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The New Deal (1933-1941)

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Title: The New Deal (1933-1941)


1
The New Deal (1933-1941)
2
I. Forging a New Deal
  • The nation waited eagerly for FDR (Franklin
    Delano Roosevelt) to be inaugurated as President
  • The inauguration did not occur until March 4th
    until the 20th amendment was passed the Lame
    Duck Amendment
  • Now, the inauguration date is January 20th
  • FDR would bring about the biggest change in the
    Federal Government since its inception

3
A. Restoring the Nations Hope
  • The first goal of FDR and Eleanor Roosevelt was
    to restore Americans sense of hope
  • Building public confidence in the future was
    essential to calming panics and gaining support
  • 3 great examples of restoring hope
  • Eleanor visits the veterans of the 2nd Bonus
    March on Washington in the campsites FDR ordered
    be set up
  • FDRs 1st inaugural address The only thing we
    have to fear is fear itself.
  • FDR would speak to large audiences over the radio
    in his Fireside chats to answer questions and
    renew hope

4
B. The First Hundred Days
  • From FDRs inauguration in March through June
    1933, the first hundred days
  • FDR pushed program after program through Congress
    to provide relief, create jobs, and stimulate
    economic recovery
  • Not taking a Laissez-faire approach

5
1. Stabilizing Financial Institutions
  • FDRs 1st step- restore public confidence in the
    nations banks
  • Ordered all banks to close for 4 days while
    Congress passed the Emergency Banking Act which
    inspected the health of all banks (March 5th)
  • 2/3 of banks were reopened by March 15th
  • People regained confidence in the banks
  • Began depositing more than taking out
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was created
    in 1933 which insures our bank deposits

6
More ways to stabilize the economy (fun economics)
  • Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was
    created to regulate the stock market
  • Federal Reserve Board could regulate the purchase
    of stock on margin
  • Took the U.S. off the gold standard to devalue
    American currency to make debt easier to pay back

7
2. Providing Relief and Creating Jobs
  • FDRs next step- help overburdened local relief
    agencies
  • Established a Federal Emergency Relief Agency
    (FERA) which sent funds to local agencies as well
    as put federal into public works programs
    (government-funded projects to build public
    facilities)
  • CWA- Build roads, parks, airports (4 million)
  • CCC- (2.5 million) young, unmarried men to work
    maintaining forests, beaches, and parks Earned
    only 30/mnth but lived free of charge

8
3. Regulating the Economy
  • The NRA (National Recovery Administration) was
    created to balance the unstable economy
  • Controlled working conditions
  • Set a minimum wage
  • Gave organized labor collective bargaining rights
  • Was not a huge success but its Public Works
    Administration (PWA) projects are still very
    visible to this day
  • NYCs Triborough Bridge, Key Wests Causeway

9
4. Assisting Homeowners and Farmers
  • Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
    tried to raise farm prices through subsidies
    (government financial assistance)
  • Paid farmers NOT to raise certain crops and
    livestock
  • Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC)- provided
    low-interest-rate loans to 1 million families

10
5. The TVA
  • Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) helped farmers
    and created jobs in one of the countrys least
    developed regions
  • Reactivated a hydroelectric power facility
  • Provided cheap electricity, flood control, and
    recreational opportunities to Tennessee River
    Valley and surrounding areas

11
C. Key Players in the New Deal
  • Appointed the first woman ever to a Cabinet
    position (Frances Perkins- Sec of Labor)
  • Hired African Americans in more than 100
    policymaking posts
  • Eleanor Roosevelt- FDRs wife and most important
    colleague traveled widely for her disabled
    husband and was an important advisor

12
D. The New Deal Falters
  • The energy and effort shown by New Dealers
    pleased many, but when the programs failed to
    bring about significant economic improvement,
    criticism began to mount
  • Many worried about the increased power of the
    Federal government (fear of tyranny)
  • The Supreme Court ruled the NIRA and the tax that
    funded the AAA unconstitutional making 2 of the
    most important programs crumble

13
E. A Second New Deal
  • In 1935, President Roosevelt launched a new, even
    bolder burst of activity than his first hundred
    days
  • the Second New Deal included more social welfare
    benefits, stricter controls over business,
    stronger support for unions, and higher taxes on
    the rich
  • Responded to people who were saying he wasnt
    doing enough for ordinary Americans

14
1. New and Expanded Agencies
  • WPA- Works Progress Administration, set up in
    1935, lasted 8 years and provided work for 8
    million citizens (playgrounds, schools,
    hospitals, supported artists and writers)
  • FSA- Farm Security Administration, set up in
    1935, loaned more than 1 billion to farmers to
    set up camps for migrant workers

15
2. Rural Electrification
  • REA- Rural Electrification Administration, 1935,
    offered loans to electric companies and farm
    cooperatives for building power plants and
    extending power lines as well as to individuals
    to pay for services
  • Increased electricity over time from 10 of farms
    with electricity to 98 of farms with it

16
3. New Labor Legislation
  • The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) called
    the Wagner Act (named after its leading advocate)
  • Legalized union practices such as collective
    bargaining and closed shops (workplaces only open
    to union members)
  • Also, outlawed spying on union activities
  • Set up the NLRB (board) to enforce provisions
  • Challenged as unconstitutional, but the Wagner
    Act was upheld on the provision that the
    government can regulate labor disputes linked to
    interstate commerce

17
4. Social Security
  • 1935, Congress also passed the Social Security
    Act
  • Established a Social Security system to provide
    financial security, in the form of regular
    payments, to people who could not support
    themselves
  • Old-age pensions and survivor benefits
  • Unemployment insurance
  • Aid for dependent children, the blind, and the
    disabled

18
F. The 1936 Election
  • FDR beat the Republican challenger Alfred M.
    Landon by an electoral college vote of 523-8!
  • The only states Landon won were Maine and Vermont
  • Most Americans supported the New Deal

19
II. The New Deals Critics
  • There was plenty of support for Franklin
    Roosevelts New Deal, but it also inspired its
    share of critics

20
A. The Limitations of the New Deal
  • For all its successes, the New Deal fell short of
    some peoples expectations
  • New Deal agencies were generally less helpful to
    women and minority groups when compared to white
    men

21
1. Women
  • Men and boys received strong preference in relief
    and job programs (ex. CCC)
  • No New Deal program protected domestic service,
    the largest female occupation
  • Some programs permitted lower standards for women
    (ex. NRA allowed women to be paid under the
    established minimum wage)

22
2. African Americans
  • Federal relief programs in the South, including
    public works projects, reinforced racial
    segregation
  • African Americans were not offered professional
    jobs or skilled labor positions
  • The New Deal did nothing to end discrimination in
    the North
  • Still, African Americans voted for FDR in the
    1936 election and many were thankful for job
    opportunity

23
B. Political Critics
  • People ran widely differing political views
  • They criticized the New Deal for both what it did
    and what it did not do

24
1. New Deal Does Too Much
  • Believed the New Deal went too far
  • Wealthy people since he raised their taxes
  • People against Social Security believed it
    penalized success the more you make, the more
    you have taken away and given to the poor
  • The American Liberty League spearheaded much of
    the opposition to the New Deal

25
2. New Deal Does Not Do Enough
  • Felt the programs did not provide enough help
  • Progressives
  • Socialists
  • Some wanted to completely change the economic
    system to prevent a permanent crisis
  • The New Deal had only limited success at ending
    poverty

26
C. Other Critics
  • Demagogues- leaders who manipulate people with
    half-truths, deceptive promises, and scare
    tactics
  • Two specific Demagogues were the leading critics
    of the New Deal

27
1. Father Coughlin
  • A dynamic speaker who used the radio to broadcast
    his message
  • Known as the Radio Priest in Detroit
  • At first, he supported the New Deal, but later
    denounced them and called FDR a double-crossing
    liar
  • Lost popularity when he issued openly anti-Jewish
    statements and began showering praise on Hitler
    and Mussolini

28
2. Huey Long
  • Known as the Kingfish- assassinated in 1935
  • Powerful Louisiana politician who began to gain
    national support and wanted to run for President
  • Was an excellent speaker who worked to help the
    underprivileged by improving education, medical
    care, and public services
  • His program was Share the Wealth and wanted to
    limit the amount of people could make and then
    redistribute the rest of the to everyone else.
  • 1 million max, 5,000 minimum per family
  • Not mathematically possible

29
D. Modern-Day Critics
  • Many Americans place FDR as one of the greatest
    presidents of all time, yet some historians and
    economist believe that the New Deal actually
    hindered economic progress and threatened
    Americas belief in free enterprise
  • Upset about the creation of a large bureaucracy
  • Didnt allow supply and demand to set the market
  • Deficit spending- the government borrowed from
    itself which greatly increased the national
    deficit

30
E. The Court-Packing Fiasco
  • In order to ensure that his legislation would be
    upheld by the Supreme Court, FDR asked for an
    amendment that would allow him to appoint 6 more
    Justices raising the total to 15
  • He would be able to pack the court with
    Justices who support the New Deal
  • It didnt get passed and was embarrassing to FDR
  • People were outraged (both parties) and this was
    the most negative response FDR ever received
  • They thought he was trying to take away the
    balance of powers in the U.S. (more like a
    dictator)

31
III. Last Days of the New Deal
  • Many of the New Deal programs would last into the
    1940s, some are even still around today

32
A. The Recession of 1937
  • The New Deal was not a miracle cure for the Great
    Depression
  • There was temporary economic improvements
  • However, in 1937, there was another economic
    downturn, a recession
  • Social Security tax was partly to blame as it
    came out of workers paychecks, through payroll
    deductions leading to fewer purchases
  • There was also rising national debt and works
    project programs had to be cut back (like the WPA)

33
B. Unions Triumph
  • The New Deal changed the way many Americans
    thought about labor unions
  • Labor union members increased from 3 million to
    10.5 million by 1941
  • 36 of workers were unionized by 1945

34
C. The New Deals Effects on Culture
  • Artists were aided by federal funds allocated by
    Congress to support the popular and fine arts to
    provide jobs

35
1. Literature
  • The Grapes of Wrath (1939) by John Steinbeck
  • A powerful tale about Dust Bowl victims who
    travel to California in search of a better life

36
2. Radio and Movies
  • Radio was a popular source of entertainment for
    Americans
  • The movies recovered from an initial setback by
    1933
  • The Wizard of Oz
  • Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
  • Mickey Mouse

37
3. The WPA and the Arts
  • FDR believed that the arts were not luxuries that
    people should have to give up in hard times
  • Gave WPA funds to support unemployed artists,
    musicians, historians, theater people, and
    writers
  • Collected 2,000 stories from former slaves
  • Built 17,000 sculptures and had over 100,000
    paintings

38
D. Lasting New Deal Achievements
  • It did not end the nations suffering but it led
    to some profound changes in American life
  • Just look at the recent bailouts and the recent
    election debates as proof of lasting change

39
1. Public Works and Federal Agencies
  • Bridges, dams, tunnels, buildings, hospitals
    still exist to this day
  • Some of the Federal agencies created still exist
    today as well (FDIC, SEC, TVA)

40
2. Social Security
  • Social security has come under harsh criticism by
    many throughout the years, but it has endured and
    many Americans depend on their Social Security
    checks
  • There have been amendments to Social Security and
    more amendments may be in the near future

41
3. A Legacy of Hope
  • Perhaps the greatest achievement of the New Deal
    was to restore hope
  • People again knew that someone cared about them
    and that the government would do what it could to
    try and support them in times of need
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