I'm not going to try to argue statistics or numbers, but I would argue the facts of who did what to subdue risky subprime mortgages, and to increase low income home ownership.
Well, you could argue it, but you'll lose. What subdued risky sub-prime mortgages was the financial meltdown. And it was Clinton who did the most to increase low income home ownership. It began with the ultimate feel-good legislation, the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, which Jimmy Cater signed into law, and was a product of the 95th Congress, a Congress which had an extremely rare 60% Supermajority of Democrats in both congressional chambers. The CRE failed utterly to do what it was designed to do, which was increase bank investment in low income areas.
In 1989 an already influential Barney Frank introduced the Federal Institutions Reform, Recovery and Investments Act (FIRREA) as an addendum to the CRE, which is part dealt with the Savings and Load crisis of the 1980s, but also set the table for what was to come. The addendum legislation greatly increased the ability of advocacy groups, researchers, and other analysts to "perform more-sophisticated analyses of banks' records, letting them see directly where money was going, and thus enabling them to influence the lending policies of banks. If banks weren't investing enough in certain areas, they were threatened by advocacy groups with litigation in violation of the CRE.
The next step was in 1991 when they got the FDIC involved in actively promoting minority and women owned businesses in investments, then in 1992 legislated a certain percentage of Freddie and Fannie be devoted to affordable housing. In 1994 Frank was instrumental in removing the restrictions on interstate banking that was in the original legislation to put a check and balance on the savings and loan problems. Now the check and balance was gone. Poof. The next year, in a move that was hotly contested by nearly every economist out there, they dramatically lowered the compliance burden (and therefor the costs of complying) as part of Clinton's efforts to "deal with the problems of the inner city and distressed rural communities." Other legislative changes in 2005 shifted the percentage of investment required to low income (high risk) areas.
All of this can be overlaid with Clinton's move to get people who couldn't even afford the down payment into home ownership. There was a Clinton-era document that actually got posted by mistake to the HUD Website. “The National Homeownership Strategy: Partners in the American Dream." It detailed the strategy for, and the problems of, low income home ownership.
Here's an excerpt, which more than any section of the document, shows the seeds of disaster being planted:
For many potential homebuyers, the lack of cash available to accumulate the required downpayment and closing costs is the major impediment to purchasing a home. Other households do not have sufficient available income to to make the monthly payments on mortgages financed at market interest rates for standard loan terms. Financing strategies, fueled by the creativity and resources of the private and public sectors, should address both of these financial barriers to homeownership.
Note the praise for creativity in addressing real, actual barriers to home ownership. It's reckless to promote home sales to individuals in such constrained financial predicaments. And we saw the poppin' bubble wrap results.
It was Carter to a large degree, and Clinton to an absolute degree, that pushed the liberal agenda of helping African Americans and Hispanics take part in the American Dream, whether they could afford it or not. And it was the House Financial Services Committee, led by Barney Frank, that forced Congress to bend over (backwards, if you like, but it was the American people who got the brunt) to make it happen.
Barney Frank said he tried the first, only to be blocked by Republicans, and that it was Bush who started the movement toward the latter.
The record seems to back him up, as does Mark Zandi. Yes, it's a press release, but the facts are easily confirmed.
Press Release :: Frank Seeks Antidote to Republican Amnesia| Financial Services Committee | U.S. House of Representatives
No, the record doesn't seem to back him up, either. As Dave noted, look a little deeper than the surface comments. I mean, just because someone says something doesn't mean it's true, even though some people will believe whatever they're told. There are plenty of people who right now, today, believe that the Obama administration is the most transparent administration in history, but the reality is the exact opposite. Barney Frank said he tried tirelessly to end the conditions that allowed for the financial meltdown, but it was exactly the opposite, as he was the architect of the nuts and bolts of how it could occur, and as the lead Democrat in the House Financial Services Committee (2003 until his retirement, and was the chairman from 2007 to 2011) he put in place things which prevented the executive branch from being able to thwart his efforts. And as the lead Democrat in the House Financial Services Committee, he was in charge of Freddie and Fannie. Carter and Clinton wanted more money invested in poor urban areas, and wanted more people to own their own home, and Barney Frank did his utmost to make that happen. And as one of the many liberal elites in Congress, he didn't go broke in doing it, either.