Fiche de révision : The New Deal and Its Legacy

📋 Course Outline

  1. Great Depression and Roosevelt's response
  2. Relief, recovery, and reform
  3. Fireside Chats and public trust
  4. Second New Deal and welfare state
  5. Labor rights and Social Security
  6. Opposition and Supreme Court crisis
  7. Legacy and political realignment

📖 1. Great Depression and Roosevelt's response

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Great Depression : Great Depression : the severe US economic collapse after 1929 that paralyzed the economy and caused mass unemployment and bank failures.
  • New Deal : New Deal : FDR’s domestic programs, public works, financial reforms, and regulations enacted from 1933 to 1938.
  • Laissez-faire capitalism : Laissez-faire capitalism : an economic doctrine favoring minimal state intervention in markets and relying on private action.

📝 Essential Points

  • On March 4, 1933, FDR launched his presidency in the worst US crisis, saying fear itself was the only thing to fear.
  • After the Wall Street Crash of October 1929, by 1933 GDP had fallen by half and unemployment hit 25% of the workforce.
  • Thousands of banks had collapsed by 1933, leaving the financial system effectively paralyzed.
  • Hoover failed to resolve the crisis partly because he trusted laissez-faire and rugged individualism rather than stronger federal action.

💡 Memory Hook

Fear itself → start the New Deal from fear of collapse.

📖 2. Relief, recovery, and reform

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • First New Deal : First New Deal : FDR’s 1933–1934 emergency phase focused on immediate Relief, Recovery, and Reform during the First Hundred Days.
  • 3 Rs : 3 Rs : the three First New Deal pillars—Relief, Recovery, and Reform—targeting crisis needs in different ways.
  • Relief : Relief : direct aid and job creation for unemployed and poor people through federal action.
  • Recovery : Recovery : programs meant to restart agriculture and industry by addressing overproduction and deflation.
  • Reform : Reform : measures designed to fix the financial system and restore confidence that another depression would not recur.

📝 Essential Points

  • During the First Hundred Days (1933), Relief used direct job aid and federal grants instead of relying on local charities.
  • CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) employed millions of young, unmarried men in environmental projects like planting trees and building parks.
  • FERA (Federal Emergency Relief Administration) gave federal grants to states to feed and clothe people in need.
  • AAA (Agricultural Adjustment Act) paid farmers subsidies to cut crop production to raise agricultural prices.
  • NRA (National Recovery Administration) formed “codes of fair competition” setting minimum wages and maximum working hours.

💡 Memory Hook

Relief = people helped, Recovery = output restarted, Reform = finance fixed.

📖 3. Fireside Chats and public trust

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Fireside Chats : Fireside Chats : regular radio broadcasts in which FDR spoke directly to Americans in simple language to explain policy and rebuild morale.

📝 Essential Points

  • Fireside Chats matched the New Deal’s goal of restoring public confidence while reforms and regulations reshaped the economy.
  • The “Bank Holiday” paired crisis communication with action by temporarily closing banks before reopening sound ones.

💡 Memory Hook

Radio trust-building alongside bank reform.

📖 4. Second New Deal and welfare state

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Second New Deal : Second New Deal : FDR’s 1935–1938 shift toward long-term social security and structural reform after the emergency phase.
  • Welfare State : Welfare State : the modern idea that the government provides social protection, including a durable safety net for citizens.
  • WPA : WPA : the major Works Progress Administration agency that provided mass employment and funded public projects.

📝 Essential Points

  • WPA employed over 8 million Americans to build public infrastructure such as bridges, roads, airports, and schools.
  • WPA also supported artists and writers through the Federal Writers’ Project, showing employment plus cultural output.
  • FDR moved from short-term relief toward long-term security and social justice as criticism grew.

💡 Memory Hook

Second New Deal = bigger jobs program + longer-term security.

📖 5. Labor rights and Social Security

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Wagner Act : Wagner Act : the 1935 National Labor Relations Act guaranteeing workers the right to form unions and bargain collectively.
  • Fair Labor Standards Act : Fair Labor Standards Act : the 1938 law establishing national labor standards including a minimum wage and limits on work hours.
  • Social Security Act : Social Security Act : the 1935 legislation creating a federal safety net through pensions, unemployment insurance, and welfare for dependents and disabled people.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Wagner Act (1935) led to a massive rise in union membership after workers gained protected rights to organize.
  • The Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) set a national minimum wage, required a 40-hour workweek, and banned oppressive child labor.
  • The Social Security Act (1935) introduced old-age pensions, unemployment insurance, and aid for dependent children and people with disabilities.

💡 Memory Hook

Labor Act = unions + bargaining; Social Security Act = pensions + unemployment + aid.

📖 6. Opposition and Supreme Court crisis

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Court-Packing Scheme : Court-Packing Scheme : FDR’s 1937 attempt to add more judges to the Supreme Court to influence constitutional decisions.
  • Share Our Wealth : Share Our Wealth : the “from the Left” proposal by Huey Long to heavily tax the rich and redistribute to the poor.
  • Unconstitutional : Unconstitutional : not permitted under the constitution, such as when courts strike down laws as invalid.

📝 Essential Points

  • Conservatives and business leaders criticized the New Deal as too socialist/dictatorial, too expansive for federal power, and harmful to free enterprise.
  • The Supreme Court declared several key programs unconstitutional, including the NRA and the AAA.
  • In 1937, FDR attempted the Court-Packing Scheme by seeking to add more judges, which drew widespread criticism.
  • Huey Long argued the New Deal did not go far enough and promoted Share Our Wealth to tax the rich and redistribute.

💡 Memory Hook

Court conflict → Court-packing; Left pressure → Share Our Wealth.

📖 7. Legacy and political realignment

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • New Deal Coalition : New Deal Coalition : the political alliance formed by labor unions, minorities, and blue-collar workers that kept the Democratic Party dominant for decades.
  • Trade unions : Trade unions : organized worker associations that helped build political support within the New Deal Coalition.

📝 Essential Points

  • The New Deal prevented total social collapse, helped restore faith in democracy, and built large-scale public infrastructure.
  • It permanently regulated Wall Street and did not end the Great Depression, since unemployment stayed high throughout the 1930s.
  • Full employment came later through massive industrial mobilization for World War II in 1939–1941, not through the New Deal alone.
  • A major social limit was exclusion of agricultural and domestic workers from Social Security to secure support from Southern Democrats.

💡 Memory Hook

Coalition keeps Democrats: unions + minorities + blue-collar workers.

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing the 3 Rs: Relief is immediate aid and jobs, Recovery targets agriculture/industry output, and Reform fixes the financial system.
  2. Mixing up programs by function: CCC and FERA are Relief, AAA and NRA belong to Recovery, while FDIC/SEC/Emergency Banking are Reform.
  3. Assuming the New Deal fully ended the depression; unemployment remained high through the 1930s.
  4. Thinking Social Security covered everyone equally; agricultural and domestic workers were excluded, limiting benefits for many African-Americans and women.
  5. Believing the Supreme Court conflict was only rhetorical; key New Deal programs like the NRA and AAA were declared unconstitutional.
  6. Overlooking that Court-Packing occurred in 1937 and was widely criticized as an abuse of executive power.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Define the New Deal and place it chronologically between 1933 and 1938.
  2. Explain what the “3 Rs” are and what each pillar targets in the First New Deal.
  3. Match Relief programs to their purpose and examples (CCC and FERA).
  4. Match Recovery programs to their economic mechanisms and examples (AAA subsidies to raise prices; NRA codes setting wages and hours).
  5. State the key goal of Reform and identify the specific financial institutions/measures (Emergency Banking/Bank Holiday, FDIC, SEC).
  6. Describe what Fireside Chats were and how they served public trust.
  7. List the major features of the Second New Deal, including the shift toward long-term security and social justice.
  8. Identify WPA’s scale (over 8 million employed) and its types of projects (infrastructure plus Federal Writers’ Project).
  9. State the Wagner Act’s guarantees and the labor outcome linked to it (union membership rise).
  10. State the three main labor standards from the Fair Labor Standards Act (minimum wage, 40-hour workweek, ban on oppressive child labor).
  11. List the components created by the Social Security Act (old-age pensions, unemployment insurance, aid for dependent children and disabled people).
  12. Describe the right-wing critique of the New Deal and identify the Supreme Court’s constitutional rulings against major programs (NRA and AAA).
  13. Explain FDR’s 1937 Court-Packing Scheme and why it was criticized.
  14. Summarize the left-wing opposition using Huey Long’s Share Our Wealth proposal (tax rich, redistribute to poor).

Testez vos connaissances

Testez vos connaissances sur The New Deal and Its Legacy avec 14 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées.

1. Which set of protections was established by the Fair Labor Standards Act?

2. What were Fireside Chats designed to do?

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Révisez avec les flashcards

Mémorisez les concepts clés de The New Deal and Its Legacy avec 14 flashcards interactives.

Great Depression — definition?

Severe US economic collapse after 1929.

New Deal — role?

FDR’s domestic programs to combat depression.

Laissez-faire capitalism — function?

Minimal government intervention in markets.

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