
Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States
Summary, books mentioned, transcript quotes, and timestamps for Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States on The Ezra Klein Show.
Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States mentions Neighborhood Defender by Katie Einstein, David Glick, Maxwell Palmer, The Home Voter Hypothesis by Bill Fischel, Fixer Upper by Jenny Scheutz, and Crabgrass Frontier with timestamps, quotes, and episode context.
On housing politics, there are three political scientists, Katie Einstein, David Glick, and Maxwell Palmer who've written a book called Neighborhood…
There's an economist called Bill Fischel who wrote a very influential book called The Home Voter Hypothesis, which essentially says that homeowners b…
Few understand the ins and outs of America's housing system or systems like Jenny Scheutz.
Jump between the book moments.
The host mentions 'Neighborhood Defender' to highlight its insightful analysis of the political dynamics surrounding…
The host discusses how homeowners, motivated by the desire to protect their property values, become a powerful politi…
The host mentions 'Fixer Upper' to highlight Jenny Scheutz's insights on America's housing crisis and the systemic fa…
The host mentions 'Crabgrass Frontier' to highlight its historical perspective on housing development and policy in t…
The host discusses the limitations of local democracy and how it often fails to represent the broader community. They…
Quick FAQ
Answers to common summary, books, and takeaway questions for this episode.
What is Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States about?
Summary, books mentioned, transcript quotes, and timestamps for Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States on The Ezra Klein Show.
What are the main takeaways from Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States?
These are the strongest takeaways surfaced by the transcript, summary copy, and linked mentions for Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States.
- The conversation centers on homeownership and political power.
- A second recurring theme is housing affordability issues.
- Referenced books include Neighborhood Defender by Katie Einstein, David Glick, Maxwell Palmer and The Home Voter Hypothesis by Bill Fischel.
- The strongest audience signal points to Political scientists and housing policy advocates and Policymakers and urban planners.
Which books are mentioned in Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States?
Neighborhood Defender by Katie Einstein, David Glick, Maxwell Palmer, The Home Voter Hypothesis by Bill Fischel, and Fixer Upper by Jenny Scheutz are the clearest linked books in this episode, each tied back to transcript timestamps and quote cards.
Why are listeners searching for Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States?
Why Housing Is So Expensive — Particularly in Blue States keeps attracting summary-style searches because this page combines episode context, transcript quotes, book references, and direct jump links back into the audio.
Aggregated from transcript-derived mention metadata for better topical navigation and citation.
Books Mentioned
The full list below is ranked by how useful each mention is to a listener: stronger recommendation language, clearer quote context, and better timestamp support rise first.

“A book that provides fantastic insight into the nitty-gritty politics of housing, showing who participates in the process.”
View mention details

“Bill Fischel wrote a very influential book called The Home Voter Hypothesis, which essentially says that homeowners become single-issue voters based on protecting the value of their property.”
View mention details

“This book is one of the clearest overviews of America's housing policy failures and just its housing policies that you'll find.”
View mention details

“A classic book by a historian that tells the long-term history of housing development, mortgage markets, and housing policy in the U.S.”
View mention details

“It's about democracy and communication and media, discussing how democracies can be liberal or illiberal, populist or consensus-based.”
View mention details

“A memoir that highlights the broken social safety net and challenges in obtaining federal housing assistance, also adapted into a Netflix series.”
View mention details
Get the strongest books from new The Ezra Klein Show episodes.
A short weekly email with transcript-backed book recommendations, source quotes, and exact moments from recently indexed episodes.
Pick up the books after you hear them in context.

The host mentions 'Neighborhood Defender' to highlight its insightful analysis of the political dynamics surrounding housing issues. It provides a…

The host discusses how homeowners, motivated by the desire to protect their property values, become a powerful political force. They reference Bill…

The host mentions 'Fixer Upper' to highlight Jenny Scheutz's insights on America's housing crisis and the systemic failures within housing policies…
Movies & Documentaries Mentioned
Made
“Made is a Netflix series based on Stephanie Land's memoir, illustrating the challenges of the social safety net and housing assistance.”