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Launching the New Deal

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Title: Launching the New Deal


1
Launching the New Deal
  • Much of Roosevelt's success was a result of his
    ebullient personality, he assured Americans the
    the only thing we have to fear is fear its self
    in his inaugural address, he was the first
    president to make regular use of the radio, he
    used his Fireside Chats to explain his programs
    to the people, helped build public confidence in
    the administration

2
Launching the New Deal
  • Bank Holiday on March 6, 1933 FDR issued a
    proclamation closing all American banks for 4
    days until Congress could meet in special session
    to consider banking reform legislation

3
Launching the New Deal
  • The Emergency Banking Act was designed primarily
    to protect the larger banks from being dragged
    down by the weakness of smaller banks, the
    Treasury Department inspected all banks before
    they would be allowed to reopen and provided
    federal assistance to some troubled institutions,
    helped dispel the panic, 75 of the banks in the
    Federal Reserve system reopened within the month,
    provided an end to the immediate banking crisis

4
Launching the New Deal
  • The Economy Act was designed to balance the
    federal budget by cutting the salaries of
    government employees and veterans by as much as
    15, this act drew protests from the progressives
    in Congress

5
Launching the New Deal
  • The Beer Act legalized the manufacture and sale
    of beer with a 3.2 alcohol content, this was an
    interim measure pending the repeal of
    prohibition, which was accomplished with the 21st
    Amendment which ended prohibition in 1933

6
Launching the New Deal
  • Agricultural Adjustment Act (May 1933) it was
    designed to reduce crop production to end
    agricultural surpluses and halt drop in farm
    prices, producers of seven basic commodities
    (wheat, cotton, corn, hogs, rice, tobacco, and
    dairy) would decide on production limits for
    their crops,

7
Launching The New Deal
  • The government (through the Agricultural
    Adjustment Administration) would then tell
    individual farmers how much they should produce
    and would pay them subsidies for leaving some of
    their land idle, this subsidy would be paid for
    by a tax on food processing, farm prices were to
    be subsidized up to the point of parity

8
Launching the New Deal
  • The results of the AAA brought about a rise in
    prices for farm commodities and made the
    agricultural economy more stable and prosperous
    than it had been in many years, but it favored
    larger farmers over smaller ones and made
    payments directly to landowners resulting in
    tenant farmers being kicked off their land in
    order to qualify for payments, the Supreme Court
    ruled the government had no right to require
    farmers to limit production and struck down the
    AAA in 1936

9
Launching the New Deal
  • Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act
    permitted the government to pay farmers to reduce
    production to "conserve soil", this was not
    struck down by the Supreme Court

10
Launching the New Deal
  • The Resettlement Administration and its successor
    the Farm Security Administration provided loans
    to help farmers cultivating sub marginal soil to
    relocate to better lands, the Rural
    Electrification Administration worked to make
    electric power available to thousands of farmers
    through utility cooperatives

11
Launching the New Deal
  • The Roosevelt administration relaxed antitrust
    provisions for businesses in exchange for
    employer recognition of workers rights to bargain
    collectively through unions, to insure that
    incomes rose along with prices, to help create
    jobs and to increase consumer buying power the
    administration added a major program of public
    works spending

12
Launching the New Deal
  • The National Industrial Recovery Act (June 1933)
    created the National Recovery Administration led
    by Hugh S. Johnson, Johnson called on every
    business in the nation to accept a temporary
    "blanket code" that included a minimum wage of 30
    to 40 cents an hour, a maximum workweek of 35 to
    40 hours, and the abolition of child labor,
    adherence to the blanket code would raise
    consumer purchasing power and increase
    employment.

13
Launching the New Deal
  • In addition to these the Industrial Codes
    negotiated by Johnson applied to major industries
    and set floors below which no company would lower
    prices or wages in search of a competitive
    advantage and they included provisions for
    maintaining employment and production, he quickly
    won agreements with every major industry in the
    US

14
Launching the New Deal
  • NIRA Difficulties the codes were hastily and
    often poorly written, administrating them was
    beyond the capacities of federal officials with
    no prior experience in running so large a
    program, large producers dominated code writing
    process and wrote them to their advantage,
    sometimes they artificially raised prices leading
    to a decline in industrial production, Section
    7(a) promised workers the right to form unions
    and engage in collective bargaining but contained
    no enforcement mechanisms

15
Launching the New Deal
  • The Public Works Administration was established
    to administer the spending programs of NIRA but
    only gradually allowed the money to flow out, not
    until 1938 was the PWA putting a large amount of
    money into the economy, industrial production
    declined from July to December in 1933, by early
    1934 many businesses were flaunting its
    provisions, FDR pressured Johnson to resign in
    the fall of 1934 and established a new board of
    directors to oversee the NRA

16
Launching the New Deal
  • In the Schecter Case (1935), the Supreme Court
    ruled that the Roosevelt administration did not
    have the power to draft the NRA codes (instead it
    belonged to Congress) and the case involved
    intrastate commerce not interstate commerce and
    therefore the federal government had acted in an
    unconstitutional manner, Roosevelt criticized the
    Court for its horse and buggy interpretation of
    the interstate commerce clause

17
Launching the New Deal
  • The AAA and the NRA reflected the beliefs of New
    Dealers who favored economic planning but wanted
    private interests (farmers or business leaders)
    to dominate the planning process, others believed
    that the government should be doing the planning
    for the economy

18
Launching the New Deal
  • The Tennessee Valley Authority was authorized to
    complete the dam at Muscle Shoals (started during
    WWI but never finished) and build others in the
    region, to generate and sell electricity from the
    dams to the public at reasonable rates, it was
    also intended to be an agent for a comprehensive
    redevelopment of the entire region, it improved
    water transportation, provided electricity,
    stopped flooding problems, power rates declined,
    but the Tennessee Valley remained generally
    impoverished

19
The Tennessee Valley Authority
20
Launching the New Deal
  • Roosevelt considered the gold standard a major
    obstacle to the restoration of adequate prices,
    he signed an executive order shifting the US off
    the gold standard, the US now had
    government-managed currency, where the dollars
    value could be raised or lowered by government
    policy according to economic circumstances, this
    did not have any major impact on the economy

21
Launching the New Deal
  • The Glass-Steagall Act gave the government
    authority to curb irresponsible speculation by
    banks, it established the Federal Deposit
    Insurance Corporation, which guaranteed all bank
    deposits up to 2,500

22
Launching the New Deal
  • The Truth in Securities Act required corporations
    issuing new securities to provide full and
    accurate info about them to the public, another
    act created the Securities and Exchange
    Commission in order to police the stock market,
    JP Morgans son and successor could not even get
    a respectful hearing on Capital Hill to address
    the issue

23
Launching the New Deal
  • Federal Emergency Relief Administration provided
    cash grants to states to prop up bankrupt relief
    agencies, Harry Hopkins was chosen to lead the
    agency but had misgivings about establishing a
    government "dole"

24
Launching the New Deal
  • The Civil Works Administration put 4 million
    people to work on temporary projects constructing
    roads, schools, and parks, the important thing to
    Hopkins was pumping money into an economy badly
    in need of it and providing assistance to people
    with nowhere else to turn

25
Launching the New Deal
  • The Civilian Conservation Corps was designed to
    provide employment to the millions of young men
    who could not find jobs in the cities, they
    created camps in the national parks, forests, and
    other wilderness areas, the men worked in a
    semi-military environment on such projects as
    planting trees, building reservoirs, developing
    parks, and improving agricultural irrigation, the
    CCC was segregated and the vast majority of jobs
    went to whites, women were excluded altogether

26
Launching the New Deal
  • The Farm Credit Administration provided mortgage
    relief for millions of farm owners and homeowners
    by refinancing 1/5th of all farm mortgages in the
    US, the Home Owners Loan Corporation refinanced
    the mortgages of 1 million homeowners by 1936,
    and the Federal Housing Administration was
    established to insure mortgages for new
    construction and home repairs

27
The New Deal In Transition
  • By early 1935 with no end to the Depression in
    sight, the New Deal found itself the target of
    fierce public criticism, most of the criticism
    came from the right but some came from the left
    (Communist and Socialist Parties)

28
The New Deal In Transition
  • The American Liberty League was formed by a group
    of the most fervent and wealthiest Roosevelt
    opponents, designed to arouse public opposition
    to the New Deal's dictatorial policies and
    attacks on free enterprise, did not attract much
    popular support

29
The New Deal In Transition
  • Dr. Francis E. Townsend, an elderly California
    physician, led a movement of more than 5 million
    members with his plan for federal pension for the
    elderly, the Townsend Plan stated that all
    Americans over the age of 60 would receive
    monthly government pensions of 200, provided
    they retired and spent the money in full each
    month, the public sentiment behind this proposal
    directly led to the Social Security System which
    Congress approved in 1935

30
The New Deal In Transition
  • Father Charles E. Coughlin was a Catholic priest
    in Detroit, his weekly sermons broadcast
    nationally over the radio, advocate for changing
    the banking and currency systems, he proposed the
    re-monetization of silver, issuing greenbacks,
    and the nationalization of the banking system, he
    became a critic of FDR for not dealing harshly
    enough with the money powers and established
    the National Union for Social Justice

31
The New Deal In Transition
  • Governor Huey P. Long from Louisiana, rose to
    power based on his strident attacks on the banks,
    oil companies, utilities and on the conservative
    political oligarchy allied with them, he became a
    dictator in the state of Louisiana but the people
    loved him because of his progressive
    accomplishments such as building roads, schools,
    hospitals, revising the tax codes, distributing
    free textbooks, and lowering utility rates.

32
The New Deal In Transition
  • He easily won election to the Senate in 1930, an
    early supporter of FDR he broke with the
    President and proposed an alternative to New Deal
    which advocated a drastic program of wealth
    redistribution

33
The New Deal In Transition
  • The Share-Our-Wealth Plan called for using the
    tax system to confiscate the surplus riches of
    the wealthiest men and women in America and
    distribute them to the rest of population, this
    would allow the government to guarantee every
    family a homestead of 5,000 and an annual wage
    of 2,500, a poll by the Democratic National
    Committee in the Spring of 1935 showed that Long
    might attract more than 10 of the vote if he ran
    as a third-party candidate for President

34
The New Deal In Transition
  • The Second New Deal was launched in the spring of
    1935 and FDR was now willing to attack corporate
    interests openly
  • The Holding Company Act of 1935 was designed to
    break up the great utility holding companies that
    held monopolies in most metropolitan areas

35
The New Deal In Transition
  • In 1935 the Supreme Court struck down the
    National Industrial Recovery Act, which
    invalidated Section 7(a) that allowed workers to
    organize into unions and bargain collectively to
    improve wages and working conditions

36
The New Deal In Transition
  • A group of progressives in Congress led by
    Senator Robert Wagner (NY) introduced the
    National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act) which
    provided workers with a crucial enforcement
    mechanism missing from the 1933 law, the National
    Labor Relations Board would have the power to
    compel employers to recognize and bargain with
    legitimate unions

37
The New Deal In Transition
  • The American Federation of Labor remained
    committed to the idea of the craft union which
    organized workers on the basis of their skills,
    but the bulk of industrial workers were now
    unskilled and so a new labor organization emerged
    to challenge craft unionism

38
The New Deal In Transition
  • Industrial Unionism argued that all workers in a
    particular industry should be organized in a
    single union, regardless of what functions the
    workers performed, all autoworkers should be in a
    single automobile union, all steelworkers in a
    single steel workers union, united in this way
    all workers would greatly increase their power.

39
The New Deal In Transition
  • John L. Lewis (United Mine Workers) created the
    Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) in
    1936, expanded the constituency of the labor
    movement, more receptive to women and blacks,
    targeted previously unorganized industries
    (textiles, laundries, tobacco factories, etc.)
    more militant than the AFL

40
The New Deal In Transition
  • The United Auto Workers utilized the Sit-Down
    strike against General Motors factories in
    Detroit, employees simply sat down inside the
    plants refusing to work or leave, thus preventing
    the company from using strikebreakers, this
    technique spread to 17 other GM factories, the
    strikers ignored court orders and police efforts
    to force them to vacate the buildings, Michigan
    had a progressive governor who refused to call
    out the National Guard, GM became the first major
    manufacturer to recognize the UAW

41
The New Deal In Transition
  • The United Steelworkers of America targeted
    United States Steel and launched an organizing
    drive in March 1937, US Steel recognized the
    union rather than risk a costly strike when it
    sensed that the company was on the verge of
    recovering from the Depression

42
The New Deal In Transition
  • Little Steel was far less accommodating, on
    Memorial Day 1937, a group of striking workers
    from Republic Steel gathered with their families
    for a picnic and demonstration on the South Side
    of Chicago, when they attempted to march toward
    the factory police opened fire on the strikers,
    10 were killed and another 90 wounded, the
    Memorial Day Massacre had the desired effect,
    the 1937 strike failed

43
The New Deal In Transition
  • In 1937 there were 4,720 strikes, and over 80
    were settled in favor of the unions, union
    membership went from 3 million in 1932 to 8
    million in 1937 to 10 million in 1941

44
The New Deal In Transition
  • Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins had been
    lobbying for a system of federally sponsored
    social insurance for the elderly and the
    unemployed, the Social Security Act (1935)
    provided two types of assistance for the elderly-
    those presently destitute received 15 a month in
    federal assistance, those presently working were
    incorporated into a pension system to which they
    and their employers would contribute by paying a
    payroll tax.

45
The New Deal In Transition
  • It would then provide them with an income upon
    retirement, payments would begin in 1942 and then
    would provide 10 to 85 a month to recipients,
    domestic servants and agricultural laborers were
    not included

46
The New Deal In Transition
  • The Social Security Act also created a system of
    unemployment insurance which made it possible for
    workers laid off from their jobs to receive
    temporary government assistance, established a
    system of federal aid to people with disabilities
    and dependent children, the framers of Social
    Security wanted to create a system of insurance
    not welfare

47
The New Deal In Transition
  • In 1935 the Works Progress Administration was
    created which established a system of work relief
    for the unemployed, under the direction of Harry
    Hopkins, it had a beginning budget of 5 billion,
    kept an average of 2.1 million workers employed,
    the WPA built or renovated 110,000 public
    buildings (schools, post offices, etc),
    constructed almost 600 airports, 500,000 miles of
    roads, and over 100,000 bridges.

48
The New Deal In Transition
  • it also offered assistance to those whose
    occupations did not fit into any traditional
    category of relief (Federal Writers Project,
    Federal Arts Project, Federal Music Project,
    Federal Theater Project, etc.)

49
The New Deal In Transition
  • The governments response to the Depression dealt
    with the two sexes in very different ways, for
    men the government concentrated on work relief
    (CCC, CWA, and the WPA, for women cash assistance
    was provided mainly through the Aid to Dependent
    Children program of Social Security

50
The New Deal In Transition
  • In the middle of 1936 the economy was visibly
    reviving, there was not much doubt that FDR would
    get a second term in the 1936 election, the
    Republicans nominated the moderate governor of
    Kansas, Alf Landon, who did not wage much of a
    campaign, Huey Long was assassinated in September
    1935, Roosevelt polled just under 61 , carried
    every state except Maine and Vermont, and the
    Democrats increased their already large
    majorities in both houses

51
The New Deal In Transition
  • The Democrats now had a broad coalition of
    western and southern farmers, the urban working
    class, the poor and the unemployed, the black
    communities of northern cities, and traditional
    progressives and committed new liberals, this
    coalition constituted a substantial majority of
    the electorate and it would be decades before the
    Republicans could create a lasting majority
    coalition of its own

52
The New Deal in Disarray
  • FDR believed that the American people had given
    him a mandate in the 1936 election and FDR was
    concerned that no program of reform could long
    survive the conservative justices on the Supreme
    Court who had already struck down the NRA and AAA

53
The New Deal in Disarray
  • In 1937 Roosevelt asked for a general overhaul of
    the federal court system that would add six new
    justices to the Supreme Court, FDR said that the
    courts were overworked and needed additional
    manpower and younger blood to enable them to cope
    with their increasing burdens, the real purpose
    was to give FDR the opportunity to appoint new,
    liberal justices and change the ideological
    balance of the Court

54
The New Deal in Disarray
  • The Supreme Court packing plan outraged
    conservatives and even disturbed some supporters
    of FDR who were concerned about the presidents
    hunger for power, in March, April, and May of
    1937 the Supreme Court upheld a state
    minimum-wage law, the Wagner Act, and the Social
    Security Act by identical 5 4 votes, and the
    Supreme Court was no longer an obstacle to the
    New Deal.

55
The New Deal in Disarray
  • The court-packing plan was easily defeated in
    Congress, but it did lasting political damage to
    Roosevelt's administration, southern Democrats
    and other conservatives voted against FDRs
    measure much more often than they had in the past

56
The New Deal in Disarray
  • By 1937 the national income had risen to almost
    where it was in 1929, other economic indices
    showed similar gains, FDR seized on these
    improvements as an excuse to try to balance the
    federal budget, many economists were convinced
    that the danger was now inflation not the
    Depression

57
The New Deal in Disarray
  • Recession of 1937 (Roosevelt Recession) seemed
    to be a direct result of his administrations
    unwise decision to reduce spending, 4 million
    additional workers lost their jobs, and economic
    conditions quickly worsened, FDR asked Congress
    for an emergency appropriation of 5 billion for
    public works and relief programs, leading to
    another tentative recovery

58
The New Deal in Disarray
  • Temporary National Economic Committee (TNEC)
    members included representatives of both houses
    of Congress and officials from several executive
    agencies, in order to examine that unjustifiable
    concentration of economic power with an eye to
    major reforms in the antitrust laws

59
The New Deal in Disarray
  • Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) established a
    national minimum wage, a 40 hour work week, and
    placed strict limits on child labor

60
The New Deal in Disarray
  • By the end of 1938 the New Deal had essentially
    come to an end, the threat of world crisis was
    real, and FDR began to prepare a reluctant nation
    for the possibility of war

61
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • Broker State elevated and strengthened new
    interest groups so as to allow them to compete
    more effectively in the national marketplace, the
    federal government was a mediator in the
    continuous competition, a force that could
    intervene when necessary to help some groups and
    limit the power of others,

62
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • By the end of the New Deal American business was
    competing for influence with a powerful labor
    movement, an organized agricultural economy, and
    with aroused consumers, the Broker State would
    eventually expand to include racial, ethnic, and
    religious minorities, women, gays, and others

63
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • One major legacy of the New Deal was to make the
    federal government a protector of interest groups
    and a supervisor of the competition among them,
    rather than an instrument attempting to create a
    universal harmony of interests.

64
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The experience of the New Deal suggests that
    assistance goes largely to those groups able to
    exercise enough political or economic power to
    demand it, in the 1930s farmers and workers
    finally won important protections from the
    federal government, also winning federal
    assistance were imperiled homeowners, the
    unemployed, and the elderly

65
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The New Deal did relatively little to assist
    African Americans, but Eleanor Roosevelt spoke on
    behalf of racial justice and put continuing
    pressure on her husband and others in the federal
    government to ease discrimination against blacks

66
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • Marian Anderson was refused permission to give a
    concert in the auditorium of the Daughters of the
    American Revolution, Eleanor Roosevelt resigned
    from the organization and helped secure
    government permission for her to sing on the
    steps of the Lincoln Memorial, it attracted
    75,000 people and became the first civil rights

67
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • FDR appointed a significant number of African
    Americans to his administration, Robert Weaver,
    William Hastie, and Mary McLeod Bethune, created
    an informal network of officeholders who
    consulted frequently with one another and became
    known as the Black Cabinet

68
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • By 1935, 25 of all African Americans were
    receiving some form of government assistance, and
    in the election of 1936 more than 90 of African
    Americans voted Democratic, they supported FDR
    because they knew he was not their enemy

69
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • FDR was never willing to risk losing the support
    of southern Democrats by supporting legislation
    to make lynching a federal crime, nor would he
    endorse efforts in Congress to ban the poll tax,
    New Deal relief agencies did not challenge, and
    indeed reinforced, existing patterns of
    discrimination, the Civilian Conservation Corps
    established separate black camps,

70
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The National Recovery Administration codes
    tolerated paying blacks less than whites doing
    the same jobs, blacks were largely excluded from
    employment in the Tennessee Valley Authority, the
    Federal Housing Administration refused to provide
    mortgages to blacks moving into white
    neighborhoods,

71
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The first housing projects financed by the
    federal government were racially segregated, and
    the Works Progress Administration routinely
    relegated black, Hispanic, and Asian workers to
    the least-skilled and lowest-paying jobs, when
    funding ebbed, minorities were the first to be
    dismissed

72
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • Indian Policy simply advocated continued
    assimilation, What we are trying to do is get
    rid of the Indian problem rather than add to it,
    the purpose of reforms should be to reduce the
    numbers of Native Americans who identified
    themselves as members of tribes and increase the
    number who attempt to join the larger society and
    culture

73
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • John Collier promoted the idea of cultural
    relativism which is the idea that every culture
    should be accepted and respected on its own terms
    and that no culture was inherently superior,
    Collier promoted legislation that would reverse
    the pressures on Native Americans to assimilate
    and would allow them to live in traditional
    Indian ways

74
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The Indian Reorganization Act (1934) restored to
    the tribes the right to own land collectively,
    reversing the Dawes Act of 1887, tribal land
    holding increased by 4 million acres, and Indian
    agricultural income rose from 2 million in 1934
    to 49 million in 1947

75
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • FDR appointed Frances Perkins as Secretary of
    Labor becoming the first female cabinet member,
    FDR also appointed more than 100 other women to
    bureaucratic positions throughout his
    administration, Eleanor Roosevelt was a committed
    advocate of womens rights and a champion of
    humanitarian causes, Hattie Caraway (AR) became
    the first women ever elected to a full term in
    the US Senate

76
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • New Deal and Women did not believe in sexual
    equality, instead gave women special protections,
    supported the belief that in hard times women
    should withdraw from the workplace to open up
    more jobs for men, not actively hostile towards
    women and in many ways unprecedentedly
    supportive, it accepted the prevailing cultural
    norms

77
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The West received more federal funds per capita
    through New Deal relief programs than any other
    region, and supported existing racial and ethnic
    prejudices, built great dams and power stations
    in the West, start of a huge federal presence out
    West

78
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • In the South, New Deal relief programs did not
    challenge racial norms, but did provide the TVA
    to address the Souths backwardness

79
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The economic boom of WWII finally ended the
    depression not the New Deal, nor did the New Deal
    substantially alter the distribution of power
    within American capitalism

80
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The New Deal did help elevate new groups
    (workers, farmers and others) to positions from
    which they could at times effectively challenge
    the power of the corporations.

81
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • It increased the regulatory functions of the
    government in ways that helped stabilize
    previously troubled areas of the economy (the
    stock market and the banking industry), it
    established the basis for new forms of federal
    fiscal policy, it created the basis of the
    federal welfare state

82
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • The New Deal fundamentally changed American
    politics, by the end of the 1930s state and local
    governments were clearly of secondary importance
    to the national government in Washington

83
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
  • FDR clearly established the presidency as the
    preeminent center of authority within the federal
    government, the New Deal also created a dominant
    political majority for the Democratic Party and
    greatly increased the American peoples
    expectations of government
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