Chris Mason: Starmer hopes to save his job with promise of change - and
warnings of chaos
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There is a big moment coming in the next 24 hours, for Sir Keir Starmer and
for would-be challengers to the prime minister.
3 hours ago

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The wave of foreclosures has been manifesting at these more local levels — even while national-level data reflects a recovery.
Since 2007, the foreclosure crisis, which has claimed nearly four million homes, has played out very differently across the U.S. After the robo-signing scandal of late 2010, lenders, flush with defaulted mortgage notes, delayed their processing of foreclosures, most notably in judicial states, where filings circulate through a court system. That delay created an artificial decrease in the rate: 830,000 homes were foreclosed upon in 2011, a 24% decrease from the year before, according to CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif.-based data firm. With the advent of the $25 billion mortgage relief plan in February, real estate experts projected a notable pick-up in activity since lenders sitting on delayed filings would hopefully process them more quickly.
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