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Homework

Homework. Read Ch 33 Message Boards Online Quizzes. Ch 33 Politics of Boom and Bust. Ch 33 Politics of Boom and Bust. 1920’s Presidents All Republican Warren G. Harding Pro-business High tariffs Anti-progressivism Corrupt Foreign affairs Disarmament Kellogg-Briand

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Homework

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  1. Homework • Read Ch 33 • Message Boards • Online Quizzes

  2. Ch 33Politics of Boom and Bust

  3. Ch 33 Politics of Boom and Bust • 1920’s Presidents • All Republican • Warren G. Harding • Pro-business • High tariffs • Anti-progressivism • Corrupt • Foreign affairs • Disarmament • Kellogg-Briand • Calvin Coolidge • Pro-business • Herbert Hoover • Pro-business • Farmers’ assistance • Stock market crash • Great depression • Finally accepts the idea that the Government should help the people

  4. Harding and the Quest for Normalcy • Warren G. Harding • Characteristics • kindly, gracious, mediocre mind • sometimes a bit overwhelmed by the responsibilities of the Presidency • poor judge of character • (Washington could never tell a lie; Harding could never tell a liar) • most corrupt administration since US Grant

  5. Warren G. Harding

  6. The Republican “Old Guard” Returns • The “Ohio Gang” • Harding’s poker-playing, cigar-smoking cronies who happen to also be members of his cabinet • Key Players • A combination of the best minds… • Charles Evans Hughes (Sec State) • Andrew W. Mellon (Sec Treas) • Herbert Hoover (Sec Commerce) • And the worst… • Sen. Albert B. Fall (Sec Interior) • Harry M. Daugherty (Attorney General)

  7. Return to Conservatism • Return to McKinley-style politics • laissez-fair • Unless helping businesses make a profit • Conservative appointments • Supreme Court • 4 of the 9 justices are Harding appointments, including William Howard Taft • struck down Progressive legislation • Keating-Owens Act • Prohibited sale of products made by child labor • Muller v. Oregonstruck down by Adkins v. Children's Hospital in 1923 • Which had declared women to be deserving of special protection in the workplace.

  8. Laissez-faire • Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) • ICC is now controlled by pro-biz appointees who relax anti-trust enforcement • Trade-associations flourish under Hoover • (secretary of commerce)

  9. The Aftermath of War • Economic demobilization • Government dismantles economic controls • WIB was dissolved • Esch-Cummings Transportation Act of 1920 • gov't control of RR's during WWI ended • private management returns of RR returns • RR's allowed to consolidate in order to guarantee their profitability • Government regulation of big business is over.

  10. Post WWI Labor • Labor • End of government support • Post-War strikes • bloody steel strike in 1919 • broken by branding strikes as Reds & exploiting ethnic/racial differences among workers • 1922 RR Strike • brought on by a wage cut • 2 month strike broken by pro-business Attorney General Daugherty • Declining Union membership • crackdowns, "welfare capitalism," pro-biz government policy, association with communism and radicalism • membership down 30% from 1920-1930

  11. WWI Veterans • Veterans • Benefitted most from post-war policy • 1921 Veterans Bureau established • promoted by the American Legion, a vet. organization founded in 1919 • known for its zealous anti-radicalism, conservatism, militant patriotism, and promotion of vets rights • called for "adjusted compensation" • a bonus to make up for wages lost while vets served in war • bill passes, is vetoed by Harding; • passed again in 1924, Coolidge vetoed, but Congress overrode him • 1924 Adjusted Compensation Act (aka Bonus Bill) • promised adjusted benefits in 20 years (1945)

  12. America seeks Benefits without Burdens • International Relations • Ending the war with Germany • after failure to pass the Treaty of Versailles, the US remained in a technical "state of war" with Germany • war finally ended by Joint Resolution of Congress in 1921 • League of Nations • US remains suspicious of the League • refuses to support its provisions but we Harding refuses to completely ignore the League • sends observers to Geneva for the world health program

  13. Black Gold • Oil in the Middle East • oil was a key ingredient in winning WWI • US in a rivalry for oil rights with Britain • Sec. State Charles Evans Hughes secures right to drill for oil in the Middle East

  14. Disarmament • Disarmament crises • Naval buildup before and during WWI made the US a growing threat to other nations • Anglo-Japanese Treaty (1902) • a response to this; pledges that GB will support Japan in any conflict • Washington (Disarmament) Conference 1921-22 • all powers (except Russia) invited to discuss disarmament plans & the mid-East crisis • Sec. Hughes calls for a "10-year Holiday" in battleship construction • a 5-5-3 ratio between US/England/Japan on battleships and carriers

  15. Washington Conference • Treaties ratified by the Washington Conference • 5-Power Naval Treaty • approves the 5-5-3 plan, with the US and England agreeing not to fortify holdings in the Pacific (but Japan can) • 4-Power Treaty • England, France, Japan, and the US • agreement to preserve the status quo in the Pacific • replaces the Anglo-Japanese Treaty (1902) • 9-Power Treaty • agreement to keep the Open Door Policy in China

  16. Weaknesses of disarmament plans • no restrictions on small warships • cruisers, destroyers, subs • no commitments to using armed forces to keep treaty provisions

  17. World Peace • Desire to stay out of future wars • Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 (aka Pact of Paris) • Outlawed war • Defensive wars are ok • ratified by 62 nations • Frank Kellogg, Sec. State under Coolidge

  18. Countries that signed the Kellogg Briand Pact

  19. Hiking the Tariff Higher • Fordney-McCumber Tariff (1922) • raised Underwood Tariff (1916) rates from 27% to 38.5% • allows president to raise/lower rates based on advice of a specially appointed Tariff Commission • Harding/Coolidge raised rates more than they lowered them • 32 upward revisions in 6 years; 5 downward during same time • EFFECT • prolonged the postwar chaos in Europe • Europe couldn’t sell goods to US in order to aid its recovery • Europeans raised tariffs

  20. The Stench of Scandal • The most corrupt administration since Grant • Veterans Bureau Scandal • Col. Charles R. Forbes, head of the VB, & accomplices skim $200 million dollars from the VB • Teapot Dome Scandal • In 1921, naval oil reserves at Teapot Dome, WY & Elk Hills, CA were transferred to the control of the Department of the Interior • Sec. Interior Albert B. Fall accepted a bribe of $100,000 from oilman Edward Doheny & $300,000 from Henry Sinclair in exchange for leases to the land • scandal breaks in 1923 • Sinclair & Doheny acquitted (hurts respect for the law) • Fall was sent to jail for 1 year

  21. Scandals continue • Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty • investigated by the Senate in 1924 for illegal sale of pardons and liquor permits • Resigned and blamed Harding in 1927 trial • Harding died in 1923, • never sees the full extent of the corruption in his administration • “Silent Cal” Coolidge becomes Prez.

  22. Calvin Coolidge

  23. “Silent Cal” Coolidge • Coolidge's Administration • Characteristics • A Vermont Yankee • exudes NE virtues of thrift, industry, and honesty • Silent Cal • practiced economy in words • Cautious Cal • an apostle of the status quo • Leave things the way they are • Pro-business Republican • staunch supporter of business • "the man who builds a factory builds a temple; the man who works there worships there."

  24. Period 4 • Harding • Pro-business • Laissez-faire • Interfere to help business • High Tariffs • 1922 Fordney-McCumber tariff • Anti-progressive • Hurts child labor and women • Corrupt cabinet • Veterans Bureau scandal • Teapot Dome Scandal • Disarmament • Died in office 1923 (unhealthy) • Coolidge • Quiet • Pro-business

  25. Frustrated Farmers • Dealings with Farmers • The 1920s marked a decline in agricultural profits • Overproduction • What caused overproduction? • Agricultural revolution • Gas-engine tractor • results in more crops on bigger farms

  26. Congress tries to help • McNary-Haugen Bill (proposed 1924 & 1928) • called for gov't to keep farm prices high by purchasing farmers' surplus • gov't then sells surplus abroad • make up for the loss in price through a special tax. • Vetoed 2x (twice) by Calvin Coolidge

  27. A three way Race for the White House in 1924 • Election of 1924 • Candidates • GOP: Coolidge • Dem Party is split • wets/drys, urban/rural, fundamentalists/modernists, northern/southern, immigrants/old stock Americans • select John W. Davis as a compromise • Progressive Party: Sen. Robert La Follette • runs on a campaign that lashes out at… • monopolies, anti-labor legislation, calls for ownership of RRs & limits on the power of the Supreme Court to invalidate laws

  28. Electoral Results • Results • Coolidge 15,718,211 (382) • Davis 8,385,285 (136) • LaFollette 5,000,000 (13 = the state of Wisconsin)

  29. Foreign Policy Flounderings • Isolationism in Foreign Policy • Caribbean and Latin America • a limited rejection of Big Stickism and Wilsonian interventionism • troops pulled out of the DR in 1924; • troops withdrawn from Nicaragua in 1925, but redeployed in 1926 and stay until 1933. • Troops in Haiti remain (1924-34)

  30. Post WWI Debt • International Debts • $10 billion owed to US by the Allies • Allies want loans forgiven • Debt had been paid in blood • US had made millions from sales to Allies during the war. • US doesn’t care, they want what’s owed • Allies push for German reparations • French troops sent into the Ruhr industrial valley in 1923 to extort payments • Berlin inflates its currency, leading to massive inflation by late 1923

  31. Solution to Allied Debt • Dawes Plan 1924 • Reschedules German reparations payments • allows for private loans to Germany • creates a cycle in which American bankers loan money to Germany, which repays the Allies, who in turn make payments on American loans! • America's refusal to forgive debts simply promotes more ill-will and isolationism

  32. The Triumph of Herbert Hoover, 1928 • The Election of 1928 • Candidates • Coolidge doesn't run again • GOP: Herbert Hoover • an orphan and self-made man who worked his way through Stanford • supports isolation, individualism, and free enterprise • Great administrator, efficient, honest, and humanitarian • Recoils from anything that hints of a "planned economy" but supports unions and regulation of radio

  33. Democrats • Dems: Alfred E. Smith • 4 time governor of NY • a tremendous political personality but numerous strikes against him as a national candidate • a "wet" (prohibitionists call him Al(cohol) Smith) • urban and northern • Roman Catholic • KKK campaigns against him; "a vote for Smith is a vote for the Pope"; "Rum, Romanism, and Ruin.”

  34. Results

  35. Herbert Hoover

  36. President Hoover’s First Moves • Dealing with the Farm surplus • Agricultural Marketing Act (1929) • establishes the Federal Farm Board • $500 million to lend to farm organizations seeking to buy, sell, and store surpluses • in 1930 the Federal Farm Board created the Grain Stabilization Corporation and the Cotton Stabilization Corporation to bolster prices • Unsuccessful • Too much; overproduction • both were buried under an avalanche of farm produce as prices drop to 57¢ a bushel; 5¢ per lbs.

  37. Tariff changes • Farmers hoped that Hoover could lower tariffs • Hawley-Smoot Tariff (1930) • like most tariff measures, starts in the House as a reasonable protective bill • becomes the highest peacetime tariff in American history • raised Fordney-McCumber from 38.5% to almost 60% • Seals the US off from European goods, but also seals American goods inside.

  38. The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties • Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929 • burst in the "speculative bubble" in the stock market • 16,410,030 shares sold • marks the beginning (but not the cause) of the Great Depression • 2 months after the crash, stocks had lost $40 million dollars • 5000 banks collapse by 1932; • foreclosures on property as banks scramble to call in loans

  39. Unemployment • Unemployment • 1930: 4 million jobless • 1932: 12 million jobless

  40. Causes of the Great Depression • OVERPRODUCTION • Farm and Factory • Too ,much for consumers to consume or pay • INCOME DISPARITY • growing gap between the rich and poor • Too much money in the hands of a few wealthy people • profits from production going back into more production, not into wages or salaries, which creates much of the problem in #1 • EASY CREDIT • a false wealth that leads to more production but a consumer who is overextended • installment plans • "buying on margin" - stocks

  41. UNEMPLOYMENT & UNDEREMPLOYMENT • caused by technology and the start/stop nature of the economy • WORLDWIDE DEPRESSION • European nations faltering on loans and reparations payments • HIGH TARIFFS • Dampened trade • NATURAL DISASTERS • drought & the boll-weevil in the Mississippi Valley in 1930 • Cause farmers to sell farm

  42. Hoover and the Great Depression • Hoover's response to the crisis • Philosophy of "rugged individualism” and “volunteerism” • fears that direct government aid would make citizens lazy and dependent • People began to look at Hoover as unsympathetic/cold • Hoover-villes, Hoover-blankets, Hoover-flags

  43. Hoover finally caves in and helps… • the wealthy business owners • The Trickle Down theory • Believed that if financial health were restored at the top, unemployment would be relieved at the bottom. Doesn’t work

  44. Hoover Battles the Great Depression • Paving the way for the New Deal • Public Works • Hoover approves of $2.25 billion dollar public works program • most famous project = Boulder Dam (later called Hoover Dam) • Hoover accepts the principle of public works, but rejects anything that smacks of socialism • the Muscle Shoals Bill – • which calls for creation of hydroelectric dams in TN which would sell power in competition with private utility companies

  45. Hoover’s “Deal” • Reconstruction Finance Corporation (1932) • A gov't lending corporation that provides money to aid business and farm organizations • Norris-LaGuardia Anti-Injunction Act (1932) • a boost to organized labor • outlaws yellow dog contracts & forbids federal courts from issuing injunctions to restrain strikes, boycotts, and picketing

  46. The significance of Hoover's actions • an important bridge between the previous depression policies ("sweat it out") and the New Deal….government is doing something to combat economic slumps

  47. Routing the Bonus Army in Washington • Bonus Expeditionary Force (Bonus Army) • group of 20,000 vets seeking early payment on the "bonuses" promised in the Adjusted Compensation Act (1924) • The marchers take up residence in a giant Hooverville across the Potomac • protest outside the Capitol; speeches; etc.

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