1302 Topic Ten: The New Deal Overview In 1932, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected president of the United States in a landslide victory over Herbert Hoover. In the days before television, FDR, as he was known, could never have won his party's nomination for president, much less the presidency. Although he came from a politically prominent family and one of New York's wealthiest families, in 1921, Roosevelt was stricken with adult polio. Very few adults survived the disease, and those who did were invalids for life. The disease left Roosevelt paralyzed from the waist down and confined to a wheelchair. In the age of TV and internet, his disability would have been a huge liability. In the '20's and especially the 30's, the media were especially careful to show respect for Roosevelt. There was a special podium built with leg braces so that the president could be locked into a standing position, with hand grips for him to hold. In this manner, FDR could give speeches to the public. While he was maneuvered from his wheelchair to the podium, the press corps, in respect, turned their backs so as not to embarrass the president. It was the same when the president entered or exited an automobile. How times have changed. Roosevelt's policy for fixing the American economy was called the New Deal, after the speech he gave when he accepted the Democratic nomination for president in 1932. It is not an exaggeration to say that the New Deal altered the United States in fundamental ways. It created new political coalitions. It changed the federal government's relationship with all sectors of society: economic, cultural, urban and rural, the elderly, the young, labor, industry and agriculture. The New Deal saw an enormous expansion of federal power (a trend that had already started during the Progressive Era). The Great Depression had exposed the myth of Americans as rugged individualists; the New Deal changed the mindset of Americans, who for the first time accepted the federal government as the guarantor of the "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness". The New Deal created the United States that we Americans inhabit today. When Roosevelt was inaugurated on 4 March, the nation was in dire straits. Unemployment was hovering at 25%. Twenty-five million people were in danger of defaulting on their mortgages, or had already done so. Over one million people were homeless. Roosevelt immediately got to work. He called a special session of Congress, and in what became known as the Hundred Days, a huge amount of legislation was passed. Part of Roosevelt's success was his charisma and his ability to connect with the American public. He initiated frequent radio broadcasts known as the fireside chats (because most radios were located on the fireplace mantle) to explain to the American people steps he and Congress were taking to deal with the crisis. He famously said that "the only thing to fear was fear itself". The New Deal can be divided into two parts: the First New Deal concerned itself with relief efforts, while the Second New Deal attempted to reform the system. The programs of the New Deal is also sometimes known as the alphabet soup of policies, for reasons you'll see below. First New Deal 1933-1935 Emergency Banking Act (9 March – 13 March 1933), 4 day bank holiday to stop the run on banks and in order for the Treasury Dept. to inspect banks and loan money to those with assets. Saves the banking system from collapse and signals that FDR a moderate. Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) – nature conservation jobs to young men. Run by the army. Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) – directed by Harry Hopkins, gave money to the states to assist in relief efforts. Civil Works Administration (CWA) - Employed 4 million people to do jobs like build airports, vaccinate children, pick up trash, etc. It had a budget of 1 billion dollars but was dismantled after one year because FDR was concerned about the cost. Securities and Exchange Commission – polices the stock market Glass-Steagall Act – creates the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and mandates that holding banks must be separate from investment banks (repealed in 1999). National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) – two parts Public Works Administration (PWA) – 3.3 billion dollars awarded so that public works Jobs could be created. Work was done by private companies, not by the government. One construction project built by the PWA is the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. National Recovery Act (NRA) – Industrial leaders would write price and wage codes to stabilize the industrial sector. This didn’t work because it led to wage and price fixing (“negro robbed again”). Also, the government couldn't enforce the codes. Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) – Limits would be set on the yields of the seven basic agricultural products (corn, dairy, tobacco, wheat, rice, pigs, cotton) and the government would pay farmers subsidies to let land sit “idle”. Ruled unconstitutional in 1936, replaced by Soil Conservation Act. Rural Electrification Administration (REA) – Government provides and subsidizes electricity to rural areas. Still in effect today. Federal Housing Administration (FHA) – created to help homeowners who were being foreclosed upon. Increased mortgage terms from 10 to 30 years and uniform bldg. codes. Still in existence today. Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) – collapse of private utility companies allows for the government to create regional power supply. The TVA built dams along the Tennessee River, which created jobs, stopped flooding, provided irrigation and brought electricity to rural areas. It is the largest electrical provider in the nation and is still in existence today. Works Progress Administration (WPA) – employs 8.5 million Americans, largest employer in America. Ran from 1935-1939. Second New Deal 1935-1938 Social Security – provided a pension for the elderly, the disabled, the unemployed and dependent mothers and children. Wealth Tax Act – raised taxes on the wealthy, corporations, inheritances, stock profits and gifts. Wagner Act – Legislation that protected workers and labor unions from employers and big business. Fair Labor Standards Act – established minimum hourly wage (40 cents) and maximum working hours per week (40 hours), and made illegal child labor. U.S. Housing Authority - money to the states to build low cost housing for poor and homeless people. Still in existence today as the Federal Public Housing Authority. Additional Measures Other measures taken by Roosevelt included taking the country off the Gold Standard, providing children with school lunches, lowering the tariff and negotiating reciprocal trade policies with other nations, and trying to resettle tenant farmers and sharecroppers on better land in order that they may own land. Critics of Roosevelt Election of 1936 Legacy of the New Deal