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Homeownership is not a partisan issue. Both parties appeal to them. Kamala just announced a big incentive for new homeowners. Mortgage rates are underwritten by the federal government as a bipartisan policy so unquestioned it's barely even acknowledged.
What i'd expect to see is differential interest and turnout in the American political process from owners vs renters, and that is absolutely true. Because this is a government of and for property owners.
In the UK on the other hand, where class politics is (or was) more openly acknowledged, and even as professional classes (what they call C1) move left and independent blue collar workers (C2: plumbers, builders, etc) move right, there is a massive Labour-Tory divide when looking at renters vs owners.
You have a bit of a chicken and egg problem then because homeowners turn out to vote in higher numbers and that's historically been so. I don't think it would really matter anyway because this type of forced class division (renting vs homeowner) simply isn't how people think or vote by and large. Its by moral values and cognitive frames, hence why I constantly meet renters that are full blown MAGA Trumpites while some of the most progressive people I know essentially live off of trust funds and never worked a real job.