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Europe tumbles when US crashes.
- Develops fascism, naziism, communism

FDR believed large corporations were to blame for the economic state,
which could only be solved by an active preseident and a strong govt.
- American Gov't had a responsibilty to help people in distress
- passed dozens of measures to promote welfare and economic recovery
- Not specifically ideological, but a pragmatist
    - New Deal (ND) was experimental, some programs failed miserably

Herbert Hoover just didn't want to do anything
- Andrew Mellon wanted to liquidate {real estate, stocks, farmers}
- Let the capitalist system "purge itself of rottenness"
- Invited business, agricultural, unions to talk (later)
    - Encouraged them to stop strikes, maintain employment
    - "Ineffective cheerleader for capitalism"
- Provided no direct federal relief
    - biggest emergency since the Civil War
- Passed 1932 Revevue Act: huge tax increase
    - worsened economic slowdown
    - Pushed "self-reliance" narrative
        - believed in charities, voluntarism
- New Dem Congress forced Hoover to Reconstruction Finance Corporation
    - helped out big banks, railroads
    - Dems still questioned these policies
    - Hoover only allowed RFC to make loans to states
- Hoover did not take it as a sign

Bonus Army March
- Wanted Congress to pay veterans the 4 million cash bonuses they
  promised for 1935
    - It is actually 1932, but the House authorized it (Senate denied)
    - Veterans with no place to go camped in vacant buildings,
      shantytown (first nonviolent protestors in US)
    - Congress paid for train tickets home
        - William Mitchell, Attorney General, ordered buildings cleared
            - Secretary of War dispatched soldiers to remove them
                - Horses, tanks, tear gas
                - General MacArthur
                - Soldiers, exceeding orders, burned their encampment
                - PR disaster for Hoover + Republicasn (heartless)
- Hoover became tired and poor morale
    - said he "had no Wilsonian qualities"
    - terrible, cold speaker

1032 Election: FDR met public demand for change (Hoover lost)
    - FDR is NY governor
    - Said his campaign was a "call to arms"
    - Wanted new ideas and agressive action
    - Hoover lacked vitality and vision

Roosevelt's First 100 Days
- Asked for broad power from Congress to respond to the emergency
- Chicago Tribune, Repub newspaper, praised him
- Presidency defined by leadership and action
- He and his advisors wanted to build back the economy and help those in
  need
    - "Our greatest primary task is putting people to work" - FDR
    - Gave farmers money to make less crops
- 100 First Days: created 50 programs, some of which to become the ND
- Hundreds of banks were failing
    - FDR asked Congress to pass "Emergency Banking Relief Act"
    - 4 day bank holiday to stall the bank collapse
    - Funded banks to restore confidence
        - "Safer to keep your money in a reopened bank than in your
          mattress"
        - Removed Gold Standard
    - Glass-Steagall Banking Act
        - Created Federal Deposit Insurance Incorporation (FDIC) to
          isnure up to 250K.
        - Divided savings banks from investment banks. Only investment
          banks could invest in stock mkt after 1933
    - Securities Act of 1933 regulated sales of stocks and bonds
        - Required publicly traded companies to disclose all relevant
          information
        - Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) enforces this.
- Helping the Unemployed and Homeless
    - Federal Emergency Relief Act (FERA) gave money to states for
      unemployed and homeless
        - Proved ineffective
    - First large-scale effort to put people on gov't payroll at good
      wages: Civil Works Admin.
    - Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) managed by War Dept. employed
      unmarried unemployed young men as "Soil Soldiers" ($1/day for no
      more than 9mo)
        - Cleared brush, constructed roads, trees, parks, taught farmers
    - National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) established PWA (sewage
      plants, dams, highways) and National Recovery Administration (NRA)
        - NRA set prices, wages, and working standards --- unique for
          the government in peacetime
            - NRA codes included fair labor policies (like 40hr/8hr, no
              child labor, unionization), negotiation policies 
                - Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional because it
                  would be a Congressional responsibility
                    - Some NRA policies had lasting effects like
                      national minimum wage, workweek
    - Farm Credit Administration and Agricultural Adjustment Act/Adm
      (AAA)
        - FCA bailed out farmers so they didn't lose homes, farms
        - AAA paid farmers to destroy cotton crop
            - Pigs were slaughtered and buried
            - Wheat, cotton, corn production declined, prices rose
- In the first 100 days, FDR gained the most pulbic support
    - Most loved by the people
        - Twice weekly press conferences won over journalists
        - Very visible to the people
    - Hated by some people
        - Leftists criticized him for not doing enough (decline slowed,
          but prosperity remained elusive)
        - Conservatives believed he was bringing in socialism
    - Prone to idealistic principles and pragmatic politics, allowing
      compromise and contradiction
Huey Long, enemy of FDR
- Classic Demagogue/populist appealing to the people
- Wore pink shirts, pastel ties
- King Fish of Louisiana
- Used bribery, intimidation and blackmail to support his policies
- Funded schools, lowered taxes
- Jealous of FDR.
    - "Share the Wealth Society"
        - Wanted to raise taxes on wealthiest Americans and redistribute
          thousands to the poorest
    - May have unseated Roosevelt
    - Roosevelt called the senator one of the two most dangerous in the
      country
Father Charles Coughlin, the other most dangerous man
- Fiery Roman Catholic radio priest
- Criticized Roosevelt as "anti-god" pushing Communist conspiracy
    - that he wanted to put oil companies, big companies, and god-given
      resources under gov't control
- Very anti-semitic, which forced radio stations to drop him by 40s
- In 30s, he was going strong however

The Court was strongly opposing Roosevelt's New Deal and Congress's
support of him
- Businesses were filing lawsuits that allowed this
- Ex: Court unanimously killed NIRA, saying it violated anti-trust

- US v Butler: tax on middlemen (warehouses, processors) in Agricultural
  Adjustment Act unconstitutional 
- 7 of 9 cases, SC ruled against ND.
- Second New Deal tried to undermine the appeal of Huey Long
    - Banking reforms, taxes on wealthy, continue employing people
    - Works Progress Administration (WPA) employs hugely: increases by 2
      million people each year
    - NLRA "Wagner" Act guaranteed workers the right to unionize and
      protected them. Required businesses to act in good faith.
    - Social Security Act: old age pensions and unemployment relief
      (insurance) through wage and payroll taxes
        - Only by 1950s did it become seen as primary source of
          retirement income, previously supplemental
        - Conservative compared to European countries: other countries
          used general funds instead of payroll taxes; also used a
          regressive flat tax
        - Removed a lot of money from circulation, hurting economy
        - Excluded about half of workers
    - Wealth-Tax "Soak the rich" Act
        - Raised taxes on evasive rich
        - Called communism; Roosevelt responds that he wanted to "save
          capitalism" by supporting a more equal dist. of wealth
Huey Long assassinated in 1939. Roosevelt wins in a landslide against
Alf Landon
- Keeps huge Democrat majority in Congress
- Constructs a new Democrat political bloc

Court-packing
- If Congress enlarged the Court, it wouldn't block the Second ND
    - Wanted 6 new justices, one for each over 75 years old
- Backfired; public focused on constitutionality of proposal
    - Congressional Reps and Dems decided it was too controversial
- Justices began to uphold SS Act, Wagner Act.
    - One conservative justice resigned, replaced by Roosevelt with a
      New Dealer

Evaluating the New Deal
- Economy began to grow around 1939, so gov't stopped spending,
  increasing unemployment, tumbling the economy
    - Roosevelt relaunched federal spending
    - Housing funding
- Conservative Southern Democrats balked at Northerners and
  African-Americans, acting against New Deal
- Congressional elections of 1938 lost many seats to Reps
    - Roosevelt began speaking about "preserving" reforms instead of
      expanding
    - Stalemate
- "more energy than coherence"
- But it did improve life in many ways: worker protections, bank regs,
  public health
    - Demonstrated that American Democracy could handle a collapse of
      capitalism
- 10M Americans still remained unemployed
- Halfway Revolution was its longlasting impact