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FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies DOMESTIC Policies
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FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

Jan 28, 2016

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Page 1: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

FRANKLIN D. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR”ROOSEVELT - “FDR”DOMESTIC PoliciesDOMESTIC Policies

Page 2: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

I. The Election of 1932I. The Election of 1932

Page 3: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

Remember, Remember, 1932 was the 1932 was the worst year of worst year of

the the depression!depression!

What will What will that spell that spell for Hoover for Hoover

and the and the RepublicansRepublicans

?!??!?

Page 4: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

A. Democrats-Franklin Delano

Roosevelt1. FDR was governor of New York

a. Ran for vice-president in 1920 and was assistant secretary of the Navy during WWI

2. Democratic platform-a. Urged the repeal of Prohibition and made general appeals for reform and recovery through a “New Deal”

Page 5: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

B. Republicans re-nominated Herbert Hoover 1.They had no better alternative

C. Roosevelt carried 42 of the 48 states- he won overwhelmingly!D. People blamed Hoover and

the Republicans for the Depression

Page 6: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

FDR’s Inaugural Address is one of the most famous!!!

Listen to a piece of it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MX_v0zxM23Q&feature=related

We’ll watch about 1st 3 minutes…

Page 7: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

II. Banking Panic

A. 20th Amendment changed the presidential inauguration from March 4 to January 20.

B. Hoover was a “Lame Duck;” a person leaving office that has not been re-elected has little or no influence.

Page 8: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

C. Between the election and the inauguration, the banking system disintegrated & the economy came to a standstill

D. Most smaller banks closed while larger banks stayed open; by 1933 most people had lost faith in the banking system; had withdrawn any $ they had left- most banks closed their doors and waited until March 4 to see if FDR could help.

Page 9: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

III. “BRAIN TRUST”A. Advisory group formed by FDR

while campaigning for the presidency in 1932.

B. This was a group of brilliant social, economic and political thinkers who comprised Roosevelt's cabinet.

C. This group advised FDR in developing his 15 relief agencies to make advances in recovery efforts.

Page 10: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

D. FRANCIS PERKINS1. A teacher and social worker who

was originally from Boston, later moved to NY2. The 1st woman to be named to a cabinet position - named Secretary of Labor in 1933.3. She supported workers’ rights to

join unions.

Page 11: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

FDR LAUNCHES A NEW DEAL

FDR promised a “new deal” for the American peopleHe took office with a flurry of activity known as “The Hundred Days”The 100 Days lasted from March to June 1933

Page 12: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

IV. THE HUNDRED DAYS

A.March 9th – June 16th

1. The Senate met for exactly

100 days to pass laws that

would hopefully get America

out of the Depression.

Page 13: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

B. 100 Days’ Order of Business

1. March 6th- 1st order of business was to call a “Bank Holiday” (1933) to stop massive withdrawals that day.

2. March 9th - Emergency Banking Act passed: only financially sound banks would reopen.

Page 14: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

3. FIRESIDE CHATS:a. March 12th – FDR held the first

of 31 Fireside Chatsb. FDR’s informal talks through

radio in which he calmly but confidently explained in simple terms the nation’s problems & how the New Deal planned to defeat the Depression.

Page 15: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

c. Many Americans felt he was speaking directly to them.

d. He often received 50,000 letters

a day after a Fireside Chat.

Page 16: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

“I never saw him - but I knew him. Can you have forgotten how, with his voice, he came into our house,

the President of these United States, calling us friends..."

- Carl Carmer, April 14, 1945

Page 17: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

V. THE “NEW DEAL”:

FDR’s Platform It had 3 general aims:

Relief, Recovery, and Reform

Page 18: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

A. RELIEF 1. Immediate action taken to halt

the economy’s deterioration. 2. FDR launched programs of

direct relief for the nation’s 13 million unemployed workers.

3. Most Americans disliked relief. They wanted jobs- not handouts- so organizations were created to address that issue.

Page 19: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

B. RECOVERY

1.Temporary programs to restart the flow of consumer demand.

2.“Priming the Pump”- FDR poured money into the economy through federal loans and government spending.

Page 20: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

C. REFORM

1. Permanent programs to avoid another depression and ensure citizens against economic disasters.

Page 21: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

FDR’s New Deal continued• Americans voted for Franklin Roosevelt in

1932 on the assumption that the Democrats would dole out more federal assistance than Hoover and the Republicans had.

• With his 100 days plan, FDR gave many people hope that the Democrats would indeed provide more aid.

• Immediately after taking the oath of president, FDR began warning that his measures might require an expansion of executive power (hmmm… sounds a little like his 5th cousin…)

Page 22: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.
Page 23: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

• Roosevelt drew much of his inspiration for the New Deal from the writings of British economist John Maynard Keynes, who believed that a government’s deficit spending (when the expenditures of a government are greater than its tax revenues) could prime the economic pump and jump-start the economy.

• With the support of a panicked Democratic Congress, FDR created most of the “alphabet agencies” of the 1st New Deal within his landmark 1st 100 Days in office.

Page 24: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

Stop!!

•Get out your books and begin…

Assignment # 2 – The 100 Days and the New Deal

Page 25: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

FDIC (reform)• 1933: Glass-Steagall Banking Reform

Act passed to protect savings deposits. • This act created the Federal Deposit

Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which insured an individual’s savings of up to $5,000 (today, it insures deposits of up to $250,000). The act also regulated lending policies and forbade banks from investing in the stock market.

• Once Americans became confident that their funds would be safe, the number of bank deposits surged.

Page 26: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

Federal Emergency Relief Administration

• Created in May 1933 to dole out roughly $500 million to state governments.

• About half of this $$ was given to bail out bankrupt state/local governments. States matched the other half and distributed it directly to the people.

• Also created the Civil Works Administration (CWA), which helped generate temporary labor for those most in need.

• Contributed money to state and local gov’ts through grants, not in loans, as Hoover had. State gov’ts were then responsible for creating work-relief projects.

Page 27: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

CCC(relief)

• In March 1933, Congress created the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), which hired unemployed young men to work on environmental conservation projects throughout the US. For a wage of $30 a month, men worked on flood control and reforestation projects, helped improve national parks, and built many public roads.

• More than 2.5 million men worked in CCC camps during the program’s nine+ years of existence.

Page 28: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

SEC (reform)• Securities and Exchange Commission –

created to regulate companies that sell stocks and bonds.

• Banks could no longer buy stocks with depositors' money. Companies that wanted to sell shares to the public had to disclose their financial information to potential investors - investors could then find out if a company was worth the price it was asking.

Page 29: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

NIRA• The 1933 National Industrial Recovery Act

was the federal government’s first attempt to revive the economy as a whole. The bill created the Nat’l Recovery Admin (NRA) to stimulate industrial production and improve competition by drafting corporate codes of conduct.

• The NRA also sought to limit production of consumer goods in order to drive up prices.

• Helped set up the Public Works Administration (PWA) to construct public roads, bridges, and buildings.

Page 30: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

AAA (recovery)• Agricultural Adjustment Administration

(AAA): created to assist America’s farmers. The AAA temporarily reset prices for farm commodities, including corn, wheat, rice, milk, cotton, and livestock, and then began paying farmers to reduce production.

• The AAA began paying farmers extra to plant less or destroy their surplus crops in order to raise prices again. Congress also passed the Farm Credit Act to provide loans to farmers in danger of bankruptcy.

Page 31: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

TVA (reform)• Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA): goal was to

modernize and reduce unemployment in the Tennessee River Valley, one of the poorest and hardest-hit regions in the country.

• TVA developed fertilizers, taught farmers how to improve crop yields, and helped replant forests, control forest fires, and improve habitat for wildlife and fish. The most dramatic change in Valley life came from the electricity generated by TVA dams. Electric lights and modern appliances made life easier and farms more productive. Electricity also drew industries into the region, providing desperately needed jobs.

Page 32: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

TVA Dams (in Red)

Page 33: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

Watts Bar Dam (TN)

Page 34: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - “FDR” DOMESTIC Policies. I. The Election of 1932.

The New Deal and FDR as a whole…

• Roosevelt’s successful application of Keynes’s economic theories transformed the Democrats into social welfare advocates. Even decades after the Great Depression, Democratic politicians would continue fighting for more government intervention in the economy, redistribution of wealth, and aid for the neediest.

• The president’s optimism and can-do attitude, combined with the success of his immediate relief programs, made him almost politically untouchable during his first term.