Roosevelt's Criticism Of The New Deal

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New Deal Criticism Following World War 1, Franklin Roosevelt stated that he wanted to take action. In order to attack and defeat the Great Depression Franklin Roosevelt decided to great the New Deal. The New Deal was a series of programs and projects made in response to the Great Depression. There were many criticisms of the New Deal; some thought the New Deal didn’t do accomplish enough. Contrastingly, others said it attempted too much. This criticism resulted in FDR creating a second New Deal. Roosevelts flypaper mindest allowed him to accept criticism and use it to his, and the countries advantage. Frederick Roosevelt's New Deal consisted of many helpful, yet controversial programs. The AAA, Agricultural Adjustment Administration, was designed to help farmers have a higher profit. In order for higher profit either demand needed to increase or supply needed to decrease. In response the AAA called for …show more content…

Huey Long's slogan was “every man a king”. He believed that all people, regardless of color, deserved a decent life and an education. Huey thought that every poor person deserves the opportunity to become unpoor. To meet his own expectionations Huey wanted to “share our wealth”; he called for confiscation of family fourtones of more than $5 million and to tax 100% on incomes over $1 million a year. All this money could have been spent on the less fortunate, but he was assassinated in 1935 before he could run for president. Roosevelt heard this criticisms and applied them to his second new deal. The Wealth Tax Act was passed as a part of the Second New Deal. This act raised taxes on large incomes, gift and estate taxes increased, and there were different taxes on corporate profits. Although Roosevelt didn’t follow what Huey Long said exactly, he still took the criticism and applied it to better the country and defeat the

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