FDR's New Deal: Deliverance from Great Depression

945 Words2 Pages

Franklin Delano Roosevelt, nicknamed as “FDR” would become the thirty-second President of the United States on March 4, 1933. Franklin Roosevelt would easily defeat President Herbert C. Hoover in the election of 1932 by obtaining 472 electoral votes to Hoover’s 59. The election proved that Americans were hungry for change and sought hope while suffering through one of the roughest times in recent memory. President Roosevelt is known for leading the United States out of the Great Depression with a series of bills he signed into law known as the New Deal, and the first one-hundred days of his Presidency were critical to the nation’s recovery. Millions of Americans were suffering from unemployment, poverty, and were quickly losing faith in …show more content…

With Herbert Hoover’s Presidential term coming to a close and the election around the corner, FDR would campaign fresh and new ideas to hopefully turn the tide of the depression. FDR called for unemployment assistance, compulsory, federally administered retirement system, aid to families with dependent children, maternal and child programs, and numerous health programs (Biles). FDR also sought legislation to protect labor, assistance for farmers, a repeal of Prohibition, and a balanced budget. His campaign slogan was a “New Deal” and that is exactly what he promised the American people and in a landslide vote, Franklin D. Roosevelt won the Presidency over the incumbent Hoover. President Roosevelt would give Americans hope during his inauguration speech, “This nation asks for action, and action now. Our greatest primary task is to put people to work. I am prepared under my constitutional duty to recommend the measures that a stricken nation in the midst of a stricken world may require.” President Roosevelt immediately established his relationship with Congress in order to quickly get America back on track and reverse the depression. Together they would implement many expensive social and economic programs with some that are still in effect

More about FDR's New Deal: Deliverance from Great Depression

Open Document