Title: Chapter Menu
1Chapter Menu
Chapter Introduction Section 1 The First New
Deal Section 2 The Second New Deal Section
3 The New Deal Coalition Visual Summary
2Chapter Intro
- Can Government Fix the Economy?
- During the 1930s, New Deal programs increased
government regulation of banking, industry, and
farming gave greater rights to workers and
provided government aid to the unemployed and
senior citizens. - What kind of problems do you think government
can solve? - What difficulties can result when the
government tries to regulate the economy?
3Chapter Timeline
4Chapter Timeline
5Chapter Intro 1
The First New Deal In what areas did the New Deal
attempt to make major economic improvements?
6Chapter Intro 2
The Second New Deal How did the Second New Deal
assist unions, the elderly, and the unemployed?
7Chapter Intro 3
The New Deal Coalition What was the legacy of the
New Deal?
8Section 1
Roosevelts Rise to Power
Franklin D. Roosevelt was governor of New York
when he was elected president in 1932, promising
a New Deal for the American people.
9Section 1
Roosevelts Rise to Power (cont.)
- After losing the 1920 election as the Democratic
vice presidential candidate, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt temporarily withdrew from politics.
- The next year he caught polio, but refused to
give in. - In 1928, Roosevelt ran for governor of New York.
- He won the election and oversaw the creation of
the first state relief agency to aid the
unemployed.
10Section 1
Roosevelts Rise to Power (cont.)
- Roosevelts popularity in New York paved the way
for his presidential nomination in 1932.
- His policies for ending the Depression became
known as the New Deal. - On election day, Roosevelt beat Herbert Hoover in
a landslide.
11Section 1
The Hundred Days
Upon taking office, FDR launched the New Deal by
sending 15 major pieces of legislation to
Congress.
12Section 1
The Hundred Days (cont.)
- Although Roosevelt won the presidency in November
1932, the countrys unemployed and homeless had
to endure another winter as they waited for his
inauguration.
- Some of the bank runs occurred because people
feared that Roosevelt would abandon the gold
standard and reduce the value of the dollar in
order to fight the Depression. - In 38 states, governors declared bank holidays to
save the remaining banks.
13Section 1
The Hundred Days (cont.)
- By the day of Roosevelts inauguration, most of
the nations banks were closed.
- One in four workers was unemployed.
- Between March 9 and June 16, 1933which came to
be called the Hundred DaysCongress passed 15
major acts to resolve the economic crisis.
- These programs made up what would later be called
the First New Deal.
14Section 1
The Hundred Days (cont.)
- To generate new ideas and programs, Roosevelt
deliberately chose advisers who disagreed with
each other.
- One group during the early years of his
administration supported the New Nationalism of
Theodore Roosevelt. - A second group wanted government planners to run
key parts of the economy. - A third group supported the New Freedom of
Woodrow Wilson.
15Section 1
Banks and Debt Relief
President Roosevelt took steps to strengthen
banks and the stock market and to help farmers
and homeowners keep their property.
16Section 1
Banks and Debt Relief (cont.)
- Roosevelt knew the first thing he had to do was
restore confidence in the banking system.
- The House of Representatives unanimously passed
the Emergency Banking Relief Act after only 38
minutes of debate. - On March 12, sixty million people listened to the
first of many of Roosevelts fireside chats.
17Section 1
Banks and Debt Relief (cont.)
- He assured people that their money was safe in
banks, and the next day, deposits far outweighed
withdrawals.
- Roosevelt listened to his advisers and supported
the Securities Act of 1933 and the Glass-Steagall
Banking Act.
- Congress also created the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) to regulate the stock market and
prevent fraud.
The First Hundred Days
18Section 1
Banks and Debt Relief (cont.)
- The Glass-Steagall Act created the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to provide
government insurance for bank deposits up to a
certain amount.
- To help homeowners make their mortgage payments,
Roosevelt asked Congress to establish the Home
Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC).
The First Hundred Days
19Section 1
Banks and Debt Relief (cont.)
- Congress also authorized the Farm Credit
Administration (FCA) to help farmers refinance
their mortgages.
The First Hundred Days
20Section 1
Farms and Industry
New Deal legislation tried to raise crop prices
and stabilize industry.
21Section 1
Farms and Industry (cont.)
- To further help the nations farmers, Secretary
of Agriculture Henry Wallace drafted the
Agricultural Adjustment Act.
- Administered by the Agricultural Adjustment
Administration (AAA), the government paid farmers
not to raise certain livestock, not to grow
certain crops, and not to produce dairy products. - The plan worked, but did not benefit everyone,
especially tenant farmers.
The TVA, 1940
22Section 1
Farms and Industry (cont.)
- The government turned its attention to
manufacturing in June 1933, when Roosevelt and
Congress enacted the National Industrial Recovery
Act (NIRA).
- Under the leadership of Hugh Johnson, the
National Recovery Administration (NRA) ran the
entire program. - By the time the Supreme Court declared the NRA
unconstitutional in 1935, it had already lost
much of its political support.
The TVA, 1940
23Section 1
Relief Programs
Programs such as the CCC, the PWA, and the WPA
provided jobs for some unemployed workers.
24Section 1
Relief Programs (cont.)
- The most highly praised New Deal work relief
program was the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC).
- The CCC offered unemployed young men 18 to 25
years old the opportunity to work under the
direction of the forestry service planting trees,
fighting forest fires, and building reservoirs.
25Section 1
Relief Programs (cont.)
- Congress also established the Federal Emergency
Relief Administration (FERA), led by Harry
Hopkins.
- In June 1933 Congress authorized another relief
agency, the Public Works Administration (PWA)
which put civilians to work on government-funded
construction projects.
26Section 1
Relief Programs (cont.)
- Roosevelt authorized Hopkins to set up the Civil
Works Administration (CWA), since FERA and the
PWA werent reducing unemployment significantly.
- The agency did provide jobs through the winter,
but Roosevelt insisted that it be shut down the
following spring due to the large amount of money
the agency spent.
27Section 1
Relief Programs (cont.)
- Perhaps the most important result of the first
New Deal was a noticeable change in the spirit of
the American people.
- Roosevelts actions had inspired hope and
restored Americans faith in their nation.
28Section 1
Which of the following did the Civil Works
Administration build or improve? A. Airports
B. Roads C. Playgrounds D. Schools E. All of the
above
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
29Section 2
Launching the Second New Deal
By 1935, the New Deal faced political and legal
challenges, as well as growing concern that it
was not ending the Depression.
30Section 2
Launching the Second New Deal (cont.)
- Although New Deal programs had created more than
2 million new jobs, more than 10 million workers
remained unemployed, and the nations total
income was about half of what it had been in 1929.
- Hostility toward Roosevelt came from both the
political right and the left. - To pay for his programs, Roosevelt had started
deficit spending, and many business leaders
became greatly alarmed at the governments
growing deficit.
31Section 2
Launching the Second New Deal (cont.)
- In August 1934 business leaders and anti-New Deal
politicians from both parties joined together to
create the American Liberty League.
- Three people who challenged Roosevelt were
- Huey Long
- Father Coughlin
- Francis Townsend
32Section 2
Launching the Second New Deal (cont.)
- In 1935 Roosevelt launched a series of programs
now known as the Second New Deal.
- Among these new programs was the Works Progress
Administration (WPA), headed by Harry Hopkins. - The WPAs most controversial program was Federal
Number One, a program for artists, musicians,
theater people, and writers.
33Section 2
Launching the Second New Deal (cont.)
- In May 1935, in Schechter Poultry Company v.
United States, the Supreme Court unanimously
struck down the authority of the NRA.
- Roosevelt feared that the Court would strike down
the rest of the New Deal and told Congress that
they could not go home until they passed his new
bills.
34Section 2
Reforms for Workers and the Elderly
Roosevelt asked Congress to pass the Wagner Act
and Social Security to build support among
workers and older Americans.
35Section 2
Reforms for Workers and the Elderly (cont.)
- In July 1935 Congress passed the National Labor
Relations Act (also called the Wagner Act), which
guaranteed workers the right to organize unions
and to bargain collectively.
- Congress also set up the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB). - The Wagner Act set up a process called binding
arbitration.
36Section 2
Reforms for Workers and the Elderly (cont.)
- The Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO)
set out to organize unions that included all
workers, skilled and unskilled, in a particular
industry.
- Union organizers used new tactics, such as the
sit-down strike. - By using a sit-down strike, the United Auto
Workers (UAW) became one of the most powerful
unions in the U.S.
Union Membership, 19331940
37Section 2
Reforms for Workers and the Elderly (cont.)
- In 1938 the CIO changed its name to the Congress
of Industrial Organizations and became a
federation of industrial unions.
- After passing the Wagner Act, Congress began work
on one of Americas most important pieces of
legislationthe Social Security Act.
- Although Social Security helped many people, it
initially left out many of the neediestfarm and
domestic workers.
38Section 2
Reforms for Workers and the Elderly (cont.)
- Social Security did establish the principle that
the federal government should be responsible for
those who, through no fault of their own, were
unable to work.
39Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term
Roosevelt was easily reelected, but the New Deal
lost momentum during his second term due to his
court-packing plan and a new recession.
40Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term (cont.)
- Since the Civil War, African Americans had been
reliable Republican voters.
- However, in the 1930s, they became just one part
of a new Democratic coalition that included
farmers, industrial workers, African Americans,
new immigrants, ethnic minorities, women,
progressives, and intellectuals.
41Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term (cont.)
- African Americans and women made some modest
gains during the New Deal.
- The president appointed several African Americans
to positions in his administration, where they
informally became known as the Black Cabinet. - FDR appointed the first woman to a cabinet post,
Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, and appointed
many other women to lower-level posts.
42Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term (cont.)
- In the election of 1936 the Republicans nominated
Alfred Landon.
- Roosevelt swept to victory in one of the largest
landslides in American history
- Although many people supported the New Deal, the
Supreme Court saw things differently.
- In March 1937 Roosevelt sent Congress a bill to
increase the number of justices.
43Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term (cont.)
- The court-packing plan, as the press called it,
was FDRs first serious political mistake.
- The Senate quietly killed the bill without
bringing it to a vote. - Roosevelt still achieved his goal of changing the
Courts view of the New Deal.
44Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term (cont.)
- In 1937 Roosevelts reputation again suffered
when unemployment suddenly surged.
- The recession of 1937 led to a debate inside
Roosevelts administration. - Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau favored
balancing the budget and cutting spending.
45Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term (cont.)
- Harry Hopkins, head of the WPA, and Harold Ickes,
head of the PWA, pushed for more government
spending using a new theory called Keynesianism
to support their arguments.
- Keynesianism was based on the theories of an
influential British economist named John Maynard
Keynes.
46Section 3
Roosevelts Second Term (cont.)
- According to Keynesian economics, FDR had done
the wrong thing when he cut back programs in 1937.
- Finally, in the spring of 1938, with no recovery
in sight, Roosevelt asked Congress for money for
the PWA, the WPA, and other programs.
47Section 3
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt demonstrated strong
sympathies toward which group? A. Native
Americans B. Unskilled workers C. African
Americans D. Immigrants
- A
- B
- C
- D
48Section 3
The New Deal Ends
The New Deal expanded federal power over the
economy and established a social safety net.
49Section 3
The New Deal Ends (cont.)
- One of the presidents goals for his second term
was to provide better housing for the nations
poor.
- He responded with the National Housing Act,
establishing the United States Housing Authority.
- He also sought to help the nations tenant
farmers.
What New Deal Programs Still Exist Today?
50Section 3
The New Deal Ends (cont.)
- Congress created the Farm Security Administration
to give loans to tenants so they could purchase
farms.
- The Fair Labor Standards Act was the last major
piece of New Deal legislation.
- By 1939, the New Deal era had come to an end.
What New Deal Programs Still Exist Today?
51Section 3
The New Deal Ends (cont.)
- The New Deal had only limited success in ending
the Depression.
- As a whole, the New Deal tended to balance
competing economic interests.
- In taking on a mediating role, the New Deal
established what some have called the broker
state.
- This role has continued under the administrations
of both parties ever since.
What New Deal Programs Still Exist Today?
52Section 3
The New Deal Ends (cont.)
- FDRs programs also succeeded in creating a
safety net for Americans.
- By the end of the 1930s, many Americans felt that
the government had a duty to maintain this safety
net, even though doing so required a larger, more
expensive federal government.
What New Deal Programs Still Exist Today?
53VS 1
Banking and Finances
- Emergency Banking Relief Act regulated banks.
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insured
bank deposits. - Farm Credit Administration refinanced farm
mortgages. - Home Owners Loan Corporation financed
homeowners mortgages.
54VS 2
Agriculture and Industry
- Agricultural Adjustment Administration paid
farmers to limit surplus production. - National Industrial Recovery Act limited
industrial production and set prices. - National Labor Relations Act gave workers the
right to organize unions and bargain
collectively. - Tennessee Valley Authority financed rural
electrification and helped develop the economy of
a seven-state region.
55VS 3
Work and Relief
- Civilian Conservation Corps created forestry
jobs for young men. - Federal Emergency Relief Administration funded
city and state relief programs. - Public Works Administration created work
programs to build public projects, such as roads,
bridges, and schools.
56VS 4
Social Safety Net
- Social Security Act provided
- income for senior citizens, handicapped, and
unemployed - monthly retirement benefit for people over 65
57Figure 1A
58Figure 1B
59Figure 2
60Figure 3
61Figure 4
62Chapter Trans Menu
Chapter Transparencies Menu
Why It Matters Cause-and-Effect Transparency
Unit Time Line Transparency
Select a transparency to view.
63Why It Matters Trans
64C E Trans
65Unit Timelines Trans
66DFS Trans 1
67DFS Trans 2
68DFS Trans 3
69Vocab1
polio abbreviated form of poliomyelitis, an
acute infectious disease affecting the skeletal
muscles, often resulting in permanent disability
and deformity
70Vocab2
gold standard a monetary standard in which one
ounce of gold equals a set number of dollars
71Vocab3
bank holiday closing of banks during the Great
Depression to avoid bank runs
72Vocab4
fireside chats radio broadcasts made by FDR to
the American people to explain his initiatives
73Vocab5
apparent appearing to be fact as far as can be
understood
74Vocab6
ideology a system of thought that is held by an
individual, group, or culture
75Vocab7
fundamental being of central importance
76Vocab8
deficit spending government practice of spending
borrowed money rather than raising taxes, usually
in an attempt to boost the economy
77Vocab9
binding arbitration process whereby a neutral
party hears arguments from two opposing sides and
makes a decision that both must accept
78Vocab10
sit-down strike method of boycotting work by
sitting down at work and refusing to leave the
establishment
79Vocab11
benefit to be useful or profitable
80Vocab12
finance to provide money for a project
81Vocab13
thereby by that means
82Vocab14
court-packing the act of changing the political
balance of power in a nations judiciary system
whereby a national leader, such as the American
president, appoints judges who will rule in favor
of his or her policies
83Vocab15
broker state role of the government to work out
conflicts among competing interest groups
84Vocab16
safety net something that provides security
against misfortune specifically, government
relief programs intended to protect against
economic disaster
85Vocab17
recovery an economic upturn, as after a
depression
86Vocab18
mediate an attempt to resolve conflict between
hostile people or groups
87Help
To use this Presentation Plus! product
Click the Forward button to go to the next
slide. Click the Previous button to return to the
previous slide. Click the Home button to return
to the Chapter Menu. Click the Transparency
button from the Chapter Menu, Chapter
Introduction, or Visual Summary slides to access
the transparencies that are relevant to this
chapter. From within a section, click on this
button to access the relevant Daily Focus Skills
Transparency. Click the Return button in a
feature to return to the main presentation. Click
the History Online button to access online
textbook features. Click the Reference Atlas
button to access the Interactive Reference Atlas.
Click the Exit button or press the Escape key
Esc to end the chapter slide show. Click the
Help button to access this screen. Links to
Presentation Plus! features such as Maps in
Motion, Graphs in Motion, Charts in Motion,
Concepts in Motion, and figures from your
textbook are located at the bottom of relevant
screens.