious cost, and not just in interest.

A 50-year mortgage could saddle homebuyers with decades of extra payments, leave them with less equity, and still potentially cost them as much per month as shorter-term loans due to higher interest rates.

The 50-year term might shave a few hundred dollars off monthly payments compared to a standard 30-year loan. But over time, it could cost tens of thousands more in interest while building equity at a much slower pace. That’s not much relief for something that could keep families in debt for half a century.

Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene — who’s been feuding with Trump over numerous issues — took to X to express her displeasure with the 50-year mortgage idea (3).

“It will ultimately reward the banks, mortgage lenders and home builders while people pay far more in interest over time and die before they ever pay off their home,” she wrote in her post.

“In debt forever, in debt for life!”

When it comes to Republicans voicing displeasure over the 50-year mortgage proposal, Greene is far from alone. POLITICO reports that several White House staffers, speaking on background with the publication, are quietly blaming Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte for convincing Trump to float the idea, angering business leaders and many of Trump’s allies in the process (4).

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