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The New Deal

The New Deal. How and why did the federal government influence American economic and political issues during the 1930s? How did President Roosevelt respond to economic depression, and why did he respond in this manner? What were the primary differences between the First and Second New Deal?

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The New Deal

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  1. The New Deal • How and why did the federal government influence American economic and political issues during the 1930s? • How did President Roosevelt respond to economic depression, and why did he respond in this manner? What were the primary differences between the First and Second New Deal? • How did labor unions respond to the New Deal? • How did the New Deal affect American society • both during the 1930s and thereafter?

  2. The New Deal, 1933–1939

  3. The 1932 election marked the emergence of a Democratic coalition that would help to shape national politics for the next four decades. • In the worst winter of the depression, unemployment stood at 20 to 25 percent, and the nation’s banking system was close to collapse. • The depression had totally overwhelmed public welfare institutions, and private charity and public relief reached only a fraction of the needy; hunger haunted both cities and rural areas.

  4. The New Deal came to stand for a complex set of responses to the nation's economic collapse. The New Deal was meant to relieve suffering yet conserve the nation's political and economic institutions. Through unprecedented intervention by the national government, Roosevelt's programs put people to work, instilling hope and restoring the nation's confidence.

  5. The Great Depression destroyed Herbert Hoover's reputation and helped to establish Roosevelt's. • Roosevelt's ideology was not vastly different from Hoover's, but he was willing to experiment with new programs to address the current crisis. His programs put people to work and instilled hope in the future. • Roosevelt crafted his administration's programs in response to shifting political and economic conditions rather than according to a set ideology or plan.

  6. Roosevelt made his administration's programs respond to shifting political and economic conditions rather than adhering to a set ideology or plan. He established a close rapport with the American people; his use of radio-broadcasted 'fireside chats' fostered a sense of intimacy. Roosevelt's approach expanded the power of the executive branch to initiate policy, thereby helping to create the modern presidency.

  7. Roosevelt's promise to act quickly was embodied in the legislation of the "hundred days." Programs were quickly established to aid agriculture and industry, and direct relief was provided to millions of suffering families. Federal job projects aided millions more. Although those actions did not end the depression, they offered both hope and sustenance to many. Legislation regulating banks and the stock market sought to eliminate some of the financial excesses of the 1920s that had contributed to the depression.

  8. Popular leaders accused the New Deal of moving too slowly in redistributing wealth and caring for the elderly. This pressure from the left caused FDR to inaugurate the "Second New Deal"  a program that offered support for organized labor and Social Security legislation that included unemployment insurance and aid to those who couldn't work.

  9. Persistent and pervasive unemployment led to the establishment of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), an agency that would provide millions of federally funded jobs through the remainder of the decade. The New Deal accelerated the expansion of the federal bureaucracy, and power was increasingly centered in the nation's capital, not in the states.

  10. Public Works Projects

  11. During the 1930s the federal government operated as a broker state, mediating between contending groups seeking power and benefits. After FDR's reelection in 1936, the New Deal began to falter. An abortive attempt to alter the structure of the Supreme Court undercut FDR's popularity, and his premature reductions in federal spending led to the "Roosevelt recession" of 1937 to 1938.

  12. Roosevelt's attempt to "purge" the Democratic Party of some of his most conservative opponents only widened the liberal-conservative rift as the 1938 election approached. Fresh out of ideas and with the nation still in a depression, FDR's basic conservatism became more apparent. Tinkering with the system had not led to economic recovery; something more drastic would be required.

  13. Even though the New Deal did not end the depression, it ushered in an unprecedented expansion of the federal government that redefined its role. By seeking to spread benefits more equitably among neglected portions of the population, the New Deal attracted African Americans, professional women, and organized labor to the Democratic Party.

  14. For the first time, organized labor had federal support, and prominent blacks and women were brought into government service. The New Deal laid the foundation for a modified welfare state and created a political coalition that would dominate national politics for most of the next three decades.

  15. The Great Depression saw a flowering of American culture. The WPA employed many writers and artists to produce works that celebrated the lives of ordinary people throughout the nation. A hallmark of the era was the "documentary impulse," a presentation in photography, graphic arts, music, and film of a social reality designed to elicit public empathy. As Europe moved toward war and Japan expanded its incursions in the Far East, Roosevelt focused less on domestic reform and more on international relations

  16. The New Deal Takes Over, 1933–1935 • The Roosevelt Style of Leadership • The Hundred Days

  17. At the beginning of his administration, Roosevelt convened Congress in a special session and launched the New Deal with an avalanche of bills. Historians refer to this period as the "Hundred Days." Roosevelt introduced a new notion of the presidency whereby the president, not Congress, was the legislative leader. Most of the bills he proposed set up new government agencies, called the "alphabet soup" agencies because of their array of acronyms.

  18. AAA (Agricultural Adjustment Act)--Designed to help American farmers by stabilizing prices and limiting overproduction, the AAA initiated the first direct subsidies to farmers who did not plant crops. The United States Supreme Court later declared the AAA unconstitutional and an unnecessary invasion of private property rights.

  19. CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps)--A public works project, operated under the control of the army, which was designed to promote environmental conservation while getting young, unemployed men off city street corners. Recruits planted trees, built wildlife shelters, stocked rivers and lakes with fish, and cleared beaches and campgrounds. The CCC housed the young men in tents and barracks, gave them three square meals a day, and paid them a small stipend. The army's experience in managing and training large numbers of civilians would prove invaluable in WWII. Wisconsin was a beneficiary of the CCC; one of the organizations many local projects was trail construction at Devil's Lake State Park.

  20. Civilian Conservation Corps Workers

  21. TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority)--One of the most ambitious and controversial New Deal projects, the TVA proposed building dams and power plants along the Tennessee River to bring electric power to rural areas in seven states. Although the TVA provided many Americans with electricity for the first time and provided jobs to thousands of unemployed construction workers, the program outraged many private power companies.

  22. NIRA (National Industrial Recovery Act)-- • The NIRA established the NRA (National Recovery Administration) to stimulate production and competition by having American industries set up a series of codes designed to regulate prices, industrial output, and general trade practices. The federal government, in turn, would agree to enforce these codes. In return for their cooperation, federal officials promised to suspend anti-trust legislation. Section 7A of the NIRA recognized the rights of labor to organize and to have collective bargaining with management. The NIRA was the most controversial piece of legislation to come out of the Hundred Days and many of its opponents charged it with being un-American, socialist, even communist, even though it did not violate the sanctity of private property or alter the American wage system.

  23. The National Industrial Recovery Act launched the National Recovery Administration (NRA), which established a system of industrial self-government to handle the problems of overproduction, cutthroat competition, and price instability. • The NRA’s codes established prices and production quotas, as well as minimum wages and maximum hours, outlawed child labor, and gave workers union rights. • Trade associations, controlled by large companies, tended to dominate the NRA’s code drafting process, thus solidifying the power of large businesses at the expense of smaller ones.

  24. The Federal Emergency Relief Administration • (FERA), set up in May 1933 under the direction of Harry Hopkins offered federal money to the states for relief programs and was designed to keep people from starving until other recovery measures took hold. Over the program’s two-year existence, FERA spent $1 billion. • Whenever possible New Deal administrators promoted work relief over cash subsidies, and they consistently favored jobs that would not compete directly with the private sector.

  25. Civil Works Administration (CWA) • Established in November, 1933, the Civil Works Administration (CWA) put 2.6 million men and women to work; at its peak, it employed 4 million in public works jobs. The CWA lapsed the next spring after spending all its funds. • Many of these early emergency measures were deliberately inflationary and meant to trigger price increases thought necessary to stimulate recovery.

  26. Roosevelt’s executive order of April 18, • 1933, to abandon the international gold standard allowed the Federal Reserve System to manipulate the value of the dollar in response to fluctuating economic conditions. • In 1934, the Securities and Exchange Commission was established in order to regulate the stock market and prevent abuses. • The Banking Act of 1935 placed the control of money-market policies at the federal level rather than with regional banks and encouraged centralization of the nation’s banking system.

  27. New Deal Under Attack • Business leaders and conservative Democrats formed the Liberty League in 1934 to lobby against the New Deal and its “reckless spending” and “socialist” reforms. • In Schechter v. United States, the Supreme Court ruled that the National Industrial Recovery Act represented an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power to the executive branch. • Citizens like Francis Townsend thought that the New Deal had not gone far enough; • Townsend proposed the Old Age Revolving Pension Plan.

  28. In 1935, Father Charles Coughlin organized the National Union for Social Justice to attack Roosevelt’s New Deal and demand nationalization of the banking system and expansion of the money supply. • Because he was Canadian-born and a priest, Coughlin was not likely to run for president —the most direct threat to Roosevelt came from Senator Huey Long. • In 1934, Senator Long broke with the New Deal and established his own national movement, the Share Our Wealth Society.

  29. Coughlin and Long offered feeble solutions to the depression and quick-fix plans that addressed only part of problem. Both men showed little respect for the principles of representative government.

  30. Why the NIRA failed • Whether radical or conservative, the NIRA ultimately failed for three reasons: • The NRA assumed businesses would police themselves. The codes, established in the interest of protecting workers and consumers, were ultimately drawn up by the largest companies. This hurt small businesses. • Corporations rarely respected the rights of labor to organize. Because of the number and complexity of the codes, the federal government never enforced labor's right to collective bargaining. • The NRA attacked recovery from the wrong direction. It tried to stabilize prices by lowering production, rather than redistributing money to American consumers and encouraging them to purchase goods. • Within two years, the Supreme Court declared the NIRA unconstitutional.

  31. "The Broker State" • During his first two years in office, FDR promoted a new vision of the executive branch; he viewed himself as an "honest broker" who would negotiate among competing interests. The president would mediate conflicts while balancing the interests of one group against another. His older cousin TR had held a similar idea of the presidency, but FDR expanded this concept of the broker state. However, the idea of the broker state has two inherent flaws:

  32. Presidents tend to get weaker the longer they are in office, because they have to make tough choices that alienate particular interest groups. • The strongest interest groups can pressure even the most forceful broker. This was true in FDR's administration, when the NIRA and AAA favored big business and big agriculture

  33. The New Deal accelerated the expansion of the federal bureaucracy, and power was increasingly centered in the nation’s capital, not in the states. During the 1930s the federal government, then, operated as a broker state, mediating between contending groups seeking power and benefits. After FDR’s reelection in 1936, the New Deal began to falter. An abortive attempt to alter the structure of the Supreme Court undercut FDR’s popularity, and his premature reductions in federal spending led to the “Roosevelt recession” of 1937 to 1938.

  34. Roosevelt’s attempt to “purge” the Democratic Party of some of his most conservative opponents only widened the liberal-conservative rift as the 1938 election approached. Fresh out of ideas and with the nation still in a depression, FDR’s basic conservatism became more apparent. Tinkering with the system had not led to economic recovery; something more drastic would be required.

  35. The Second New Deal, 1935–1938 • Legislative Accomplishments • Stalemate

  36. One of the more innovative New Deal programs was the Federal Theatre Project. Its director, Hallie Flanagan, envisioned a nationwide network of community theaters that would produce plays of social relevance. "Living Newspaper" productions, such as the one advertised in this 1938 poster for a performance in Oregon, were documentary plays designed to expose Americans to contemporary social problems. One Third of a Nation by Arthur Arent tackled the history of New York City's housing problems, while at the same time it promoted New Deal Housing legislation.

  37. When President Franklin Roosevelt dedicated the just-completed Boulder Dam in Nevada in September 1935, he noted that only four years earlier "the mighty waters of the Colorado [River] were running unused to the sea” but now the dam "translate[s] them into a great national possession.” The massive dam-then the largest in the world-tamed the river to provide public services of flood control, hydroelectric power, and water for crops and people throughout the Southwest. In 1933, New Dealers had officially renamed the dam Boulder Dam, and so it remained until 1947 when it was officially renamed Hoover Dam in honor of the president who was instrumental in pushing the long-contemplated dream into reality. At a cost of less than $200 million, the construction project provided jobs for over 4,000 men and inspired Americans with dramatic evidence of the creative potential of ambitious public works

  38. The Social Security Act of 1935 required each working American who participated in the system to register with the government and obtain a unique number-the "SSN” familiar to every citizen today-

  39. The New Deal’s Impact on Society • New Deal Constituencies and the Broker State • The New Deal and the Land • The New Deal and the Arts • The Legacies of the New Deal

  40. Harder Times for the Down and Out • African Americans in the Depression • Dust Bowl Migrations • Mexican American Communities • Asian Americans Face the Depression

  41. African Americans in the Depression • African Americans, who had always known discrimination and limited opportunities, viewed the depression differently from most whites. • Despite the black migration to the cities of the North, most African Americans still lived in the South and earned less than a quarter of the annual average wages of a factory worker.

  42. Throughout the 1920s, southern agriculture suffered from falling prices and overproduction, so the depression made an already desperate situation worse. • The Southern Tenant Farmers’ Union, which some black farmers joined, could do little to reform an agricultural system based on deep economic and racial inequalities

  43. The hasty trials and the harsh sentences in the 1931 Scottsboro, Alabama, rape case along with an increase in lynching in the early 1930s gave black Americans a strong incentive to head for the North and the Midwest. • Harlem, one of their main destinations, was already strained by the enormous influx of African Americans in the 1920s and, in 1935, was the setting of the only major race riot of the decade, when anger exploded over the lack of jobs, a slowdown in relief services, and economic exploitation of blacks.

  44. Partly in response to the riot but mainly in return for growing black allegiance to the Democratic Party, the New Deal channeled significant amounts of relief money toward blacks outside the South. • The NAACP continued to challenge the status quo of race relations, though calls for racial justice went largely unheeded during the depression.

  45. Dust Bowl Migrations • The years 1930 to 1941 witnessed the worst drought in America’s history, but low rainfall alone did not cause the dust bowl.

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