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Zorluk: OrtaThe New Deal: Policies, Reforms, and Debates

Excerpt from a radio address by Father Charles Coughlin, 1935:

"I am in favor of a New Deal, but it must be a Christian New Deal... We have been witnessing a struggle between two forces: the force of plutocratic capitalism and the force of social justice. The New Deal, as it has been administered, has too often compromised with the money changers. It has failed to nationalize the banking system and has instead protected the profits of the great financial institutions at the expense of the working man. The federal government must assert its sovereignty over the creation and control of credit. Until we wrest this power from the hands of private bankers, any efforts at recovery will be mere palliatives that do not cure the underlying disease of economic inequality."

Which of the following developments in the 1930s was most directly a response to the political pressures represented by the sentiments in the excerpt?

  1. A
    The decision by the Roosevelt administration to return to a laissez-faire approach to financial regulation.
  2. The passage of Second New Deal legislation aimed at providing economic security and addressing wealth inequality.Cevap
  3. C
    The rapid ending of the Great Depression as early New Deal programs achieved full economic recovery by 1936.
  4. D
    The establishment of federal healthcare entitlements like Medicare to protect senior citizens.

Cevap

The passage of Second New Deal legislation aimed at providing economic security and addressing wealth inequality.
The correct answer is the passage of Second New Deal legislation. The political challenge from left-wing populists like Father Charles Coughlin, Senator Huey Long, and Dr. Francis Townsend pressured the Roosevelt administration to move away from cooperation with big business and toward direct assistance for individuals and stronger regulation of financial institutions. This shift resulted in the Second New Deal, which introduced lasting reforms such as the Social Security Act and the Banking Act of 1935.

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1
Analyze the stimulus text to identify the speaker's main argument and political orientation.
The author (Father Charles Coughlin) criticizes the New Deal for being too friendly to banks and failing to address systemic wealth inequality, representing a populist critique of FDR's early policies from the left.
Understanding the source's perspective is necessary to determine what historical developments resulted from or responded to these criticisms.
2
Connect the populist criticisms of the New Deal in the mid-1930s to the legislative responses of the Roosevelt administration.
To neutralize the political threat posed by critics like Coughlin, Townsend, and Huey Long before the 1936 election, Roosevelt launched the 'Second New Deal' in 1935, which focused on social security, labor rights, and progressive taxation.
This links the political pressure described in the stimulus to the actual policy shifts of the era.
3
Evaluate the choices to find the option that matches this legislative shift while ruling out historically inaccurate or chronologically misplaced distractors.
The option regarding the Second New Deal correctly identifies the legislative shift, while other choices incorrectly claim the depression ended in the 1930s, confuse the New Deal with the Great Society, or suggest a return to laissez-faire.
This confirms the correct option based on historical evidence.

Anahtar Kavram

The political debates and reform measures of the New Deal, specifically how populist criticism pressured the Roosevelt administration to shift toward the social welfare policies of the Second New Deal.
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