1 / 32

Republicans must stay with Hoover or take blame for Depression

Election of 1932. Republicans must stay with Hoover or take blame for Depression Democrats choose Franklin D. Roosevelt Hoover says F.D.R. will destroy the American economy. F.D.R. traveled 25,000 miles, promised to help “the forgotten man” - “New Deal”

tender
Download Presentation

Republicans must stay with Hoover or take blame for Depression

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Election of 1932 • Republicans must stay with Hoover or take blame for Depression • Democrats choose Franklin D. Roosevelt • Hoover says F.D.R. will destroy the American economy

  2. F.D.R. traveled 25,000 miles, promised to help “the forgotten man” - “New Deal” • F.D.R. wins - Inaugural Address - “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. Reality was that he was the first to give the nation hope

  3. Brain Trust • Group of intellectuals who advised the President • Raymond Moley - Law professor • Rexford Tugwell - Agriculture professor • Adolph Berle - Corporate finance lawyer and speech writer

  4. "100 Days" • The first “New Deal” • March 9 - June 16, 1933 • Honeymoon period when the President told the Brain Trust “If all fails admit it frankly and try another, but above all try”

  5. Emergency Relief Banking Act • Declared a “Bank Holiday” - fastest bill in history • Sec. of Treasury called in all gold in the country ($10,000 fine if you didn’t) • Examined all banks - sound ones were allowed to reopen

  6. First “Fireside Chat” he says “I assure you it is safer to keep your money in a reopened bank than under a mattress” • By end of next week 3/4 of nations banks reopened • Emergency currency issued to halt bank runs

  7. Glass-Stegal Act • Prohibited commercial banks from selling stock or financing corporations • Created Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) which insured investors up to $2,500

  8. Gold Standard • F.D.R. had the U.S. taken off the gold standard in April, 1933 • By 1934, the dollar is worth 59 cents

  9. National Recovery Administration • Goal was to see major businesses shortened hours and raised wages • “Codes of Fair Competition” - minimum wage, no child labor, and collective bargaining • Established N.I.R.A.

  10. National Industrial Recovery Act • Effort to join the federal gov’t with business and labor to fight the depression • Set codes of fair competition • Headed by Hugh Johnson • Blue Eagle “We do our part”

  11. People encouraged to only go to NIRA businesses • Small and large businesses didn’t like it (too pro-labor) • NIRA and NRA declared unconstitutional - can not establish codes of fair competition

  12. Wagner Act • National Labor Relations Act - 1933 • Saved part of the NIRA • No coercion of employees • No firing due to union membership • Guarantee collective bargaining

  13. Civilian Conservation Corps • CCC - March 31, 1933 • Provide employment for men age 18-25 • Built parks and battlefields • Paid $30.00/month, $25.00 had to be sent home

  14. Agricultural Adjustment Administration • To advise and assist farmers • May 12, 1933 • Government paid farmers not to produce • Paid subsidies for unplanted land • By 1934 - size of Illinois

  15. Federal Emergency Relief Administration • May 12, 1933, FERA • To provide direct relief to needy Americans. • System set up $5 million to state and local governments to directly help the needy

  16. Tennessee Valley Authority • TVA, May 28, 1933 • To help develop the resources of the Tennessee Valley • 25,000 miles long, 25 dams, 7 states benefit from electricity provided • Encouraged industry in area

  17. Home Owners' Loan Corporation • HOLC, June 13, 1933 • To help townspeople refinance their mortgages • Low interest rates and 15 years to pay mortgage • Helped middle and upper middle class homes

  18. Public Works Administration • PWA, June, 13, 1933 • Provide employment on public works • Help business help people • Usually were construction jobs • Enterprise and Yorktowne

  19. National Recovery Administration • June 13, 1933, NRA • To revive American business

  20. Farm Credit Administration • FCA, June 16, 1933 • Set up credit system for farmers

  21. Civil Works Administration • CWA, November 8, 1933 • Provided employment at federal expense • Rake leaves, pave roads, • Real goal was to get people through the Winter of 33-34 • Airports, schools $15.00/week

  22. Securities and Exchange Commission • SEC, June 6, 1934 • Protected public and private investors in stocks

  23. Federal Housing Administration • FHA, June 28, 1933 • Inside loans for home construction

  24. Enemies of the New Deal

  25. Dr. Francis Townsend • Wanted to pay every American over 60 $200/month • To be paid by 2% sales tax • Person could not hold a job • Had to spend money every month • Popular idea with the people • Cost $24 billion/year

  26. Father Charles Coughlin • “Radio Priest” • Received more mail in 1934 than FDR - very popular • Wanted government ownership of banks, natural resources and public utilities

  27. Huey P. Long • “Kingfish” • Proposed gov’t take money from the rich and give to the poor • Give every family a car, home, & a radio • College education if wanted • Tax the rich at 70% - he was assassinated

  28. The Second New Deal

  29. Works Progress Administration • WPA, April 8, 1935 • Provide jobs and training for 16-25 year olds • Accounted for over 1/2 of schools built in the 1930’s, 800 airports, 13,000 playgrounds, 2,500 hospitals • Kept artists and actors employed

  30. National Labor Relations Board • NLRB, July 5, 1935 • Purpose was to guarantee rights to workers

  31. Social Security Board • SSB, August 14, 1935 • To provide a sound social security system • Helped children, handicapped, and the aged • Every worker had to take part

  32. Provided for unemployment compensation • Employers and employees made mandatory contributions out of wages • Idea came from Francis Perkins, first women to hold a cabinet position

More Related