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The Election of 1932

The Election of 1932. The depression made Hoover the “victim” while Franklin Roosevelt emerged as the “savior”: In the 1932 election, FDR was able to unite the rural & urban factions of the Democratic party & won a landslide victory

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The Election of 1932

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  1. The Election of 1932 • The depression made Hoover the “victim” while Franklin Roosevelt emerged as the “savior”: • In the 1932 election, FDR was able to unite the rural & urban factions of the Democratic party & won a landslide victory • FDR appealed to Protestants & Catholics, farmers & workers, native-born & immigrants

  2. “I pledge you—I pledge myself to a new deal for the American people.”

  3. The Hundred Days • When FDR took over in 1933, the U.S. economy was on the brink of collapse: • Unemployment was at 25% • 38 states had total bank failure • FDR requested from Congress broad executive power to begin his “New Deal” program of economicrelief,recovery&reform FDR asked for “broad executive power that would be given to me if we were in fact invaded by a foreign foe.”

  4. “Let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself; nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.”

  5. The Hundred Days Banks were regulated (not nationalized); the economic system was reformed (not drastically changed) Now, the FDIC insures deposits up to $250,000 • In his 1st hundred days, FDR began his 1st New Deal (1933-35) • FDR’s 1st order of business was to restore confidence in banking: • Declared a 4-day bank holiday: closed or funded weak banks & opened new gov’t-aided banks • Glass-Steagall Act created the FDIC which guaranteed all bank deposits up to $5,000 Emergency Banking Act of 1933

  6. The Hundred Days • The greatest success of the First New Deal was its ability to offer relief to unemployed citizens via the Reconstruction Finance Corps • Modest relief checks were doled to 15% of Americans • Federal Emergency Relief Act(FERA) pumped $500 million into state welfare programs

  7. The Hundred Days • Relief efforts of the First New Deal created more “alphabet agencies” • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) employed urban men • Civilian Works Admin (CWA) hired 4 million men & women • Created the Public Works Admin (PWA) to build public roads, bridges, & buildings

  8. CCC workers paved roads, planted trees, built bridges

  9. The Hundred Days • The National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) was the 1st attempt at economic recovery: • Created the National Recovery Admin (NRA) set max hours & minimum wages for workers & stimulated industry by fixing prices & setting production limits • Agricultural Adjustment Admin(AAA) subsidized farmers Additional attempts to stimulate the economy include taking the U.S. off the gold standard & ending prohibition (21st amendment)

  10. National Recovery Administration The NRA ended up being too bureaucratic; business cooperation gave way to self-interest & greed

  11. The Hundred Days • Some of FDR’s First New Deal focused on long-term reforms • Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) to regulate the stock market & prevent another stock market crash • Tennessee Valley Authority(TVA) created dams in 7 states to provide cheap hydroelectric power & create jobs

  12. The Tennessee Valley Authority Critics claimed the TVA was too socialistic; Competing electric companies attacked the TVA for selling cheaper electricity & eliminating competition

  13. The Hundred Days • The 1st hundred days of FDR’s administration were temporary solutions to solve problems, but… • …psychologically, Americans believed that FDR was actively responding to the Great Depression

  14. Franklin Roosevelt & the Second New Deal (1935-1938)

  15. Criticism of the First New Deal • The failure of the New Deal to end the depression led to growing frustration among Americans • From 1933-1934, the New Deal focused on immediate problems & did very little to help unskilled workers & sharecroppers • In 1935, FDR shifted approach from economic relief to reform

  16. Challenges to FDR • By 1935, signs of discontent with the New Deal were evidenced as 3 critics gained national attention: • Father Charles Coughlin called fornationalizingU.S.banks;used anti-Semitism in radio sermons • Francis Townsend appealed to the elderly with a $200/mo payment plan to anyone over 60 inordertostimulatetheeconomy

  17. Challenges to FDR • Louisiana Senator Huey Long proposed his Share the Wealth plan to: • Take from the rich—a 100% tax on all personal income over $1 million • Give to the poor—give every American $2,500 per year Huey Long threatened to run as a 3rd Party candidate but was assassinated in 1935

  18. The Second New Deal • The1st act of the 2nd New Deal was Works Progress Admin (WPA), the most comprehensive, direct-assistanceprogramoftheNewDeal • The national gov’t hired 10 million Americans in an attempt to stimulate the economy • WPA created building projects, funded artists, & pumped $10 billion into the economy WPA helped but never employed enough people to stimulate consumer purchase power—it made the Depression bearable

  19. WPA Public Work Project WPA cared less about what got done as long as work was done: built hospitals, schools, airport fields… but also moved leaf piles & dug ditches

  20. Social Security • Social Security Act (1935) was the 1st U.S. welfare program for the aged, disabled, & unemployed • Old-age pensions to be funded by employers & workers • Unemployment compensation to begin in 1942 funded nat’l taxes but administered by states • Welfare payments for the blind, handicapped, & needy children

  21. Liberal critics argued that SS did not do enough • Conservative critics argued that SS violated individualism & self-reliance • Social Security created America’s 1stwelfareprogram to help individuals

  22. Labor Legislation • Wagner Act (1935) created the Nat’l Labor Relations Board to oversee labor-management affairs • Mandated management to negotiate with unions regarding pay, hours, conditions if majority of workers vote for a union • Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) created 1st minimum wage & maximum hour laws (aimed at helping non-unionized workers) The “Magna Carta” for labor 40 hours per week 40¢ per hour

  23. Conclusions The gov’t assumed responsibility for the health of the nation's economy & citizens For the 1st time, the gov’t used Keynesian economics (deficit spending & gov’t spending to stimulate the economy) • The New Deal was made up of 3 parts: relief, recovery, & reform • New Deal was most successful in providing immediate relief to ease economic suffering • The New Deal did not bring economic recovery, redistributewealth, or end the depression • The New Deal brought major reforms that changed America The New Deal signaled the beginning of the welfare state

  24. The End of the New Deal

  25. End of the New Deal The 1936 election saw the birth of a new Democratic coalition that would last for 30 years: South, West, urban, labor, ethnic groups, blacks, & the poor • New Deal reached its high point when FDR was re-elected in 1936 • FDR’sexperiencedmoresetbacks in his 2nd term than is 1st term but he still remained a popular leader

  26. Packing the Supreme Court U.S. v. Butler (1936) Schechter v. U.S. (1935) • The Supreme Court was FDR’s last obstacle to overcome: • The Court ruled the NRA & AAA were unconstitutional • FDR’s solution was to ask Congress to appt 1 new justice for each justice over 70 yrs old • Thiscontroversial“court packing” plan would add 6 new justices All 9 justices were old, white men; Only 3 were sympathetic to the New Deal; 2 were unpredictable; 4 wanted to block New Deal Justice Willis Van Devanter planned to retire in 1932, but stayed on because he felt FDR was “unfitted & unsafe for the presidency”

  27. Packing the Supreme Court • The court-packing scheme was legal but set a scary precedent: • The Senate strongly resisted FDR & the Court defended itself against “ageism” attacks • The crisis ended when the Court declared the Wagner Act & Social Security constitutional & Judge Van Devanter resigned FDR eventually appointed 5 justices to the Supreme Court in his 4 terms

  28. The End of the New Deal • 1938 saw the end of the New Deal • Other than the Fair Labor Standards Act, FDR’s 2nd term saw no new New Deal programs • FDR’s court-packing plan hurt his relationship with Congress • The “Roosevelt Recession” of 1937 was the result of FDR’s attempt to reduce gov’t spending & balance the budget

  29. Unemployment, 1929-1942

  30. The Impact of the New Deal

  31. The Impact on Women • The New Deal brought few economic benefits to women: • The New Deal allowed for unequal wages; Social Security, the NRA, & minimum wage laws offered little help for women • But, women did see gains in gov’t: • The 1st female cabinet member, Senator, ambassadors, & judges were appointed under FDR

  32. The 1st female cabinet member: Francis Perkins (Dept of Labor) The 1st female Senator: Hattie Caraway (D-Arkansas)

  33. The Impact on African-Americans • The New Deal did little for African Americans: • Racism & segregation remained strong during the Depression • The NRA allowed lower wage scales for black workers; The AAA allowed for the eviction of sharecroppers & tenant farmers • Minimum wage & SS did not apply to farmers & domestic servants (65% were black) Social Security “looks like a sieve with the holes just large enough for the majority of Negroes to fall through” —NAACP Blacks were the last hired & first fired Blacks experienced 50% unemployment rate AAA is a “continuation of the same old raw deal”

  34. The Impact on African-Americans • Despite the inequalities of the New Deal, blacks supported FDR: • FDR hired African-Americans to key gov’t positions • Eleanor Roosevelt spoke out against racial discrimination • The RFC brought assistance to 40% of unemployed blacks through the WPA “While relief & WPA are not ideal, they are better than the Hoover bread lines & they’ll have to do until the real thing comes along”

  35. The Impact on Mexican-Americans • Mexican-Americans fared even less than African-Americans: • The Dust Bowl led to a flood of whites into the agricultural fields in the southwest • Congress created immigration restrictions & allowed for the deportation of illegal residents to reduce state welfare payments • Received few New Deal benefits

  36. The Impact on Native Americans • Native-Americans remained the poorest of all U.S. residents but did benefit from the New Deal • The Indian Reorganization Act shifted U.S. Indian policy from Indians as yeoman farmers to unified & autonomous tribes • Many gained employment in the Indian Bureau

  37. The Impact on the South & West • The South & West benefited the most from the New Deal: • The AAA helped end Southern dependence on sharecropping in favor of a wage labor system • The West received more work relief & welfare than any region • Hydroelectric power & irrigation programs helped residents

  38. Conclusion:The New Deal & American Life

  39. The New Deal and American Life First Hundred Days Second Hundred Days • The New Deal lasted only 5 years (1933-1938); The majority of laws came in 2 bursts in 1933 & 1935: • The New Deal was not very successful economically: • Helped relieve suffering but did not end the Depression • American wealth remained unequally distributed 10 million were still unemployed in 1939 12 million were unemployed when FDR took office in 1933

  40. The New Deal & American Life • The New Deal was more successful socially: • Social Security, Wagner Act, & the Fair Labor Standards Act helped elderly & disabled citizens, labor unions, & workers • The New Deal did not help women, minorities, domestic workers, or small farmers

  41. The New Deal and American Life • The New Deal was most successful politically: • FDR’s leadership unified a new Democratic voting bloc • FDR used his leadership & optimism to provide a vital psychological lift to help citizens endure the Great Depression

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