The New Deal

A look at both the positive and negative aspects of Roosevelt’s New Deal.

This paper examines how Franklin D. Roosevelt changed the world of American politics and the economy in the era with the New Deal. It explores how many were opposed to the New Deal and its policies, as well as to its later manifestations, and how there were also many changes that were beneficial after the years of the Great Depression. Both positive and negative aspects of the New Deal are explored by examining Roosevelt?s opponents, labor-management relations, the voting patterns of blacks, and the nature of the Second New Deal.

Outline
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Opposition to Roosevelt?s Policies
Labor-Management Relations
The Voting Patterns of Blacks
The Second New Deal
Other critics such as the Communist Party within the United States also, while opposed to many elements of the New Deal, were also willing to work with government in order to satisfy everybody’s ideals. It therefore appears that the New Deal at least started out as a system that many critics, although disillusioned, were willing to work with. Roosevelt seems to have encouraged such an ideology by his own simple statement that if something done does not work, then something else should be attempted. This is more than can be said of most political movements in the past of the United States.