Franklin D. Roosevelt
{{Short description|President of the United States from 1933 to 1945}}
{{Redirect|FDR|other uses|FDR (disambiguation)|and|Franklin D. Roosevelt (disambiguation)}}
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{{Infobox officeholder
| image = FDR-1944-Campaign-Portrait (retouched, cropped) (1).jpg
| caption = Official campaign portrait, 1944
| alt = Franklin Roosevelt, 62, has graying hair and faces the camera.
| order = 32nd
| office = President of the United States
| vicepresident = {{plainlist|
- {{longitem|John Nance Garner
(1933–1941)}} - {{longitem|Henry A. Wallace
(1941–1945)}} - {{longitem|Harry S. Truman
(Jan–Apr 1945)}}
}}
| term_start = March 4, 1933
| term_end = April 12, 1945
| predecessor1 = Herbert Hoover
| successor1 = Harry S. Truman
| order2 = 44th
| office2 = Governor of New York
| term_start2 = January 1, 1929
| term_end2 = December 31, 1932
| predecessor2 = Al Smith
| successor2 = Herbert H. Lehman
| lieutenant2 = Herbert H. Lehman
| office3 = Assistant Secretary of the Navy
| president3 = Woodrow Wilson
| term_start3 = March 17, 1913
| term_end3 = August 26, 1920
| predecessor3 = Beekman Winthrop
| successor3 = Gordon Woodbury
| state_senate4 = New York State
| district4 = 26th
| term_start4 = January 1, 1911
| term_end4 = March 17, 1913
| predecessor4 = John F. Schlosser
| successor4 = James E. Towner
| birth_name = Franklin Delano Roosevelt
| birth_date = {{birth date|1882|1|30}}
| birth_place = Hyde Park, New York, U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1945|4|12|1882|1|30}}
| death_place = Warm Springs, Georgia, U.S.
| resting_place = Springwood Estate
| party = Democratic
| spouse = {{marriage|Eleanor Roosevelt|March 17, 1905}}
| education = {{plainlist|
}}
| relatives = {{plainlist|
}}
| signature = Franklin Roosevelt Signature.svg
| signature_alt = Cursive signature in ink
| module = {{Listen|pos=center|embed=yes|filename=FDR's Speech to the Congress regarding the naval attack on Pearl Harbor.ogg|title=Franklin D. Roosevelt's voice|type=speech|description=On the attack on Pearl Harbor and declaring war on Japan
Recorded December 8, 1941}}
| children = 6, including Anna, James, Elliott, Franklin Jr., John
| parents = {{plainlist|
}}
}}
Franklin Delano Roosevelt{{efn|Pronounced {{IPAc-en|ˈ|d|ɛ|l|ə|n|oʊ|_|ˈ|r|oʊ|z|ə|v|ɛ|l|t|,_|-|v|əl|t}} {{respell|DEL|ə|noh|_|ROH|zə|velt|,_|-|vəlt}};{{cite American Heritage Dictionary|Roosevelt}}}} (January 30, 1882{{spaced ndash}}April 12, 1945), also known as FDR, was the 32nd president of the United States, serving from 1933 until his death in 1945. He is the longest-serving U.S. president, and the only one to have served more than two terms. His first two terms were centered on combating the Great Depression, while his third and fourth saw him shift his focus to America's involvement in World War II.
A member of the prominent Delano and Roosevelt families, Roosevelt was elected to the New York State Senate from 1911 to 1913 and was then the assistant Secretary of the Navy under President Woodrow Wilson during World War I. Roosevelt was James M. Cox's running mate on the Democratic Party's ticket in the 1920 U.S. presidential election, but Cox lost to Republican nominee Warren G. Harding. In 1921, Roosevelt contracted a paralytic illness that permanently paralyzed his legs. Partly through the encouragement of his wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, he returned to public office as governor of New York from 1929 to 1932, during which he promoted programs to combat the Great Depression. In the 1932 presidential election, Roosevelt defeated president Herbert Hoover in a landslide victory.
During his first 100 days as president, Roosevelt spearheaded unprecedented federal legislation and directed the federal government during most of the Great Depression, implementing the New Deal, building the New Deal coalition, and realigning American politics into the Fifth Party System. He created numerous programs to provide relief to the unemployed and farmers while seeking economic recovery with the National Recovery Administration and other programs. He also instituted major regulatory reforms related to finance, communications, and labor, and presided over the end of Prohibition. In 1936, Roosevelt won a landslide reelection. He was unable to expand the Supreme Court in 1937, the same year the conservative coalition was formed to block the implementation of further New Deal programs and reforms. Major surviving programs and legislation implemented under Roosevelt include the Securities and Exchange Commission, the National Labor Relations Act, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and Social Security. In 1940, he ran successfully for reelection, before the official implementation of term limits.
Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Roosevelt obtained a declaration of war on Japan. When in turn, Japan's Axis partners, Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, declared war on the U.S. on December 11, 1941, he secured additional declarations of war from the United States Congress. He worked closely with other national leaders in leading the Allies against the Axis powers. Roosevelt supervised the mobilization of the American economy to support the war effort and implemented a Europe first strategy. He also initiated the development of the first atomic bomb and worked with the other Allied leaders to lay the groundwork for the United Nations and other post-war institutions, even coining the term "United Nations".{{Cite web |title=When was the term United Nations first used? |url=https://www.un.org/en/yearbook/article/when-was-term-united-nations-first-used |access-date=December 14, 2023 |publisher=United Nations}} Roosevelt won reelection in 1944 but died in 1945 after his physical health seriously and steadily declined during the war years. Since then, several of his actions have come under criticism, such as his ordering of the internment of Japanese Americans. Nonetheless, historical rankings consistently place him among the three greatest American presidents, and he is often considered an icon of American liberalism.
Early life and marriage
=Childhood=
File:Franklin-Roosevelt-1884.jpg Roosevelt in 1884, 2 years old]]
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was born on January 30, 1882, in Hyde Park, New York, to businessman James Roosevelt I and his second wife, Sara Ann Delano. His parents, who were sixth cousins,{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=7}} came from wealthy, established New York families—the Roosevelts, the Aspinwalls and the Delanos, respectively—and resided at Springwood, a large estate south of Hyde Park's historic center.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=5–6}} Franklin's father, James, was a prominent Bourbon Democrat who once took him to meet President Grover Cleveland. During this meeting, Cleveland said: "My little man, I am making a strange wish for you. It is that you may never be President of the United States."{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|p=16}} Franklin's mother Sara, the dominant influence in his early years, once declared, "My son Franklin is a Delano, not a Roosevelt at all."{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=7}}{{Sfn|Lash|1971|p=111}} James, who was 54 when Franklin was born, was considered by some as a remote father, though biographer James MacGregor Burns indicates James interacted with his son more than was typical at the time.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=4}} Franklin had a half-brother, James Roosevelt "Rosy" Roosevelt, from his father's previous marriage.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=5–6}}
=Education and early career=
As a child, Roosevelt learned to ride, shoot, sail, and play polo, tennis, and golf.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=110}}{{sfn|Black|2005|p=21}} Frequent trips to Europe—beginning at age two and from age seven to fifteen—helped Roosevelt become conversant in German and French. Except for attending public school in Germany at age nine,{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=20–25}} Roosevelt was homeschooled by tutors until age 14. He then attended Groton School, an Episcopal boarding school in Groton, Massachusetts.{{cite web |title=FDR Biography-The Early Years |url=https://www.fdrlibrary.org/fdr-biography |access-date=January 25, 2022 |publisher=Roosevelt Library and Museum}} He was not among the more popular Groton students, who were better athletes and had rebellious streaks.{{cite web|url=https://millercenter.org/president/fdroosevelt|title=FDR: Life Before the Presidency|publisher=Univ. of Virginia Miller Center of Public Affairs|first=William E.|last=Leuchtenburg|date=September 26, 2016|access-date=January 25, 2022}} Its headmaster, Endicott Peabody, preached the duty of Christians to help the less fortunate and urged his students to enter public service. Peabody remained a strong influence throughout Roosevelt's life, officiating at his wedding and visiting him as president.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=16}}{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|p=174}}
{{multiple image
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| header=Roosevelt in his younger years
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| image1 = Franklin D. Roosevelt Portrait in New York City, New York - NARA - 196675.jpg
| caption1 = Roosevelt in 1893, at the age of 11
| image2 = FDR at Groton April 1900.JPG
| caption2 = Roosevelt in 1900, at the age of 18
| image3=Franklin D. Roosevelt on horse, Bobby in Rhinebeck, New York - NARA - 195579 (cropped).jpg
| caption3=Roosevelt in 1905 on horse, Bobby in Rhinebeck, New York]
}}
Like most of his Groton classmates, Roosevelt went to Harvard College. He was a member of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0130.html|title=Family of Wealth Gave Advantages|date=April 15, 1945|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=December 20, 2012}} and the Fly Club,{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|p=176}} and served as a school cheerleader.{{cite news|title=Almanac: The 1st cheerleader|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/almanac-the-1st-cheerleader/|access-date=December 1, 2019|publisher=CBS News|date=November 2, 2014}} Roosevelt was relatively undistinguished as a student or athlete, but he became editor-in-chief of The Harvard Crimson daily newspaper, which required ambition, energy, and the ability to manage others.{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|p=175}} He later said, "I took economics courses in college for four years, and everything I was taught was wrong."{{Sfn|Burns|1956|pp=18, 20}}
Roosevelt's father died in 1900, distressing him greatly.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=28–29}} The following year, Roosevelt's fifth cousin Theodore Roosevelt became U.S. president. Theodore's vigorous leadership style and reforming zeal made him Franklin's role model and hero.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=24}} He graduated from Harvard in three years in 1903 with an A.B. in history.{{cite web |url=https://www.fdrlibrary.org/fdr-biography |title=FDR Biography |publisher=Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum}} He remained there for a fourth year, taking graduate courses.{{cite web |url=https://millercenter.org/president/fdroosevelt/life-before-the-presidency |title=Franklin D. Roosevelt: Life Before the Presidency |first= William E. |last=Leuchtenburg |date=October 4, 2016 |author-link= William Leuchtenburg |publisher=Miller Center of Public Affairs}} Like his cousin Theodore, he was a member of The Explorers Club.{{Cite web |title=DECEASED members 1904 to 23 May 2007 - The Explorers Club |url=https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/read/33936119/deceased-members-1904-to-23-may-2007-the-explorers-club |access-date=October 19, 2024 |publisher=YUMPU}}
File:Roosevelt attending his stamp collections.jpg
Roosevelt entered Columbia Law School in 1904, but dropped out in 1907 after passing the New York bar examination.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=28}}{{Efn|In 2008, Columbia awarded Roosevelt a posthumous Juris Doctor degree.{{cite news|title=Presidents Roosevelt Honored With Posthumous Columbia Degrees|url=https://www.nysun.com/new-york/presidents-roosevelt-honored-with-posthumous/86666/|access-date=April 6, 2018|newspaper=New York Sun|date=September 26, 2008|archive-date=April 6, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180406101950/https://www.nysun.com/new-york/presidents-roosevelt-honored-with-posthumous/86666/}}}} In 1908, he took a job with the prestigious law firm of Carter Ledyard & Milburn, working in the firm's admiralty law division.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=38–39}}
Roosevelt was an avid stamp collector who came into the hobby beginning at eight years old, and continued this pursuit into his adulthood and political career. During his terms as president he aroused nationwide interest in stamp collecting. Beginning in the 1930s, the White House released numerous photographs of him while he was attending his stamp collection. He devoted time each day working with his collection. He worked with Postmaster General James A. Farley over stamp designs, colors, and themes for U.S. postage stamps..When he became stricken with polio it is said the hobby gave him solace and kept his mind off his ailments during his idle hours.{{cite web |title=Franklin D. Roosevelt |publisher=Smithsonian National Postal Museum |url=https://postalmuseum.si.edu/people/franklin-d-roosevelt |accessdate=May 31, 2025}}
=Marriage, family, and extramarital affairs=
During his second year of college, Roosevelt met and proposed to Boston heiress Alice Sohier, who turned him down. Franklin then began courting his childhood acquaintance and fifth cousin once removed, Eleanor Roosevelt, a niece of Theodore Roosevelt.{{Sfn|Rowley|2010|pp=3–6}} In 1903, Franklin proposed to Eleanor. Despite resistance from his mother, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt were married on March 17, 1905.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=26}} Eleanor's father, Elliott, was deceased; Theodore, who was then president, gave away the bride.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=35–36}} The young couple moved into Springwood. Franklin's mother, Sara Roosevelt, also provided a townhouse for the newlyweds in New York City, and had a house built for herself alongside that townhouse. Eleanor never felt at home in the houses at Hyde Park or New York City; however, she loved the family's vacation home on Campobello Island, which was also a gift from Sara.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=54–55}}
Burns indicates that young Franklin Roosevelt was self-assured and at ease in the upper class. On the other hand, Eleanor was shy and disliked social life. Initially, Eleanor stayed home to raise their children.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|pp=77–79}} As his father had done, Franklin left childcare to his wife, and Eleanor delegated the task to caregivers. She later said that she knew "absolutely nothing about handling or feeding a baby".{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=57–58}} They had six children. Anna, James, and Elliott were born in 1906, 1907, and 1910, respectively. The couple's second son, Franklin, died in infancy in 1909. Another son, also named Franklin, was born in 1914, and the youngest, John, was born in 1916.{{cite book|last=Abate|first=Frank R.|title=The Oxford Desk Dictionary of People and Places|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780195138726/page/329|year=1999|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-513872-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780195138726/page/329 329]}}
Roosevelt had several extramarital affairs. He commenced an affair with Eleanor's social secretary, Lucy Mercer, soon after she was hired in 1914. That affair was discovered by Eleanor in 1918.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=153}} Franklin contemplated divorcing Eleanor, but Sara objected, and Mercer would not marry a divorced man with five children.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|p=160}} Franklin and Eleanor remained married, and Franklin promised never to see Mercer again. Eleanor never forgave him for the affair, and their marriage shifted to become a political partnership.{{Sfn|Winkler|2006|pp=28, 38, 48–49}} Eleanor soon established a separate home in Hyde Park at Val-Kill and devoted herself to social and political causes independent of her husband. The emotional break in their marriage was so severe that when Franklin asked Eleanor in 1942—in light of his failing health—to come live with him again, she refused.{{Sfn|Winkler|2006|pp=202–03}} Roosevelt was not always aware of Eleanor's visits to the White House. For some time, Eleanor could not easily reach Roosevelt on the telephone without his secretary's help; Franklin, in turn, did not visit Eleanor's New York City apartment until late 1944.{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|p=195}}
Franklin broke his promise to Eleanor regarding Lucy Mercer. He and Mercer maintained a formal correspondence and began seeing each other again by 1941.{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/20/weekinreview/20mcgrath.html|work=The New York Times|title=No End of the Affair|first=Charles|last=McGrath|date=April 20, 2008}}{{cite web|url=http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/glossary/mercer-lucy.htm|title=Lucy Page Mercer Rutherfurd|publisher=Eleanor Roosevelt Papers|access-date=February 7, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100304022555/http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/glossary/mercer-lucy.htm|archive-date=March 4, 2010}} Roosevelt's son Elliott claimed that his father had a 20-year affair with his private secretary, Marguerite LeHand.{{sfn|Tully|2005|p=340}} Another son, James, stated that "there is a real possibility that a romantic relationship existed" between his father and Crown Princess Märtha of Norway, who resided in the White House during part of World War II. Aides referred to her at the time as "the president's girlfriend",{{sfn|Goodwin|1995|p=153}} and gossip linking the two romantically appeared in newspapers.{{sfn|Rowley|2010|p=254}}
Early political career (1910–1920)
=New York state senator (1910–1913)=
File:Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1912.png
Roosevelt cared little for the practice of law and told friends he planned to enter politics.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=58–60}} Despite his admiration for cousin Theodore, Franklin shared his father's bond with the Democratic Party, and in preparation for the 1910 elections, the party recruited Roosevelt to run for a seat in the New York State Assembly.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|p=41}} Roosevelt was a compelling recruit: he had the personality and energy for campaigning and the money to pay for his own campaign.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=60–62}} But Roosevelt's campaign for the state assembly ended after the Democratic incumbent, Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, chose to seek re-election. Rather than putting his political hopes on hold, Roosevelt ran for a seat in the New York State Senate.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=60–64}} The senate district, located in Dutchess, Columbia, and Putnam, was strongly Republican.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|p=65}} Roosevelt feared that opposition from Theodore could end his campaign, but Theodore encouraged his candidacy despite their party differences.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|p=41}} Acting as his own campaign manager, Roosevelt traveled throughout the senate district via automobile at a time when few could afford a car.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=65–66}} Due to his aggressive campaign,{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|pp=202–03}} his name gained recognition in the Hudson Valley, and in the Democratic landslide in the 1910 United States elections, Roosevelt won a surprising victory.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=34}}
Despite short legislative sessions, Roosevelt treated his new position as a full-time career.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=68–69}} Taking his seat on January 1, 1911, Roosevelt soon became the leader of a group of "Insurgents" in opposition to the Tammany Hall machine that dominated the state Democratic Party. In the 1911 U.S. Senate election, which was determined in a joint session of the New York state legislature,{{Efn| State legislatures elected United States senators prior to the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913.}} Roosevelt and nineteen other Democrats caused a prolonged deadlock by opposing a series of Tammany-backed candidates. Tammany threw its backing behind James A. O'Gorman, a highly regarded judge whom Roosevelt found acceptable, and O'Gorman won the election in late March.{{Sfn|Brands|2009|pp=57–60}} Roosevelt in the process became a popular figure among New York Democrats.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=34}} News articles and cartoons depicted "the second coming of a Roosevelt", sending "cold shivers down the spine of Tammany".{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|pp=205–06}}
Shortly after being elected to the New York State Senate, Roosevelt became a Freemason, on October 10, 1911, at Holland Lodge No. 8 in New York City.{{Cite web |last=Corcoran |first=Syndney |date=2022-04-07 |title=Franklin D. Roosevelt {{!}} Grand Lodge of Ohio |url=https://www.freemason.com/franklin-d-roosevelt-freemason/ |access-date=2025-01-23 |website=Freemasonry}}
Roosevelt also opposed Tammany Hall by supporting New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson's successful bid for the 1912 Democratic nomination.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=49}} The election became a three-way contest when Theodore Roosevelt left the Republican Party to launch a third-party campaign against Wilson and sitting Republican president William Howard Taft. Franklin's decision to back Wilson over his cousin in the general election alienated some of his family, except Theodore.{{sfn|Black|2005|pp=62–63}} Roosevelt overcame a bout of typhoid fever that year and, with help from journalist Louis McHenry Howe, he was re-elected in the 1912 elections. After the election, he served as chairman of the Agriculture Committee; his success with farm and labor bills was a precursor to his later New Deal policies.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|pp=44–46}} He had then become more consistently progressive, in support of labor and social welfare programs.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=43}}
=Assistant Secretary of the Navy (1913–1919)=
File:Franklin Roosevelt Secretary of the Navy 1913.jpg
Roosevelt's support of Wilson led to his appointment in March 1913 as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, the second-ranking official in the Navy Department after Secretary Josephus Daniels who paid it little attention.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=97–101}} Roosevelt had an affection for the Navy, was well-read on the subject, and was an ardent supporter of a large, efficient force.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=51}}J. Simon Rofe, " 'Under the Influence of Mahan': Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt and their Understanding of American National Interest." Diplomacy & Statecraft 19.4 (2008): 732–45. With Wilson's support, Daniels and Roosevelt instituted a merit-based promotion system and extended civilian control over the autonomous departments of the Navy.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=102–06}} Roosevelt oversaw the Navy's civilian employees and earned the respect of union leaders for his fairness in resolving disputes.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=113–14}} No strikes occurred during his seven-plus years in the office,{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=52}} as he gained valuable experience in labor issues, wartime management, naval issues, and logistics.{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|p=212}}
In 1914, Roosevelt ran for the seat of retiring Republican Senator Elihu Root of New York. Though he had the backing of Treasury Secretary William Gibbs McAdoo and Governor Martin H. Glynn, he faced a formidable opponent in Tammany Hall's James W. Gerard.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=122–23}} He also was without Wilson's support, as the president needed Tammany's forces for his legislation and 1916 re-election.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=56}} Roosevelt was soundly defeated in the Democratic primary by Gerard, who in turn lost the general election to Republican James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr. He learned that federal patronage alone, without White House support, could not defeat a strong local organization.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|pp=57, 60}} After the election, he and Tammany Hall boss Charles Francis Murphy sought accommodation and became allies.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|p=125}}
Roosevelt refocused on the Navy Department as World War I broke out in Europe in August 1914.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=125–26}} Though he remained publicly supportive of Wilson, Roosevelt sympathized with the Preparedness Movement, whose leaders strongly favored the Allied Powers and called for a military build-up.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=59–61}} The Wilson administration initiated an expansion of the Navy after the sinking of the RMS Lusitania by a German submarine, and Roosevelt helped establish the United States Navy Reserve and the Council of National Defense.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=130–32}} In April 1917, after Germany declared it would engage in unrestricted submarine warfare and attacked several U.S. ships, Congress approved Wilson's call for a declaration of war on Germany.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=62–63}}
Roosevelt requested that he be allowed to serve as a naval officer, but Wilson insisted that he continue as Assistant Secretary. For the next year, Roosevelt remained in Washington to coordinate the naval deployment, as the Navy expanded fourfold.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=65–66}}{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=139–40}} In the summer of 1918, Roosevelt traveled to Europe to inspect naval installations and meet with French and British officials. On account of his relation to Theodore Roosevelt, he was received very prominently considering his relatively junior rank, obtaining long private audiences with King George V and prime ministers David Lloyd George and Georges Clemenceau, as well as a tour of the battlefield at Verdun.{{Cite magazine |last=O'Brien |first=Phillips |author-link=Phillips O'Brien |date=August 10, 2024 |title=Franklin Roosevelt was made in world war one |url=https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/franklin-roosevelt-was-made-in-world-war-one/ |access-date=August 10, 2024 |magazine=The Spectator}} In September, on the ship voyage back to the United States, he contracted pandemic influenza with complicating pneumonia,{{sfn|Goldman|Goldman|2017|p=15}} which left him unable to work for a month.
After Germany signed an armistice in November 1918, Daniels and Roosevelt supervised the demobilization of the Navy.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=171–72}} Against the advice of older officers such as Admiral William S. Benson—who claimed he could not "conceive of any use the fleet will ever have for aviation"—Roosevelt personally ordered the preservation of the Navy's Aviation Division.{{sfn|Underwood|1991|p=11}} With the Wilson administration near an end, Roosevelt planned his next run for office. He approached Herbert Hoover about running for the 1920 Democratic presidential nomination, with Roosevelt as his running mate.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=176–77}}
=Campaign for vice president (1920)=
File:Franklin D. Roosevelt and James Cox in Dayton, Ohio - NARA - 197236.jpg
Roosevelt's plan for Hoover to run fell through after Hoover publicly declared himself to be a Republican, but Roosevelt decided to seek the 1920 vice presidential nomination. After Governor James M. Cox of Ohio won the party's presidential nomination at the 1920 Democratic National Convention, he chose Roosevelt as his running mate, and the convention nominated him by acclamation.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=177–81}} Although his nomination surprised most people, he balanced the ticket as a moderate, a Wilsonian, and a prohibitionist with a famous name.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=73}}{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|pp=215–16}} Roosevelt, then 38, resigned as Assistant Secretary after the Democratic convention and campaigned across the nation for the party ticket.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=181}}
During the campaign, Cox and Roosevelt defended the Wilson administration and the League of Nations, both of which were unpopular in 1920.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=181–82}} Roosevelt personally supported U.S. membership in the League, but, unlike Wilson, he favored compromising with Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and other "Reservationists".{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=175–76}} Republicans Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge defeated the Cox–Roosevelt ticket in the presidential election by a wide margin, carrying every state outside of the South.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=74}} Roosevelt accepted the loss and later reflected that the relationships and goodwill that he built in the 1920 campaign proved to be a major asset in his 1932 campaign. The 1920 election also saw the first public participation of Eleanor Roosevelt who, with the support of Louis Howe, established herself as a valuable political player.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=182–83}} After the election, Roosevelt returned to New York City, where he practiced law and served as a vice president of the Fidelity and Deposit Company.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=184–85}}
Paralytic illness and political comeback (1921–1928)
{{Further|Paralytic illness of Franklin D. Roosevelt}}
File:FDR-Wheelchair-February-1941 (cropped).jpg and Ruthie Bie, the daughter of caretakers at his Hyde Park estate, February 1941]] Roosevelt sought to build support for a political comeback in the 1922 elections, but his career was derailed by an illness.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=184–85}} It began while the Roosevelts were vacationing at Campobello Island in August 1921. His main symptoms were fever; symmetric, ascending paralysis; facial paralysis; bowel and bladder dysfunction; numbness and hyperesthesia; and a descending pattern of recovery. Roosevelt was left permanently paralyzed from the waist down and was diagnosed with polio. A 2003 study strongly favored a diagnosis of Guillain–Barré syndrome,{{cite journal | vauthors=Goldman AS, Schmalstieg EJ, Freeman DH, Goldman DA, Schmalstieg FC | title=What was the cause of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's paralytic illness? | journal=Journal of Medical Biography | volume=11 | issue=4 | pages=232–40 | year=2003 | pmid=14562158 | url=http://www.ehdp.com/out/jmb_2003_v11_p232-240.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121130001136/http://www.ehdp.com/out/jmb_2003_v11_p232-240.pdf |archive-date=November 30, 2012 |url-status=live | doi= 10.1177/096777200301100412| s2cid=39957366 | access-date=July 4, 2017 | issn = 0967-7720}} but historians have continued to describe his paralysis according to the initial diagnosis.{{sfn|Alter|2006|p=355}}{{cite book|last1=Lomazow|first1=Steven|last2=Fettmann|first2=Eric|title=FDR's Deadly Secret|year=2010|page=27}}{{cite book|last=Rose|first=David M.|title=Friends and Partners: The Legacy of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Basil O'Connor in the History of Polio|year=2016|page=179}}{{cite book|last=Wooten|first=Heather Green|title=The Polio Years in Texas|year=2009|page=192}}
Though his mother favored his retirement from public life, Roosevelt, his wife, and Roosevelt's close friend and adviser, Louis Howe, were all determined that he continue his political career.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=195–96}} He convinced many people that he was improving, which he believed to be essential prior to running for office.{{sfn|Rowley|2010|p=125}} He laboriously taught himself to walk short distances while wearing iron braces on his hips and legs, by swiveling his torso while supporting himself with a cane.{{sfn|Rowley|2010|p=120}} He was careful never to be seen using his wheelchair in public, and great care was taken to prevent any portrayal in the press that would highlight his disability.{{sfn|Ward|Burns|2014|p=332}} However, his disability was well known before and during his presidency and became a major part of his image. He usually appeared in public standing upright, supported on one side by an aide or one of his sons.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=220}}
Beginning in 1925, Roosevelt spent most of his time in the Southern United States, at first on his houseboat, the Larooco.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=213–14}} Intrigued by the potential benefits of hydrotherapy, he established a rehabilitation center at Warm Springs, Georgia, in 1926, assembling a staff of physical therapists and using most of his inheritance to purchase the Merriweather Inn. In 1938, he founded the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, leading to the development of polio vaccines.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=215–19}}
Roosevelt remained active in New York politics while also establishing contacts in the South, particularly in Georgia, in the 1920s.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=255–56}} He issued an open letter endorsing Al Smith's successful campaign in New York's 1922 gubernatorial election, which both aided Smith and showed Roosevelt's continuing relevance as a political figure.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=87–88}} Roosevelt and Smith came from different backgrounds and never fully trusted one another, but Roosevelt supported Smith's progressive policies, while Smith was happy to have Roosevelt's backing.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=87–96}}
File:F.D. Roosevelt & Nathan Straus LCCN2014717406.jpg co-owner Nathan Straus at the 1924 Democratic National Convention]]
Roosevelt gave presidential nominating speeches for Smith at the 1924 and 1928 Democratic National Conventions; the speech at the 1924 convention marked a return to public life following his illness and convalescence.{{sfn|Morgan|1985|pp=267, 269–72, 286–87}} That year, the Democrats were badly divided between an urban wing, led by Smith, and a conservative, rural wing, led by William Gibbs McAdoo. On the 101st ballot, the nomination went to John W. Davis, a compromise candidate who suffered a landslide defeat in the 1924 presidential election. Like many, Roosevelt did not abstain from alcohol during Prohibition, but publicly he sought to find a compromise on the issue acceptable to both wings of the party.{{sfn|Black|2005|pp=160–67}}
In 1925, Smith appointed Roosevelt to the Taconic State Park Commission, and his fellow commissioners chose him as chairman.{{sfn|Caro|1974|pp=289–91}} In this role, he came into conflict with Robert Moses, a Smith protégé,{{sfn|Caro|1974|pp=289–91}} who was the primary force behind the Long Island State Park Commission and the New York State Council of Parks.{{sfn|Caro|1974|pp=289–91}} Roosevelt accused Moses of using the name recognition of prominent individuals including Roosevelt to win political support for state parks, but then diverting funds to the ones Moses favored on Long Island, while Moses worked to block the appointment of Howe to a salaried position as the Taconic commission's secretary.{{sfn|Caro|1974|pp=289–91}} Roosevelt served on the commission until the end of 1928,{{sfn|F. Roosevelt, E. Roosevelt|p=21}} and his contentious relationship with Moses continued as their careers progressed.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|p=231}}
In 1923 Edward Bok established the $100,000 American Peace Award for the best plan to deliver world peace. Roosevelt had leisure time and interest, and he drafted a plan for the contest. He never submitted it because Eleanor was selected as a judge for the prize. His plan called for a new world organization that would replace the League of Nations.Conrad Black, Franklin Delano Roosevelt: champion of freedom (Hachette UK, 2012) p 160. Although Roosevelt had been the vice-presidential candidate on the Democratic ticket of 1920 that supported the League, by 1924 he was ready to scrap it. His draft of a "Society of Nations" accepted the reservations proposed by Henry Cabot Lodge in the 1919 Senate debate. The new Society would not become involved in the Western Hemisphere, where the Monroe doctrine held sway. It would not have any control over military forces. Although Roosevelt's plan was never made public, he thought about the problem a great deal and incorporated some of his 1924 ideas into the design for the United Nations in 1944–1945.Selig Adler, The isolationist impulse: its 20th-century reaction (1957) pp 200–201.
Governor of New York (1929–1932)
{{Main|Governorship of Franklin D. Roosevelt}}
File:Governor Roosevelt and Al Smith.jpg, 1930]]
Smith, the Democratic presidential nominee in the 1928 election, asked Roosevelt to run for governor of New York in the 1928 state election.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=100}} Roosevelt initially resisted, as he was reluctant to leave Warm Springs and feared a Republican landslide.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=96–98}} Party leaders eventually convinced him only he could defeat the Republican gubernatorial nominee, New York Attorney General Albert Ottinger.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=223–25}} He won the party's gubernatorial nomination by acclamation and again turned to Howe to lead his campaign. Roosevelt was joined on the campaign trail by associates Samuel Rosenman, Frances Perkins, and James Farley.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=225–28}} While Smith lost the presidency in a landslide, and was defeated in his home state, Roosevelt was elected governor by a one-percent margin,{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=101}} and became a contender in the next presidential election.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=229}}
Roosevelt proposed the construction of hydroelectric power plants and addressed the ongoing farm crisis of the 1920s.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=237–38}} Relations between Roosevelt and Smith suffered after he chose not to retain key Smith appointees like Moses.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=230–33}} He and his wife Eleanor established an understanding for the rest of his career; she would dutifully serve as the governor's wife but would also be free to pursue her own agenda and interests.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=235–37}} He also began holding "fireside chats", in which he directly addressed his constituents via radio, often pressuring the New York State Legislature to advance his agenda.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=238–39}}
In October 1929, the Wall Street Crash occurred and the Great Depression in the United States began.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=240–41}} Roosevelt saw the seriousness of the situation and established a state employment commission. He also became the first governor to publicly endorse the idea of unemployment insurance.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=242–43}}
When Roosevelt began his run for a second term in May 1930, he reiterated his doctrine from the campaign two years before: "that progressive government by its very terms must be a living and growing thing, that the battle for it is never-ending and that if we let up for one single moment or one single year, not merely do we stand still but we fall back in the march of civilization."{{sfn|Burns|1956|pp=119–20}} His platform called for aid to farmers, full employment, unemployment insurance, and old-age pensions.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=243–44}} He was elected to a second term by a 14% margin.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=121}}
Roosevelt proposed an economic relief package and the establishment of the Temporary Emergency Relief Administration to distribute those funds. Led first by Jesse I. Straus and then by Harry Hopkins, the agency assisted over one-third of New York's population between 1932 and 1938.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=250–52}} Roosevelt also began an investigation into corruption in New York City among the judiciary, the police force, and organized crime, prompting the creation of the Seabury Commission. The Seabury investigations exposed an extortion ring, led many public officials to be removed from office, and made the decline of Tammany Hall inevitable.{{cite book|last=Allen|first=Oliver E.|title=The Tiger: The Rise and Fall of Tammany Hall|pages=[https://archive.org/details/tigerrisefalloft00alle/page/233 233–50]|date=1993|publisher=Addison-Wesley Publishing Company|isbn=978-0-201-62463-2|url=https://archive.org/details/tigerrisefalloft00alle/page/233}} Roosevelt supported reforestation with the Hewitt Amendment in 1931, which gave birth to New York's State Forest system.{{Cite web|title=History Of State Forest Program|publisher=New York State Department of Environmental Conservation|url=https://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/4982.html|access-date=June 28, 2021}}
1932 presidential election
{{Main|1932 United States presidential election}}
File:Vincenzo Laviosa - Franklin D. Roosevelt - Google Art Project.jpg
As the 1932 presidential election approached, Roosevelt turned his attention to national politics, established a campaign team led by Howe and Farley, and a "brain trust" of policy advisers, primarily composed of Columbia University and Harvard University professors.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=261–63}} Some were not so sanguine about his chances, such as Walter Lippmann, the dean of political commentators, who observed: "He is a pleasant man who, without any important qualifications for the office, would very much like to be president."{{cite web|url=https://millercenter.org/president/fdroosevelt/campaigns-and-elections|title=FDR: Campaigns and Elections|publisher=Univ. of Virginia Miller Center of Public Affairs|last=Leuchtenburg|first=William E.|date=October 4, 2016|access-date=January 28, 2022}}
However, Roosevelt's efforts as governor to address the effects of the depression in his own state established him as the front-runner for the 1932 Democratic presidential nomination. Roosevelt rallied the progressive supporters of the Wilson administration while also appealing to many conservatives, establishing himself as the leading candidate in the South and West. The chief opposition to Roosevelt's candidacy came from Northeastern conservatives, Speaker of the House John Nance Garner of Texas and Al Smith, the 1928 Democratic presidential nominee.
Roosevelt entered the convention with a delegate lead due to his success in the 1932 Democratic primaries, but most delegates entered the convention unbound to any particular candidate. On the first presidential ballot, Roosevelt received the votes of more than half but less than two-thirds of the delegates, with Smith finishing in a distant second place. Roosevelt then promised the vice-presidential nomination to Garner, who controlled the votes of Texas and California; Garner threw his support behind Roosevelt after the third ballot, and Roosevelt clinched the nomination on the fourth ballot. Roosevelt flew in from New York to Chicago after learning that he had won the nomination, becoming the first major-party presidential nominee to accept the nomination in person.{{Sfn|Brands|2009|pp=232–36, 246–51}} His appearance was essential, to show himself as vigorous, despite his physical disability.
In his acceptance speech, Roosevelt declared, "I pledge you, I pledge myself to a new deal for the American people... This is more than a political campaign. It is a call to arms."{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=139}} Roosevelt promised securities regulation, tariff reduction, farm relief, government-funded public works, and other government actions to address the Great Depression.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=276–77}} Reflecting changing public opinion, the Democratic platform included a call for the repeal of Prohibition; Roosevelt himself had not taken a public stand on the issue prior to the convention but promised to uphold the party platform.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=266–67}} Otherwise, Roosevelt's primary campaign strategy was one of caution, intent upon avoiding mistakes that would distract from Hoover's failings on the economy. His statements attacked the incumbent and included no other specific policies or programs.
After the convention, Roosevelt won endorsements from several progressive Republicans, including George W. Norris, Hiram Johnson, and Robert La Follette Jr.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=278}} He also reconciled with the party's conservative wing, and even Al Smith was persuaded to support the Democratic ticket.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=279}} Hoover's handling of the Bonus Army further damaged the incumbent's popularity, as newspapers across the country criticized the use of force to disperse assembled veterans.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=282–84}}
Roosevelt won 57% of the popular vote and carried all but six states. Historians and political scientists consider the 1932–36 elections to be a political realignment. Roosevelt's victory was enabled by the creation of the New Deal coalition, small farmers, the Southern whites, Catholics, big-city political machines, labor unions, northern black Americans (southern ones were still disfranchised), Jews, intellectuals, and political liberals.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|1963|pp=183–96}} The creation of the New Deal coalition transformed American politics and started what political scientists call the "New Deal Party System" or the Fifth Party System.{{sfn|Sternsher|1975|pp=127–49}} Between the Civil War and 1929, Democrats had rarely controlled both houses of Congress and had won just four of seventeen presidential elections; from 1932 to 1979, Democrats won eight of twelve presidential elections and generally controlled both houses of Congress.{{sfn|Campbell|2006|pp=127–49}}
=Transition and assassination attempt=
{{Main|Presidential transition of Franklin D. Roosevelt}}
Roosevelt was elected in November 1932 but like his predecessors did not take office until the following March.{{efn|Roosevelt was the last president inaugurated on March 4. The Twentieth Amendment changed presidential inaugurations to January 20, from 1937.}} After the election, President Hoover sought to convince Roosevelt to renounce much of his campaign platform and to endorse the Hoover administration's policies.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=290–91}} Roosevelt refused Hoover's request to develop a joint program to stop the economic decline, claiming that it would tie his hands and that Hoover had the power to act.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=146}}
During the transition, Roosevelt chose Howe as his chief of staff, and Farley as Postmaster General. Frances Perkins, as Secretary of Labor, became the first woman appointed to a cabinet position. William H. Woodin, a Republican industrialist close to Roosevelt, was chosen for Secretary of the Treasury, while Roosevelt chose Senator Cordell Hull of Tennessee as Secretary of State. Harold L. Ickes and Henry A. Wallace, two progressive Republicans, were selected for Secretary of the Interior and Secretary of Agriculture, respectively.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=292–95}}
In February 1933, Roosevelt escaped an assassination attempt by Giuseppe Zangara, who expressed a "hate for all rulers". As he was attempting to shoot Roosevelt, Zangara was struck by a woman with her purse; he instead mortally wounded Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak, who was sitting alongside Roosevelt.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=147}}{{cite news|first=Amy|last=Davidson|title=The FDR New Yorker cover that never ran|date=May 5, 2012|url=https://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/closeread/2012/05/the-fdr-new-yorker-cover-that-never-ran.html|newspaper=The New Yorker}}
Presidency (1933–1945)
As president, Roosevelt appointed powerful men to top positions in government. However, he made all of his administration's major decisions himself, regardless of any delays, inefficiencies, or resentments doing so may have caused. Analyzing the president's administrative style, Burns concludes:
{{blockquote|text=The president stayed in charge of his administration...by drawing fully on his formal and informal powers as Chief Executive; by raising goals, creating momentum, inspiring a personal loyalty, getting the best out of people...by deliberately fostering among his aides a sense of competition and a clash of wills that led to disarray, heartbreak, and anger but also set off pulses of executive energy and sparks of creativity...by handing out one job to several men and several jobs to one man, thus strengthening his own position as a court of appeals, as a depository of information, and as a tool of co-ordination; by ignoring or bypassing collective decision-making agencies, such as the Cabinet...and always by persuading, flattering, juggling, improvising, reshuffling, harmonizing, conciliating, manipulating.{{sfn|Burns|1970|pp=347–48}}}}
=First and second terms (1933–1941)=
{{Main|Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933–1941)}}
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When Roosevelt was inaugurated on March 4, 1933, the U.S. was at the nadir of the worst depression in its history. A quarter of the workforce was unemployed, and farmers were in deep trouble as prices had fallen by 60%. Industrial production had fallen by more than half since 1929. Two million people were homeless. By the evening of March 4, 32 of the 48 states—as well as the District of Columbia—had closed their banks.{{sfn|Alter|2006|p=190}}
Historians categorized Roosevelt's program as "relief, recovery, and reform". Relief was urgently needed by the unemployed. Recovery meant boosting the economy back to normal, and reform was required of the financial and banking systems. Through Roosevelt's 30 "fireside chats", he presented his proposals directly to the American public as a series of radio addresses.{{sfn|Burns|1956|pp=157, 167–68}} Energized by his own victory over paralytic illness, he used persistent optimism and activism to renew the national spirit.{{sfn|Tobin|2013|pp=4–7}}
==First New Deal (1933–1934)==
{{Main|New Deal}}
On his second day in office, Roosevelt declared a four-day national "bank holiday", to end the run by depositors seeking to withdraw funds.{{cite web|url=https://millercenter.org/president/fdroosevelt/domestic-affairs|title=FDR: Domestic Affairs|publisher=Univ. of Virginia Miller Center of Public Affairs|last=Leuchtenburg|first=William E.|date=October 4, 2016|access-date=January 29, 2022}} He called for a special session of Congress on March 9, when Congress passed, almost sight unseen, the Emergency Banking Act. The act, first developed by the Hoover administration and Wall Street bankers, gave the president the power to determine the opening and closing of banks and authorized the Federal Reserve Banks to issue banknotes.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=147–48}} The "first 100 Days" of the 73rd United States Congress saw an unprecedented amount of legislation and set a benchmark against which future presidents have been compared.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=312}}{{cite news|last1=Liptak|first1=Kevin|title=History of measuring presidents' first 100 days|url=http://www.cnn.com/2017/04/23/politics/donald-trump-history-100-days/index.html|access-date=October 9, 2017|publisher=CNN|date=April 23, 2017}} When the banks reopened on Monday, March 15, stock prices rose by 15 percent and in the following weeks over $1 billion was returned to bank vaults, ending the bank panic. On March 22, Roosevelt signed the Cullen–Harrison Act, which brought Prohibition to a close.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=151–52}}
Roosevelt saw the establishment of a number of agencies and measures designed to provide relief for the unemployed and others. The Federal Emergency Relief Administration, under the leadership of Harry Hopkins, distributed relief to state governments.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=322}} The Public Works Administration (PWA), under Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes, oversaw the construction of large-scale public works such as dams, bridges, and schools.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=322}} The Rural Electrification Administration (REA) brought electricity for the first time to millions of rural homes. The most popular of all New Deal agencies—and Roosevelt's favorite—was the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), which hired 250,000 unemployed men for rural projects. Roosevelt also expanded Hoover's Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which financed railroads and industry. Congress gave the Federal Trade Commission broad regulatory powers and provided mortgage relief to millions of farmers and homeowners. Roosevelt also set up the Agricultural Adjustment Administration to increase commodity prices, by paying farmers to leave land uncultivated and cut herds.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=318–23}} The policies were criticized when, in a few cases, crops were intentionally plowed under and livestock was killed as a result.
Reform of the economy was the goal of the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) of 1933. It sought to end cutthroat competition by forcing industries to establish rules such as minimum prices, agreements not to compete, and production restrictions. Industry leaders negotiated the rules with NIRA officials, who suspended antitrust laws in return for better wages. The Supreme Court in May 1935 declared NIRA unconstitutional, to Roosevelt's chagrin.{{Sfn|Hawley|1995|p=124}} He reformed financial regulations with the Glass–Steagall Act, creating the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to underwrite savings deposits. The act also limited affiliations between commercial banks and securities firms.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=331–32}} In 1934, the Securities and Exchange Commission was created to regulate the trading of securities, while the Federal Communications Commission was established to regulate telecommunications.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=346}}
The NIRA included $3.3 billion (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|3.3|1933|r=2}} billion in {{Inflation-year|US}}) of spending through the Public Works Administration to support recovery.{{sfn|Savage|1991|p=160}} Roosevelt worked with Senator Norris to create the largest government-owned industrial enterprise in American history—the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)—which built dams and power stations, controlled floods, and modernized agriculture and home conditions in the poverty-stricken Tennessee Valley. However, locals criticized the TVA for displacing thousands of people for these projects. The Soil Conservation Service trained farmers in the proper methods of cultivation, and with the TVA, Roosevelt became the father of soil conservation. Executive Order 6102 declared that all privately held gold of American citizens was to be sold to the U.S. Treasury and the price raised from $20 to $35 per ounce. The goal was to counter the deflation which was paralyzing the economy.{{Sfn|Freidel|1952–1973|pp=4, 320–39}}
Roosevelt tried to keep his campaign promise by cutting the federal budget. This included a reduction in military spending from $752 million in 1932 to $531 million in 1934 and a 40% cut in spending on veterans benefits. 500,000 veterans and widows were removed from the pension rolls, and benefits were reduced for the remainder. Federal salaries were cut and spending on research and education was reduced. The veterans were well organized and strongly protested, so most benefits were restored or increased by 1934.{{Sfn|Freidel|1952–1973|pp=4, 448–52}} Veterans groups such as the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars won their campaign to transform their benefits from payments due in 1945 to immediate cash when Congress overrode the President's veto and passed the Bonus Act in January 1936.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|p=249}} It pumped sums equal to 2% of the GDP into the consumer economy and had a major stimulus effect.{{cite journal|first=Joshua K.|last=Hausman|title=Fiscal Policy and Economic Recovery: The Case of the 1936 Veterans' Bonus|journal=American Economic Review|volume=106|issue=4|pages=1100–43|date=April 2016|doi=10.1257/aer.20130957|url=http://behl.berkeley.edu/files/2013/02/WP2013-06_Hausman.pdf|access-date=October 22, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141031231820/http://behl.berkeley.edu/files/2013/02/WP2013-06_Hausman.pdf|archive-date=October 31, 2014}}
==Second New Deal (1935–1936)==
{{Main|Second New Deal}}
File:Signing Of The Social Security Act.jpg
Roosevelt expected that his party would lose seats in the 1934 Congressional elections, as the president's party had done in most previous midterm elections; the Democrats gained seats instead. Empowered by the public's vote of confidence, the first item on Roosevelt's agenda in the 74th Congress was the creation of a social insurance program.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=349–51}} The Social Security Act established Social Security and promised economic security for the elderly, the poor, and the sick. Roosevelt insisted that it should be funded by payroll taxes rather than from the general fund, saying, "We put those payroll contributions there so as to give the contributors a legal, moral, and political right to collect their pensions and unemployment benefits. With those taxes in there, no damn politician can ever scrap my social security program."[http://www.ssa.gov/history/Gulick.html Social Security History]. Ssa.gov. Retrieved July 14, 2013. Compared with the social security systems in Western European countries, the Social Security Act of 1935 was rather conservative. But for the first time, the federal government took responsibility for the economic security of the aged, the temporarily unemployed, dependent children, and disabled people.{{sfn|Norton|2009|p=670}} Against Roosevelt's original intention for universal coverage, the act excluded farmers, domestic workers, and other groups, which made up about forty percent of the labor force.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=353}}
Roosevelt consolidated the various relief organizations, though some, like the PWA, continued to exist. After winning Congressional authorization for further funding of relief efforts, he established the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Under the leadership of Harry Hopkins, the WPA employed over three million people in its first year of operations. It undertook numerous massive construction projects in cooperation with local governments. It also set up the National Youth Administration and arts organizations.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=353–56}}
File:1936 FDR "Don't Be Fooled by Figures" Re-election handbill.jpg
The National Labor Relations Act guaranteed workers the right to collective bargaining through unions of their own choice. The act also established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) to facilitate wage agreements and suppress repeated labor disturbances. The act did not compel employers to reach an agreement with their employees, but it opened possibilities for American labor.{{sfn|Kennedy|1999|p=291}} The result was a tremendous growth of membership in the labor unions, especially in the mass-production sector.Colin Gordon, New Deals: Business, Labor, and Politics in America, 1920–1935 (1994) p. 225 When the Flint sit-down strike threatened the production of General Motors, Roosevelt broke with the precedent set by many former presidents and refused to intervene; the strike ultimately led to the unionization of both General Motors and its rivals in the American automobile industry.{{Sfn|Brands|2009|pp=463–67}}
While the First New Deal of 1933 had broad support from most sectors, the Second New Deal challenged the business community. Conservative Democrats, led by Al Smith, fought back with the American Liberty League, savagely attacking Roosevelt and equating him with socialism.{{Sfn|Fried|2001|pp=120–23}} But Smith overplayed his hand, and his boisterous rhetoric let Roosevelt isolate his opponents and identify them with the wealthy vested interests that opposed the New Deal, strengthening Roosevelt for the 1936 landslide.{{Sfn|Fried|2001|pp=120–23}} By contrast, labor unions, energized by labor legislation, signed up millions of new members and became a major backer of Roosevelt's re-elections in 1936, 1940, and 1944.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=350}}
Burns suggests that Roosevelt's policy decisions were guided more by pragmatism than ideology and that he "was like the general of a guerrilla army whose columns, fighting blindly in the mountains through dense ravines and thickets, suddenly converge, half by plan and half by coincidence, and debouch into the plain below."{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=226}} Roosevelt argued that such apparently haphazard methodology was necessary. "The country needs and, unless I mistake its temper, the country demands bold, persistent experimentation," he wrote. "It is common sense to take a method and try it; if it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something."{{cite book|last=Roosevelt|first=Franklin Delano|title=Looking forward|url={{GBurl|id=wJwnAQAAMAAJ|p=141}}|year=1933|publisher=John Day|page=141}}
==Election of 1936==
{{Main|1936 United States presidential election}}
Eight million workers remained unemployed in 1936, and though economic conditions had improved since 1932, they remained sluggish. By 1936, Roosevelt had lost the backing he once held in the business community because of his support for the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and the Social Security Act. The Republicans had few alternative candidates and nominated Kansas Governor Alf Landon, a little-known bland candidate whose chances were damaged by the public re-emergence of the still-unpopular Herbert Hoover.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=364–66}} While Roosevelt campaigned on his New Deal programs and continued to attack Hoover, Landon sought to win voters who approved of the goals of the New Deal but disagreed with its implementation.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=371–72}}
An attempt by Louisiana Senator Huey Long to organize a left-wing third party collapsed after Long's assassination in 1935. The remnants, helped by Father Charles Coughlin, supported William Lemke of the newly formed Union Party.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=360–61}} Roosevelt won re-nomination with little opposition at the 1936 Democratic National Convention, while his allies overcame Southern resistance to abolish the long-established rule that required Democratic presidential candidates to win the votes of two-thirds of the delegates rather than a simple majority.{{Efn|Biographer Jean Edward Smith notes that "the significance of the repeal of the two-thirds rule...is difficult to overstate. Not only did the power of the South in the Democratic party diminish, but without the repeal, it is open to question whether FDR could have been renominated in 1940."{{Sfn|Smith|2007|p=366}}}}
In the election against Landon and a third-party candidate, Roosevelt won 60.8% of the vote and carried every state except Maine and Vermont.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=284}} The Democratic ticket won the highest proportion of the popular vote.{{Efn|The 1964 Democratic ticket of Lyndon B. Johnson and Hubert Humphrey would later set a new record, taking 61.1% of the popular vote}} Democrats expanded their majorities in Congress, controlling over three-quarters of the seats in each house. The election also saw the consolidation of the New Deal coalition; while the Democrats lost some of their traditional allies in big business, they were replaced by groups such as organized labor and African Americans, the latter of whom voted Democratic for the first time since the Civil War.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=373–75}} Roosevelt lost high-income voters, especially businessmen and professionals, but made major gains among the poor and minorities. He won 86 percent of the Jewish vote, 81 percent of Catholics, 80 percent of union members, 76 percent of Southerners, 76 percent of blacks in northern cities, and 75 percent of people on relief. Roosevelt carried 102 of the country's 106 cities with a population of 100,000 or more.{{cite book|author=Mary E. Stuckey|title=Voting Deliberatively: FDR and the 1936 Presidential Campaign|url={{GBurl|id=OootCgAAQBAJ|pg=PT19}}|year=2015|publisher=Penn State UP|page=19|isbn=978-0-271-07192-3}}
==Supreme Court fight and second term legislation==
{{See also|Franklin D. Roosevelt Supreme Court candidates|Hughes Court|Wiley Rutledge Supreme Court nomination}}
The Supreme Court became Roosevelt's primary domestic focus during his second term after the court overturned many of his programs, including NIRA. The more conservative members of the court upheld the principles of the Lochner era, which saw numerous economic regulations struck down on the basis of freedom of contract.{{cite journal|last1=Kalman|first1=Laura|title=The Constitution, the Supreme Court, and the New Deal|journal=The American Historical Review|date=October 2005|volume=110|issue=4|pages=1052–80|doi=10.1086/ahr.110.4.1052}} Roosevelt proposed the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937, which would have allowed him to appoint an additional Justice for each incumbent Justice over the age of 70; in 1937, there were six Supreme Court Justices over the age of 70. The size of the Court had been set at nine since the passage of the Judiciary Act of 1869, and Congress had altered the number of Justices six other times throughout U.S. history.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=379–82}} Roosevelt's "court packing" plan ran into intense political opposition from his own party, led by Vice President Garner since it upset the separation of powers.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=312}} A bipartisan coalition of liberals and conservatives of both parties opposed the bill, and Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes broke with precedent by publicly advocating the defeat of the bill. Any chance of passing the bill ended with the death of Senate Majority Leader Joseph Taylor Robinson in July 1937.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=384–89}}
Starting with the 1937 case of West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, the court began to take a more favorable view of economic regulations. Historians have described this as, "the switch in time that saved nine". That same year, Roosevelt appointed a Supreme Court Justice for the first time, and by 1941, had appointed seven of the court's nine justices.{{Efn|The two Justices who Roosevelt did not originally appoint to the Court were Harlan Fiske Stone and Owen Roberts. However, in 1941, Roosevelt elevated Stone to the position of Chief Justice.}}{{cite magazine|last1=Leuchtenburg|first1=William E.|title=When Franklin Roosevelt Clashed with the Supreme Court – and Lost|url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/when-franklin-roosevelt-clashed-with-the-supreme-court-and-lost-78497994/|access-date=March 1, 2016|magazine=Smithsonian Magazine|date=May 2005}} After Parrish, the Court shifted its focus from judicial review of economic regulations to the protection of civil liberties.Leuchtenburg, E. (1996). The Supreme Court Reborn: The Constitutional Revolution in the Age of Roosevelt. Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|0-19-511131-1}} Four of Roosevelt's Supreme Court appointees, Felix Frankfurter, Robert H. Jackson,
Hugo Black, and William O. Douglas, were particularly influential in reshaping the jurisprudence of the Court.{{cite news|last1=Blake|first1=John|title=How FDR unleashed his Supreme Court 'scorpions'|url=http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/12/14/FDR.supremecourt/index.html|access-date=October 10, 2017|publisher=CNN|date=December 14, 2010}}{{cite book|last1=Belknap|first1=Michal|title=The Vinson Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy|date=2004|publisher=ABC-CLIO|pages=162–63|url={{GBurl|id=oeFRJj8dVAUC|q=vinson court}}|access-date=March 3, 2016|isbn=978-1-57607-201-1}}
With Roosevelt's influence on the wane following the failure of the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937, conservative Democrats joined with Republicans to block the implementation of further New Deal programs.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=390–91}} Roosevelt did manage to pass some legislation, including the Housing Act of 1937, a second Agricultural Adjustment Act, and the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) of 1938, which was the last major piece of New Deal legislation. The FLSA outlawed child labor, established a federal minimum wage, and required overtime pay for certain employees who work in excess of forty hours per week.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=408–09}} He also passed the Reorganization Act of 1939 and subsequently created the Executive Office of the President, making it "the nerve center of the federal administrative system".{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=187–88}} When the economy began to deteriorate again in mid-1937, Roosevelt launched a rhetorical campaign against big business and monopoly power, alleging that the recession was the result of a capital strike and even ordering the Federal Bureau of Investigation to look for a criminal conspiracy (they found none). He then asked Congress for $5 billion (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|5|1937|r=2}} billion in {{Inflation-year|US}}) in relief and public works funding. This created as many as 3.3 million WPA jobs by 1938. Projects accomplished under the WPA ranged from new federal courthouses and post offices to facilities and infrastructure for national parks, bridges, and other infrastructure across the country, and architectural surveys and archaeological excavations—investments to construct facilities and preserve important resources. Beyond this, however, Roosevelt recommended to a special congressional session only a permanent national farm act, administrative reorganization, and regional planning measures, all of which were leftovers from a regular session. According to Burns, this attempt illustrated Roosevelt's inability to settle on a basic economic program.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=320}}
Determined to overcome the opposition of conservative Democrats in Congress, Roosevelt became involved in the 1938 Democratic primaries, actively campaigning for challengers who were more supportive of New Deal reform. Roosevelt failed badly, managing to defeat only one of the ten targeted. In the November 1938 elections, Democrats lost six Senate seats and 71 House seats, with losses concentrated among pro-New Deal Democrats. When Congress reconvened in 1939, Republicans under Senator Robert Taft formed a Conservative coalition with Southern Democrats, virtually ending Roosevelt's ability to enact his domestic proposals.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|1963|pp=262–63, 271–73}} Despite their opposition to Roosevelt's domestic policies, many of these conservative Congressmen would provide crucial support for his foreign policy before and during World War II.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=440–41}}
==Conservation and the environment==
Roosevelt had a lifelong interest in the environment and conservation starting with his youthful interest in forestry on his family estate. Although he was never an outdoorsman or sportsman on Theodore Roosevelt's scale, his growth of the national systems was comparable.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|p=19}}See also Edgar B. Nixon, ed. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Conservation, 1911-1945 (2 vol. 1957); [https://archive.org/details/franklindrooseve0000nixo/page/n7/mode/2up vol 1 online]; also see [https://archive.org/details/franklindrooseve0002unse_p5t9/page/n6/mode/1up vol 2 online] When Roosevelt was governor of New York, the Temporary Emergency Relief Administration was essentially a state-level predecessor of the federal Civilian Conservation Corps, with 10,000 or more men building fire trails, combating soil erosion and planting tree seedlings in marginal farmland in New York.{{Cite web|title=FDR's Conservation Legacy (U.S. National Park Service)|url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/fdr-s-conservation-legacy.htm|access-date=June 28, 2021|website=nps.gov}} As President, Roosevelt was active in expanding, funding, and promoting the National Park and National Forest systems.{{cite book|last=Leshy|first=John|editor1-last=Woolner|editor1-first=David|editor2-last=Henderson|editor2-first=Henry L.|title=FDR and the Environment|publisher=Springer|date=2009|chapter=FDR's Expansion of Our National Patrimony: A Model for Leadership|pages= 177–78|isbn=978-0-230-10067-1}} Their popularity soared, from three million visitors a year at the start of the decade to 15.5 million in 1939.{{cite web|title=The National Parks: America's Best Idea: History Episode 5: 1933–1945|url=https://www.pbs.org/nationalparks/history/ep5|publisher=PBS|access-date=April 23, 2016}} The Civilian Conservation Corps enrolled 3.4 million young men and built {{convert|13,000|mi|km|abbr=off|sp=us}} of trails, planted two billion trees, and upgraded {{convert|125,000|mi|km|abbr=off|sp=us}} of dirt roads. Every state had its own state parks, and Roosevelt made sure that WPA and CCC projects were set up to upgrade them as well as the national systems.{{sfn|Brinkley|2016|pp=170–86}}{{cite journal|first=Neil M.|last=Maher|title=A New Deal Body Politic: Landscape, Labor, and the Civilian Conservation Corps|journal=Environmental History|volume=7|issue=3|pages=435–61|date=July 2002|jstor=3985917|url=http://environmentalhistory.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/7-3_Maher.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160602073403/http://environmentalhistory.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/7-3_Maher.pdf |archive-date=June 2, 2016 |url-status=live|doi=10.2307/3985917|bibcode=2002EnvH....7..435M |s2cid=144800756}}Anna L. Riesch Owen, Conservation Under FDR (Praeger, 1983).
==GNP and unemployment rates==
{{See also|Great Depression in the United States#Roosevelt's New Deal}}
class="wikitable" style="margin-left:1em; float:right; clear:right;"
|+Unemployment rates{{Efn|This table shows the estimated unemployment related as calculated by two economists. Michael Darby's estimate counts individuals on work relief programs as employed, while Stanley Lebergott's estimate counts individuals on work relief programs as unemployed{{cite journal|last1=Margo|first1=Robert A.|title=Employment and Unemployment in the 1930s|journal=Journal of Economic Perspectives|date=Spring 1993|volume=7|issue=2|pages=42–43|doi=10.1257/jep.7.2.41|citeseerx=10.1.1.627.1613|s2cid=26369842}}}} | ||
Year | Lebergott | Darby |
---|---|---|
1929 | 3.2 | 3.2 |
1932 | 23.6 | 22.9 |
1933 | 24.9 | 20.6 |
1934 | 21.7 | 16.0 |
1935 | 20.1 | 14.2 |
1936 | 16.9 | 9.9 |
1937 | 14.3 | 9.1 |
1938 | 19.0 | 12.5 |
1939 | 17.2 | 11.3 |
1940 | 14.6 | 9.5 |
Government spending increased from 8.0% of the gross national product (GNP) under Hoover in 1932 to 10.2% in 1936. The national debt as a percentage of the GNP had more than doubled under Hoover from 16% to 40% of the GNP in early 1933. It held steady at close to 40% as late as fall 1941, then grew rapidly during the war.{{cite book|title=Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970|url={{GBurl|id=e91TplHLeQAC|pg=PP1}}|year=1976|publisher=The Bureau of the U.S. Census|pages=Y457, Y493, F32}} The GNP was 34% higher in 1936 than in 1932 and 58% higher in 1940 on the eve of war. That is, the economy grew 58% from 1932 to 1940, and then grew 56% from 1940 to 1945 in five years of wartime. Unemployment fell dramatically during Roosevelt's first term. It increased in 1938 ("a depression within a depression") but continually declined after 1938. Total employment during Roosevelt's term expanded by 18.31 million jobs, with an average annual increase in jobs during his administration of 5.3%.{{cite news|type=graphic|date=July 2, 2003|url=http://graphics7.nytimes.com/images/2003/07/02/business/03JOBSch450.gif|format=GIF|work=The New York Times|title=Presidents and Job Growth}}{{cite book|title=Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970|url={{GBurl|id=e91TplHLeQAC|pg=PP1}}|year=1976|publisher=The Bureau of the U.S. Census|page=F31}}
==Foreign policy (1933–1941)==
{{Main|Foreign policy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration}}
File:Vargas e Roosevelt.jpg and other dignitaries in Brazil, 1936]]
The main foreign policy initiative of Roosevelt's first term was the Good Neighbor Policy, which was a re-evaluation of U.S. policy toward Latin America. The United States frequently intervened in Latin America following the promulgation of the Monroe Doctrine in 1823, and occupied several Latin American nations during the Banana Wars that occurred following the Spanish–American War of 1898. After Roosevelt took office, he withdrew U.S. forces from Haiti and reached new treaties with Cuba and Panama, ending their status as U.S. protectorates. In December 1933, Roosevelt signed the Montevideo Convention, renouncing the right to intervene unilaterally in the affairs of Latin American countries.{{Sfn|Leuchtenburg|1963|pp=203–10}} Roosevelt also normalized relations with the Soviet Union, which the United States had refused to recognize since the 1920s.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=341–43}} He hoped to renegotiate the Russian debt from World War I and open trade relations, but no progress was made on either issue and "both nations were soon disillusioned by the accord."{{sfn|Doenecke|Stoler|2005|p=18}}
The rejection of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919–1920 marked the dominance of non-interventionism in American foreign policy. Despite Roosevelt's Wilsonian background, he and Secretary of State Cordell Hull acted with great care not to provoke isolationist sentiment. The isolationist movement was bolstered in the early to mid-1930s by Senator Gerald Nye and others who succeeded in their effort to stop the "merchants of death" in the U.S. from selling arms abroad.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=254}} This effort took the form of the Neutrality Acts; the president was refused a provision he requested giving him the discretion to allow the sale of arms to victims of aggression.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=255}} He largely acquiesced to Congress's non-interventionist policies in the early-to-mid 1930s.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=417–18}} In the interim, Fascist Italy under Benito Mussolini proceeded to overcome Ethiopia, and the Italians joined Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler in supporting General Francisco Franco and the Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=256}} As that conflict drew to a close in early 1939, Roosevelt expressed regret in not aiding the Spanish Republicans.{{Sfn|Dallek|1995|p=180}} When Japan invaded China in 1937, isolationism limited Roosevelt's ability to aid China,{{Sfn|Dallek|1995|pp=146–47}} despite atrocities like the Nanking Massacre and the USS Panay incident.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=188–90}}
File:FDR-George-VI-Potomac-June-9-1939-2-detail-crop.jpg and Queen Elizabeth, sailing from Washington, D.C., to Mount Vernon, Virginia, on the USS Potomac during the first U.S. visit of a reigning British monarch (June 9, 1939)]]
[[File:FDR foreign trips.svg|thumb|Foreign trips of Roosevelt during his presidency{{cite web|url=https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/travels/president/roosevelt-franklin-d|title=Travels of President Franklin D. Roosevelt|work=Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs|publisher=U.S. Department of State|access-date=December 2, 2015}}
{{collapsible list
|title=Legend
|{{legend|#000000|United States}}
|{{legend|#050725|7 or more visits}}
|{{legend|#111976|6 visits}}
|{{legend|#1a25ac|5 visits}}
|{{legend|#2533dd|4 visits}}
|{{legend|#4f5ae3|3 visits}}
|{{legend|#737ce8|2 visits}}
|{{legend|#a1a7ef|1 visit}}
}}
]]
Germany annexed Austria in 1938, and soon turned its attention to its eastern neighbors.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=423–24}} Roosevelt made it clear that, in the event of German aggression against Czechoslovakia, the U.S. would remain neutral.{{Sfn|Dallek|1995|pp=166–73}} After completion of the Munich Agreement and the execution of Kristallnacht, American public opinion turned against Germany, and Roosevelt began preparing for a possible war with Germany.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=425–26}} Relying on an interventionist political coalition of Southern Democrats and business-oriented Republicans, Roosevelt oversaw the expansion of U.S. airpower and war production capacity.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=426–29}}
When World War II began in September 1939 with Germany's invasion of Poland and Britain and France's declaration of war on Germany, Roosevelt sought ways to assist Britain and France militarily.{{Sfn|Black|2005|pp=503–06}} Isolationist leaders like Charles Lindbergh and Senator William Borah successfully mobilized opposition to Roosevelt's proposed repeal of the Neutrality Act, but Roosevelt won Congressional approval of the sale of arms on a cash-and-carry basis.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=436–41}} He also began a regular secret correspondence with Britain's First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, in September 1939—the first of 1,700 letters and telegrams between them.{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|p=15}} Roosevelt forged a close personal relationship with Churchill, who became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in May 1940.{{cite web|title=Roosevelt and Churchill: A Friendship That Saved The World|url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/fdrww2.htm|website=National Park Service}}
The Fall of France in June 1940 shocked the American public, and isolationist sentiment declined.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|1963|pp=399–402}} In July 1940, Roosevelt appointed two interventionist Republican leaders, Henry L. Stimson and Frank Knox, as Secretaries of War and the Navy, respectively. Both parties gave support to his plans for a rapid build-up of the American military, but the isolationists warned that Roosevelt would get the nation into an unnecessary war with Germany.{{sfn|Burns|1956|p=420}} In July 1940, a group of Congressmen introduced a bill that would authorize the nation's first peacetime draft, and with the support of the Roosevelt administration, the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940 passed in September. The size of the army increased from 189,000 men at the end of 1939 to 1.4 million in mid-1941.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=464–66}} In September 1940, Roosevelt openly defied the Neutrality Acts by reaching the Destroyers for Bases Agreement, which, in exchange for military base rights in the British Caribbean Islands, gave 50 American destroyers to Britain.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=438}}
==Election of 1940==
{{Main|1940 United States presidential election}}
In the months prior to the July 1940 Democratic National Convention, there was much speculation as to whether Roosevelt would run for an unprecedented third term. The two-term tradition, although not yet enshrined in the Constitution,{{efn|The Twenty-second Amendment ratified in 1951, would bar any individual from winning more than two presidential elections.}} had been established by George Washington when he refused to run for a third term in 1796. Roosevelt refused to give a definitive statement, and he even indicated to some ambitious Democrats, such as James Farley, that he would not run for a third term and that they could seek the Democratic nomination. Farley and Vice President John Garner were not pleased with Roosevelt when he ultimately made the decision to break from Washington's precedent.Bernard F. Donahoe, Private Plans and Public Dangers: The Story of FDR's Third Nomination (University of Notre Dame Press, 1965). As Germany swept through Western Europe and menaced Britain in mid-1940, Roosevelt decided that only he had the necessary experience and skills to see the nation safely through the Nazi threat. He was aided by the party's political bosses, who feared that no Democrat except Roosevelt could defeat Wendell Willkie, the popular Republican nominee.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|pp=408–30}}
At the July 1940 Democratic Convention in Chicago, Roosevelt easily swept aside challenges from Farley and Vice President Garner, who had turned against Roosevelt in his second term because of his liberal economic and social policies. To replace Garner on the ticket, Roosevelt turned to Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace of Iowa, a former Republican who strongly supported the New Deal and was popular in farm states.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=389–90}} The choice was strenuously opposed by many of the party's conservatives, who felt Wallace was too radical and "eccentric" in his private life. But Roosevelt insisted that without Wallace on the ticket he would decline re-nomination, and Wallace won the vice-presidential nomination, defeating Speaker of the House William B. Bankhead and other candidates.{{cite book|last1=Moe|first1=Richard|title=Roosevelt's Second Act: The Election of 1940 and the Politics of War|date=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-998191-5|pages=229–46}}
A late August poll taken by Gallup found the race to be essentially tied, but Roosevelt's popularity surged in September following the announcement of the Destroyers for Bases Agreement.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=472}} Willkie supported much of the New Deal as well as rearmament and aid to Britain but warned that Roosevelt would drag the country into another European war.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=474–75}} Responding to Willkie's attacks, Roosevelt promised to keep the country out of the war.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=476–77}} Over its last month, the campaign degenerated into a series of outrageous accusations and mud-slinging by the parties. Roosevelt won the 1940 election with 55% of the popular vote, 38 of the 48 states, and almost 85% of the electoral vote.{{Sfn|Burns|1956|p=454}}
=Third and fourth terms (1941–1945)=
{{Main|Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt (1941–1945)}}
{{Further|Foreign policy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration}}
World War II dominated Roosevelt's attention, with far more time devoted to world affairs than ever before. Domestic politics and relations with Congress were largely shaped by his efforts to achieve total mobilization of the nation's economic, financial, and institutional resources for the war effort. Even relationships with Latin America and Canada were structured by wartime demands. Roosevelt maintained close personal control of all major diplomatic and military decisions, working closely with his generals and admirals, the war and Navy departments, the British, and even the Soviet Union. His key advisors on diplomacy were Harry Hopkins in the White House, Sumner Welles in the State Department, and Henry Morgenthau Jr. at Treasury. In military affairs, Roosevelt worked most closely with Secretary Henry L. Stimson at the War Department, Army Chief of Staff George Marshall, and Admiral William D. Leahy.Winston Groom, The Allies: Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin, and the Unlikely Alliance That Won World War II (2018)Joseph E. Persico, Roosevelt's Centurions: FDR and the Commanders He Led to Victory in World War II (2013).Eric Larrabee, Commander in Chief: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, His Lieutenants, and Their War (1987)
==Lead-up to the war==
{{listen|title=State of the Union (Four Freedoms) (January 6, 1941)|filename=FDR's 1941 State of the Union (Four Freedoms speech) Edit 1.ogg|description =Franklin Delano Roosevelt's January 6, 1941 State of the Union Address introducing the theme of the Four Freedoms (starting at 32:02)}}
File:"Freedom from Fear" - NARA - 513538.jpg from painter Norman Rockwell, {{circa|1943}}]]
By late 1940, re-armament was in high gear, partly to expand and re-equip the Army and Navy and partly to become the "Arsenal of Democracy" for Britain and other countries.{{sfn|Herman|2012|pp=128–29}} With his Four Freedoms speech in January 1941, which proposed four fundamental freedoms that people "everywhere in the world" ought to enjoy: freedom of speech and expression, freedom of worship, freedom from want and freedom from fear, Roosevelt laid out the case for an Allied battle for basic rights throughout the world. Assisted by Willkie, Roosevelt won Congressional approval of the Lend-Lease program, which directed massive military and economic aid to Britain and China.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=488–90}} In sharp contrast to the loans of World War I, there would be no repayment.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=95}} As Roosevelt took a firmer stance against Japan, Germany, and Italy, American isolationists such as Charles Lindbergh and the America First Committee vehemently attacked Roosevelt as an irresponsible warmonger.{{cite journal|last=Charles|first=Douglas M.|title=Informing FDR: FBI Political Surveillance and the Isolationist-Interventionist Foreign Policy|journal=Diplomatic History|date=Spring 2000|volume=24|issue=2|pages=211–32|doi=10.1111/0145-2096.00210}} When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, Roosevelt agreed to extend Lend-Lease to the Soviets. Thus, Roosevelt had committed the U.S. to the Allied side with a policy of "all aid short of war".{{Sfn|Churchill|1977|p=119}} By July 1941, Roosevelt authorized the creation of the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs to counter perceived propaganda efforts in Latin America by Germany and Italy.Media Sound & Culture in Latin America. Editors: Bronfman, Alejanda & Wood, Andrew Grant. University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, PA, 2012,{{ISBN|978-0-8229-6187-1}} [{{GBurl|id=ehN4sM0Xy_UC|q=Alfredo Antonini Elsa Miranda|p=49}} pp. 41–54]Anthony, Edwin D. Records of the Office of Inter-American Affairs. National Archives and Record Services – General Services Administration, Washington D.C., 1973, pp. 1–8 {{LCCN|73600146}} [https://www.archives.gov/files/research/foreign-policy/related-records/rg-229-inter-american-affairs.pdf Records of the Office of Inter-American Affairs at the U.S. National Archive at www.archives.gov]
In August 1941, Roosevelt and Churchill conducted a secret bilateral meeting in which they drafted the Atlantic Charter, conceptually outlining global wartime and postwar goals. This would be the first of several wartime conferences;{{Sfn|Burns|1970|pp=126–28}} Churchill and Roosevelt would meet ten more times in person.{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|pp=15–16}} Though Churchill pressed for an American declaration of war against Germany, Roosevelt believed that Congress would reject any attempt to bring the U.S. into the war.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=502}} In September, a German submarine fired on the U.S. destroyer Greer, and Roosevelt declared that the U.S. Navy would assume an escort role for Allied convoys in the Atlantic as far east as Britain and would fire upon German ships or U-boats of the Kriegsmarine if they entered the U.S. Navy zone. This "shoot on sight" policy brought the U.S. Navy into direct conflict with German submarines and was favored by Americans by a margin of 2-to-1.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|pp=141–42}}
==Pearl Harbor and declarations of war==
{{See also|Events leading to the attack on Pearl Harbor}}
{{Listen
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After the German invasion of Poland, the primary concern of both Roosevelt and his top military staff was on the war in Europe, but Japan also presented foreign policy challenges. Relations with Japan had continually deteriorated since its invasion of Manchuria in 1931 and worsened further with Roosevelt's support of China.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=506–08}} After Roosevelt announced a $100 million loan (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|.1|1940|r=1}} billion in {{Inflation-year|US}}) to China in reaction to Japan's occupation of northern French Indochina, Japan signed the Tripartite Pact with Germany and Italy; Germany, Japan, and Italy became known as the Axis powers.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=510–11}} In July 1941, after Japan occupied the remainder of French Indochina, Roosevelt cut off the sale of oil to Japan, depriving Japan of more than 95 percent of its oil supply.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|pp=134–46}} He also placed the Philippine military under American command and reinstated General Douglas MacArthur into active duty to command U.S. forces in the Philippines.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=516–17}}
The Japanese were incensed by the embargo and Japanese leaders became determined to attack the United States unless it lifted the embargo. The Roosevelt administration was unwilling to reverse the policy, and Secretary of State Hull blocked a potential summit between Roosevelt and Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe.{{Efn|Hull and others in the administration were unwilling to recognize the Japanese conquest of China and feared that an American accommodation with Japan would leave the Soviet Union vulnerable to a two-front war.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=522–23}}}} After diplomatic efforts failed, the Privy Council of Japan authorized a strike against the United States.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=518–30}} The Japanese believed that the destruction of the United States Asiatic Fleet (stationed in the Philippines) and the United States Pacific Fleet (stationed at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii) was vital to the conquest of Southeast Asia.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=531–33}} On December 7, 1941, the Japanese launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, knocking out the main American battleship fleet and killing 2,403 American servicemen and civilians. At the same time, separate Japanese task forces attacked Thailand, British Hong Kong, the Philippines, and other targets. Roosevelt called for war in his "Infamy Speech" to Congress, in which he said: "Yesterday, December 7, 1941—a date which will live in infamy—the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan." In a nearly unanimous vote, Congress declared war on Japan.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=533–39}} After Pearl Harbor, antiwar sentiment in the United States largely evaporated overnight. On December 11, 1941, Hitler and Mussolini declared war on the United States, which responded in kind.{{Efn|The United States would also declare war on Bulgaria, Hungary, and Romania, all of which had joined the Axis bloc.}}{{Sfn|Sainsbury|1994|p=184}}
A majority of scholars have rejected the conspiracy theories that Roosevelt, or any other high government officials, knew in advance about the attack on Pearl Harbor.{{cite book|last=Maffeo|first=Steven E.|title=U.S. Navy Codebreakers, Linguists, and Intelligence Officers against Japan, 1910–1941: A Biographical Dictionary|url={{GBurl|id=017fCgAAQBAJ|p=311}}|year=2015|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-1-4422-5564-7|page=311}} The Japanese had kept their secrets closely guarded, so it is unlikely that American officials were aware of Japanese plans for a surprise attack on the Pacific Fleet. Senior American officials were aware that war was imminent, but they did not expect an attack on Pearl Harbor.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|pp=523–39}} Roosevelt assumed that the Japanese would attack either the Dutch East Indies or Thailand.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=159}}
File:Franklin Roosevelt signing declaration of war against Japan.jpg|Roosevelt signing the declaration of war against Japan on December 8, 1941
File:Franklin Roosevelt signing declaration of war against Germany.jpg|Roosevelt signing the declaration of war against Germany on December 11, 1941
File:Prince of Wales-5.jpg|Roosevelt and Winston Churchill aboard HMS Prince of Wales for 1941 Atlantic Charter meeting
==War plans==
File:Ww2 allied axis 1942 jun.png
In late December 1941, Churchill and Roosevelt met at the Arcadia Conference, which established a joint strategy between the U.S. and Britain. Both agreed on a Europe first strategy that prioritized the defeat of Germany before Japan. The U.S. and Britain established the Combined Chiefs of Staff to coordinate military policy and the Combined Munitions Assignments Board to coordinate the allocation of supplies.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=545–47}} An agreement was also reached to establish a centralized command in the Pacific theater called ABDA, named for the American, British, Dutch, and Australian forces in the theater.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|pp=180–85}} On January 1, 1942, the United States and the other Allied Powers issued the Declaration by United Nations, in which each nation pledged to defeat the Axis powers.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=547}}
In 1942, Roosevelt formed a new body, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which made the final decisions on American military strategy. Admiral Ernest J. King as Chief of Naval Operations commanded the Navy and Marines, while General George C. Marshall led the Army and was in nominal control of the Air Force, which in practice was commanded by General Hap Arnold.{{cite book|last=Chambers|first=John Whiteclay|title=The Oxford Companion to American Military History|url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordcompaniont00cham/page/351|year=1999|publisher=Oxford University Press, US|isbn=978-0-19-507198-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/oxfordcompaniont00cham/page/351 351]}} The Joint Chiefs were chaired by Admiral William D. Leahy, the most senior officer in the military.{{sfn|Smith|2007|p=546}} Roosevelt avoided micromanaging the war and let his top military officers make most decisions.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=598–99}} Roosevelt's civilian appointees handled the draft and procurement of men and equipment, but no civilians—not even the secretaries of War or Navy—had a voice in strategy. Roosevelt avoided the State Department and conducted high-level diplomacy through his aides, especially Harry Hopkins, whose influence was bolstered by his control of the Lend-Lease funds.{{cite book|last1=Fullilove|first1=Michael|title=Rendezvous with Destiny: How Franklin D. Roosevelt and Five Extraordinary Men Took America into the War and into the World|date=2013|publisher=Penguin Press|isbn=978-1-59420-435-7|pages=147–49}}
==Nuclear program==
{{see also|History of nuclear weapons|Nuclear weapons of the United States}}
In August 1939, Leo Szilard and Albert Einstein sent the Einstein–Szilárd letter to Roosevelt, warning of the possibility of a German project to develop nuclear weapons. Szilard realized that the recently discovered process of nuclear fission could be used to create a weapon of mass destruction.{{Sfn|Brands|2009|pp=678–80}} Roosevelt feared the consequences of allowing Germany to have sole possession of the technology and authorized preliminary research into nuclear weapons.{{Efn|The Germans stopped research on nuclear weapons in 1942, choosing to focus on other projects. Japan gave up its own program in 1943.{{Sfn|Smith|2007|p=580}}}} After Pearl Harbor, the Roosevelt administration secured funding to continue research and selected General Leslie Groves to oversee the Manhattan Project, which was charged with developing the first nuclear weapons. Roosevelt and Churchill agreed to jointly pursue the project, and Roosevelt helped ensure that American scientists cooperated with their British counterparts.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=578–81}}
==Wartime conferences==
{{see also|Diplomatic history of World War II}}
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Roosevelt coined the term "Four Policemen" to refer to the "Big Four" Allied powers of World War II: the United States, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, and China. The "Big Three" of Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, together with Chinese Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, cooperated informally on a plan in which American and British troops concentrated in the West; Soviet troops fought on the Eastern front; and Chinese, British and American troops fought in Asia and the Pacific. The United States also continued to send aid via the Lend-Lease program to the Soviet Union and other countries. The Allies formulated strategy in a series of high-profile conferences as well as by contact through diplomatic and military channels.{{sfn|Doenecke|Stoler|2005|pp=109–10}} Beginning in May 1942, the Soviets urged an Anglo-American invasion of German-occupied France to divert troops from the Eastern front.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=557–59}} Concerned that their forces were not yet ready, Churchill and Roosevelt decided to delay such an invasion until at least 1943 and instead focus on a landing in North Africa, known as Operation Torch.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=560–61}}
In November 1943, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin met to discuss strategy and post-war plans at the Tehran Conference, where Roosevelt met Stalin for the first time.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=587–88}} Britain and the United States committed to opening a second front against Germany in 1944, while Stalin committed to entering the war against Japan at an unspecified date. Subsequent conferences at Bretton Woods and Dumbarton Oaks established the framework for the post-war international monetary system and the United Nations, an intergovernmental organization similar to the failed League of Nations.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=214–16}} Taking up the Wilsonian mantle, Roosevelt pushed the establishment of the United Nations as his highest postwar priority. Roosevelt expected it would be controlled by Washington, Moscow, London and Beijing, and would resolve all major world problems.Townsend Hoopes, and Douglas Brinkley, FDR and the Creation of the UN (Yale UP, 1997) pp. ix, 175.
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Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin met for a second time at the February 1945 Yalta Conference in Crimea. With the end of the war in Europe approaching, Roosevelt's primary focus was convincing Stalin to enter the war against Japan; the Joint Chiefs had estimated that an American invasion of Japan would cause as many as one million American casualties. In return, the Soviet Union was promised control of Asian territories such as Sakhalin Island. The three leaders agreed to hold a conference in 1945 to establish the United Nations, and they also agreed on the structure of the United Nations Security Council, which would be charged with ensuring international security. Roosevelt did not push for the immediate evacuation of Soviet soldiers from Poland, but he won the issuance of the Declaration on Liberated Europe, which promised free elections in countries that had been occupied by Germany. Germany itself would not be dismembered but would be jointly occupied by the United States, France, Britain, and the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=623–24}} Against Soviet pressure, Roosevelt and Churchill refused to consent to impose huge reparations and deindustrialization on Germany after the war.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=233–34}}
During March 1945, Roosevelt sent strongly worded messages to Stalin accusing him of breaking his Yalta commitments over Poland, Germany, prisoners of war, and other issues. When Stalin accused the Western Allies of plotting behind his back a separate peace with Hitler, Roosevelt replied: "I cannot avoid a feeling of bitter resentment towards your informers, whoever they are, for such vile misrepresentations of my actions or those of my trusted subordinates."{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=587}}
Roosevelt's role in the Yalta Conference has been controversial; critics charge that he naively trusted the Soviet Union to allow free elections in Eastern Europe, while supporters argue that there was little more that Roosevelt could have done for the Eastern European countries given the Soviet occupation and the need for cooperation with the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Herring|2008|pp=584–87}}{{cite news|last1=Bumiller|first1=Elizabeth|title=60 Years Later, Debating Yalta All Over Again|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/16/politics/60-years-later-debating-yalta-all-over-again.html|access-date=October 14, 2017|newspaper=The New York Times|date=May 16, 2005}}
==Course of the war==
{{see also|Military history of the United States during World War II}}
The Allies invaded French North Africa in November 1942, securing the surrender of Vichy French forces within days of landing.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=563–64}} At the January 1943 Casablanca Conference, the Allies agreed to defeat Axis forces in North Africa and then launch an invasion of Sicily, with an attack on France to take place in 1944. At the conference, Roosevelt also announced that he would only accept the unconditional surrender of Germany, Japan, and Italy.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=565–67}} In February 1943, the Soviet Union won a major victory at the Battle of Stalingrad, and in May 1943, the Allies secured the surrender of over 250,000 German and Italian soldiers in North Africa, ending the North African Campaign.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=573–74}} The Allies launched an invasion of Sicily in July 1943, capturing the island the following month.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=575–76}} In September 1943, the Allies secured an armistice from Italian prime minister Pietro Badoglio, but Germany quickly restored Mussolini to power.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=575–76}} The Allied invasion of mainland Italy commenced in September 1943, but the Italian Campaign continued until 1945 as German and Italian troops resisted the Allied advance.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=581–82}}
File:Ww2 allied axis 1944 dec.png
To command the invasion of France, Roosevelt chose General Dwight D. Eisenhower, who had successfully commanded a multinational coalition in North Africa and Sicily.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=596–97}} Eisenhower launched Operation Overlord on June 6, 1944. Supported by 12,000 aircraft and the largest naval force ever assembled, the Allies successfully established a beachhead in Normandy and then advanced further into France.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=598–99}} Though reluctant to back an unelected government, Roosevelt recognized Charles de Gaulle's Provisional Government of the French Republic as the de facto government of France in July 1944. After most of France had been liberated, Roosevelt granted formal recognition to de Gaulle's government in October 1944.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=613–17}} Over the following months, the Allies liberated more territory and began the invasion of Germany. By April 1945, Nazi resistance was crumbling in the face of advances by both the Western Allies and the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=630–31}}
In the opening weeks of the war, Japan conquered the Philippines and the British and Dutch colonies in Southeast Asia. The Japanese advance reached its maximum extent by June 1942, when the U.S. Navy scored a decisive victory at the Battle of Midway. American and Australian forces then began a slow and costly strategy called island hopping or leapfrogging through the Pacific Islands, with the objective of gaining bases from which strategic airpower could be brought to bear on Japan and from which Japan could ultimately be invaded. In contrast to Hitler, Roosevelt took no direct part in the tactical naval operations, though he approved strategic decisions.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=228}} Roosevelt gave way in part to insistent demands from the public and Congress that more effort be devoted against Japan, but he always insisted on Germany first. The strength of the Japanese navy was decimated in the Battle of Leyte Gulf, and by April 1945 the Allies had re-captured much of their lost territory in the Pacific.{{Sfn|Brands|2009|p=785}}
==Home front==
{{Main|United States home front during World War II}}
The home front was subject to dynamic social changes throughout the war, though domestic issues were no longer Roosevelt's most urgent policy concern. The military buildup spurred economic growth. Unemployment fell from 7.7 million in spring 1940 to 3.4 million in fall 1941 and to 1.5 million in fall 1942, out of a labor force of 54 million.{{Efn|WPA workers were counted as unemployed by this set of statistics.{{Citation|place=US|publisher=Bureau of the Census|title=Statistical Abstract|year=1946|page=173}}}} There was a growing labor shortage, accelerating the second wave of the Great Migration of African Americans, farmers and rural populations to manufacturing centers. African Americans from the South went to California and other West Coast states for new jobs in the defense industry. To pay for increased government spending, in 1941 Roosevelt proposed that Congress enact an income tax rate of 99.5% on all income over $100,000; when the proposal failed, he issued an executive order imposing an income tax of 100% on income over $25,000, which Congress rescinded.{{Sfn|Schweikart|Allen|2004|p=602}} The Revenue Act of 1942 instituted top tax rates as high as 94% (after accounting for the excess profits tax), greatly increased the tax base, and instituted the first federal withholding tax.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=221–22}} In 1944, Roosevelt requested that Congress enact legislation to tax all "unreasonable" profits, both corporate and individual, and thereby support his declared need for over $10 billion in revenue for the war and other government measures. Congress overrode Roosevelt's veto to pass a smaller revenue bill raising $2 billion.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=436}}
In 1942, war production increased dramatically but fell short of Roosevelt's goals, due in part to manpower shortages.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=333}} The effort was also hindered by numerous strikes, especially in the coal mining and railroad industries, which lasted well into 1944.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=343}}{{sfn|Herman|2012|pp=139–44, 151, 246}} Nonetheless, between 1941 and 1945, the United States produced 2.4 million trucks, 300,000 military aircraft, 88,400 tanks, and 40 billion rounds of ammunition. The production capacity of the United States dwarfed that of other countries; for example, in 1944, the United States produced more military aircraft than the combined production of Germany, Japan, Britain, and the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=571–72}} The White House became the ultimate site for labor mediation, conciliation or arbitration. One particular battle royale occurred between Vice President Wallace, who headed the Board of Economic Warfare, and Jesse H. Jones, in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation; both agencies assumed responsibility for the acquisition of rubber supplies and came to loggerheads over funding. Roosevelt resolved the dispute by dissolving both agencies.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|pp=339–42}} In 1943, Roosevelt established the Office of War Mobilization to oversee the home front; the agency was led by James F. Byrnes, who came to be known as the "assistant president" due to his influence.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=575–76}}
File:Second Bill of Rights Speech.ogv in the State of the Union address broadcast on January 11, 1944 (excerpt).]]
Roosevelt's 1944 State of the Union Address advocated that Americans should think of basic economic rights as a Second Bill of Rights.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=223–25}} He stated that all Americans should have the right to "adequate medical care", "a good education", "a decent home", and a "useful and remunerative job". In the most ambitious domestic proposal of his third term, Roosevelt proposed the G.I. Bill, which would create a massive benefits program for returning soldiers. Benefits included post-secondary education, medical care, unemployment insurance, job counseling, and low-cost loans for homes and businesses. The G.I. Bill passed unanimously in both houses of Congress and was signed into law in June 1944. Of the fifteen million Americans who served in World War II, more than half benefitted from the educational opportunities provided for in the G.I. Bill.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=584–85}}
Towards the end of his presidency, Roosevelt supported the idea of forming a new liberal party with former liberal Republican presidential candidate Wendell Willkie (who himself put forward this proposal), believing that there should be two ideologically distinct parties in America; one liberal and one conservative.
==Declining health==
Roosevelt, a chain-smoker throughout his adult life,{{cite web|url=https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/magazine/issues/summer07/articles/summer07pg25.html|title=Medical Research Pays Off for All Americans|date=Summer 2007|access-date=July 25, 2014|work=NIH Medline Plus|publisher=National Institutes of Health}}{{cite news|first=Max|last=Hastings|date=January 19, 2009|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/presidents/franklin-d-roosevelt-the-man-who-conquered-fear-1417417.html|title=Franklin D Roosevelt: The man who conquered fear|access-date=July 25, 2014|work=The Independent}} had been in declining health since at least 1940. In March 1944, shortly after his 62nd birthday, he underwent testing at Bethesda Hospital and was found to have hypertension, atherosclerosis, coronary artery disease causing angina pectoris, and congestive heart failure.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|p=448}}{{cite web|last=Lerner|first=Barron H.|url=http://hnn.us/articles/40225.html|title=How Much Confidence Should We Have in the Doctor's Account of FDR's Death?|work=History News Network|publisher=George Washington University|date=November 23, 2007}}{{cite journal|last=Bruenn|first=Howard G.|title=Clinical notes on the illness & death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt|journal=Annals of Internal Medicine|date=April 1970|volume=72|issue=4|pages=579–91|doi=10.7326/0003-4819-72-4-579|pmid=4908628}}
Hospital physicians and two outside specialists ordered Roosevelt to rest. His personal physician, Admiral Ross McIntire, created a daily schedule that banned business guests for lunch and incorporated two hours of rest daily. During the 1944 re-election campaign, McIntire denied several times that Roosevelt's health was poor; on October 12, for example, he announced that "The President's health is perfectly OK. There are absolutely no organic difficulties at all."{{Sfn|Gunther|1950|pp=372–74}} Roosevelt realized that his declining health could eventually make it impossible for him to continue as president, and in 1945 he told a confidant that he might resign from the presidency following the end of the war.{{sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=618–19}}
==Election of 1944==
{{Main|1944 United States presidential election|1944 Democratic Party vice presidential candidate selection}}
While some Democrats had opposed Roosevelt's nomination in 1940, the president faced little difficulty in securing his re-nomination at the 1944 Democratic National Convention. Roosevelt made it clear before the convention that he was seeking another term, and on the lone presidential ballot of the convention, Roosevelt won the vast majority of delegates, although a minority of Southern Democrats voted for Harry F. Byrd. Party leaders prevailed upon Roosevelt to drop Vice President Wallace from the ticket, believing him to be an electoral liability and a poor potential successor in case of Roosevelt's death. Roosevelt preferred Byrnes as Wallace's replacement but was convinced to support Senator Harry S. Truman of Missouri, who had earned renown for his investigation of war production inefficiency and was acceptable to the various factions of the party. On the second vice presidential ballot of the convention, Truman defeated Wallace to win the nomination.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=617–19}}
The Republicans nominated Thomas E. Dewey, the governor of New York, who had a reputation as a liberal in his party. They accused the Roosevelt administration of domestic corruption and bureaucratic inefficiency, but Dewey's most effective gambit was to raise discreetly the age issue. He assailed the President as a "tired old man" with "tired old men" in his cabinet, pointedly suggesting that the President's lack of vigor had produced a less than vigorous economic recovery. Roosevelt, as most observers could see from his weight loss and haggard appearance, was a tired man in 1944. But upon entering the campaign in earnest in late September 1944, Roosevelt displayed enough passion to allay most concerns and deflect Republican attacks. With the war still raging, he urged voters not to "change horses in mid-stream". Labor unions, which had grown rapidly in the war, fully supported Roosevelt. Roosevelt and Truman won the 1944 election, defeating Dewey and his running mate John W. Bricker with 53.4% of the popular vote and 432 out of the 531 electoral votes.{{sfn|Jordan|2011|p=321}} The president campaigned in favor of a strong United Nations, so his victory symbolized support for the nation's future participation in the international community.{{Sfn|Burns|1970|pp=533, 562}}
==Final months and death<span class="anchor" id="Death"></span><!-- linked from redirect "Death of Franklin D. Roosevelt" -->==
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File:Franklin Delano Roosevelt Gravesite August 21, 2012.jpg
{{Further|The Dying President}}
When Roosevelt returned to the United States from the Yalta Conference, everyone was shocked to see how old, thin and frail he looked. In his address to Congress he spoke while seated, an unprecedented concession to his physical incapacity.{{Sfn|Dallek|1995|p=520}} On March 29, 1945, Roosevelt departed for the Little White House in Warm Springs, Georgia, to rest before his anticipated appearance at the founding conference of the United Nations.{{cite web|title=Franklin D. Roosevelt Day by Day – April|url=http://fdrlibrary.wordpress.com/tag/elizabeth-shoumatoff/|work=In Roosevelt History|publisher=Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum Collections and Programs|access-date=May 14, 2012}}
In the afternoon of April 12, 1945, in Warm Springs, Georgia, while sitting for a portrait by Elizabeth Shoumatoff, Roosevelt said: "I have a terrific headache." He then slumped forward in his chair, unconscious, and was carried into his bedroom. The president's attending cardiologist, Howard Bruenn, diagnosed a massive intracerebral hemorrhage.{{cite journal|title=Presidential Stroke: United States Presidents and Cerebrovascular Disease|first1=Jeffrey M.|last1=Jones|first2=Joni L.|last2=Jones|journal=CNS Spectrums|volume=11|issue=9|date=September 2006|pages=674–78|doi=10.1017/S1092852900014760|pmid=16946692|s2cid=44889213}} At 3:35 p.m., Roosevelt died at the age of 63.{{Cite web|title=President Franklin D. Roosevelt dies at age 63, April 12, 1945|url=https://www.politico.com/story/2016/04/this-day-in-politics-april-12-1945-221722|last=Andrew Glass|work=Politico|date=April 12, 2016 |access-date=May 21, 2020}}
Roosevelt's body was placed in a flag-draped coffin and loaded onto the Ferdinand Magellan presidential train for the trip back to Washington.{{Cite web |title=Roosevelt Funeral Train |url=https://www.c-span.org/video/?314427-1/roosevelt-funeral-train |access-date=February 7, 2023 |website=c-span.org}} Due to the U.S. still being in a state of war, a state funeral was deemed inappropriate and a smaller ceremony was opted for instead. Despite this, thousands flocked to the route to pay their respects.{{cite web |title=Franklin D. Roosevelt Funeral |url=https://www.whitehousehistory.org/franklin-d-roosevelt-funeral |website=White House Historical Association |access-date=January 12, 2025}}
Rather than lying in state at the United States Capitol as per tradition, Roosevelt's remains were placed in the White House East Room where, on April 14, a simple funeral service was held that was attended by his family, high government officials, and foreign ambassadors. Roosevelt was then transported by train from Washington to his birthplace at Hyde Park. On April 15 he was buried, per his wish, in the rose garden of his Springwood estate.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|p=620}}{{cite news|title=Nation Pays Final Tribute to Roosevelt As World Mourns; Hyde Park Rites Today|first=Frank|last=Kluckhohn|newspaper=The New York Times|date=April 15, 1945|author-link=Frank Kluckhohn}}
His death was met with shock and grief across the world.{{cite video|year=1945|type=video|title=Allies Overrun Germany|url=https://archive.org/details/gov.archives.arc.39165|publisher=Universal Newsreel|access-date=February 21, 2012}} Germany surrendered during the 30-day mourning period, but Harry Truman (who had succeeded Roosevelt as president) ordered flags to remain at half-staff; he also dedicated Victory in Europe Day and its celebrations to Roosevelt's memory.{{cite book| last = McCullough| first = David| author-link = David McCullough| year = 1992| title = Truman| publisher = Simon & Schuster| isbn = 978-0-671-86920-5| pages = [https://archive.org/details/truman00mccu_0/page/345 345, 381]| title-link = Truman (book)}} World War II ended with the signed surrender of Japan in September.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=243–52}}
Roosevelt's declining physical health had been kept secret from the public, just as his wheelchair was kept a secret from the public. Although he was allowed to work only four hours a day, the illusion of activity was kept up.See "Confront the Issue: FDR's Health" from FDR Library at http://www.fdrlibraryvirtualtour.org/graphics/07-38/7.5_FDRs_Health.pdf In the scholarly book The Dying President: Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1944–1945 by Robert Ferrell, the extent to which the president and his top aides went to keep the public in the dark about decline is explored, as well as the political and diplomatic problems that arose both from the illness and the secrecy.{{cite book|last=Ferrell|first=Robert H.|author-link=Robert Hugh Ferrell|title=The Dying President: Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1944–1945|url=https://archive.org/details/dyingpresidentfr00ferr_0|url-access=registration|year=1998|publisher=University of Missouri Press|isbn=978-0-8262-1171-2|lccn= 97045797}} It argues that Roosevelt was too sick to have remained in office, and that his inability to work led to critical foreign-policy mistakes in 1944–1945, as well as a failure to prepare Vice President Harry S. Truman to take over. What little energy he had for presidential affairs he focused on building support for the new United Nations.{{cite web |url= https://networks.h-net.org/node/9997/reviews/10450/dunn-ferrell-dying-president-franklin-d-roosevelt-1944-1945 |title=Dunn on Ferrell, 'The Dying President: Franklin D. Roosevelt 19441945' |last=Dunn |first=Dennis J. |date=April 1998 |website=H-Pol, H-Net Reviews |access-date=28 January 2019}}
Civil rights, repatriation, internment, and the Holocaust
{{Further|Franklin D. Roosevelt and civil rights}}
File:Froosevelt.jpeg, {{circa|1947}}]]
From his first term until 1939, the Mexican Repatriation started by President Herbert Hoover continued under Roosevelt, which scholars today contend was a form of ethnic cleansing towards Mexican Americans. Roosevelt ended federal involvement in the deportations. After 1934, deportations fell by approximately 50 percent.{{Cite book |last1=Balderrama |first1=Francisco E. |url={{GBurl|id=1A6iBy_0qacC}} |title=Decade of Betrayal: Mexican Repatriation in the 1930s |last2=Rodriguez |first2=Raymond |publisher=UNM Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-8263-3973-7 |page=82}} However, Roosevelt did not attempt to suppress the deportations on a local or state level.{{Cite news |last=McGreevy |first=Patrick |date=October 2, 2015 |title=California law seeks history of Mexican deportations in textbooks |url=https://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-ln-california-law-seeks-history-of-mexican-deportations-in-textbooks-20151001-story.html |access-date=August 12, 2023 |newspaper=Los Angeles Times}}{{Cite news |last=Bernard |first=Diane |date=October 28, 2021 |title=The time a president deported 1 million Mexican Americans for supposedly stealing U.S. jobs |newspaper=The Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/retropolis/wp/2018/08/13/the-time-a-president-deported-1-million-mexican-americans-for-stealing-u-s-jobs/ |access-date=August 12, 2023 |issn=0190-8286}} Mexican Americans were the only group explicitly excluded from New Deal benefits. The deprival of due process for Mexican Americans is cited as a precedent for Roosevelt's internment of Japanese Americans in concentration camps during World War II.{{cite news|url=http://digitalcommons.pace.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1147&context=plr|title=The Forgotten Repatriation of Persons of Mexican Ancestry and Lessons for the War on Terror|last=Johnson|first=Kevin|date=Fall 2005|publisher=Pace Law Review|issue=1|location=Davis, California|volume=26}} Roosevelt won strong support from Chinese Americans and Filipino Americans, but not Japanese Americans, as he presided over their internment during the war.{{cite book|last=Odo |first=Franklin |title=The Columbia Documentary History of the Asian American Experience |url=https://archive.org/details/columbiadocument00fran/page/5 |year=2002 |publisher=Columbia University Press |isbn=978-0-231-11030-3 |page=[https://archive.org/details/columbiadocument00fran/page/5 5]}} African Americans and Native Americans fared well in two New Deal relief programs, the Civilian Conservation Corps and the Indian Reorganization Act, respectively. Sitkoff reports that the WPA "provided an economic floor for the whole black community in the 1930s, rivaling both agriculture and domestic service as the chief source" of income.{{cite book |last=Sitkoff |first=Harvard |title=A new deal for Blacks: the emergence of civil rights as a national issue |url={{GBurl|id=u5EnAQAAMAAJ|p=71}} |date=1978 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-502418-0 |page=71}}
{{clear}}
=Lynching and civil rights=
In contrast to Presidents Harding and Coolidge, Roosevelt stopped short of joining NAACP leaders in pushing for federal anti-lynching legislation. He asserted that such legislation was unlikely to pass and that his support for it would alienate Southern congressmen, though by 1940 even his conservative Texan vice-president, Garner, supported federal action against lynching.{{Cite journal |last=Magness |first=Phillip W. |title=How FDR Killed Federal Anti-Lynching Legislation|url= https://www.aier.org/article/how-fdr-killed-federal-anti-lynching-legislation/|journal=American Institute for Economic Research |date=July 31, 2020}}
Roosevelt did not appoint or nominate a single African American as secretary or assistant secretary to his cabinet. About one hundred African Americans met informally, however, to provide the administration with advice on issues related to African Americans. Although sometimes described as a "Black Cabinet", Roosevelt never officially acknowledged it as such nor did he make "appointments" to it.{{sfn|McJimsey|2000|pp=162–63}}
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt vocally supported efforts designed to aid the African American community, including the Fair Labor Standards Act, which helped boost wages for nonwhite workers in the South.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=307–08}} In 1941, Roosevelt established the Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC) to implement Executive Order 8802, which prohibited racial and religious discrimination in employment among defense contractors. The FEPC was the first national program directed against employment discrimination, and it played a major role in opening up new employment opportunities to nonwhite workers. During World War II, the proportion of African American men employed in manufacturing positions rose significantly.{{cite journal|first=William J.|last=Collins|jstor=2677909|title=Race, Roosevelt, and Wartime Production: Fair Employment in World War II Labor Markets|journal=The American Economic Review|volume=91|issue=1|pages=272–86|date=March 2001|doi=10.1257/aer.91.1.272}} In response to Roosevelt's policies, African Americans increasingly defected from the Republican Party during the 1930s and 1940s, becoming an important Democratic voting bloc in several Northern states.{{sfn|McJimsey|2000|pp=162–63}}
=Japanese Americans=
The attack on Pearl Harbor raised concerns among the public regarding the possibility of sabotage by Japanese Americans. This suspicion was fed by long-standing racism against Japanese immigrants and the findings of the Roberts Commission, which concluded that the attack on Pearl Harbor had been assisted by Japanese spies. On February 19, 1942, Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which relocated 110,000 Japanese-American citizens and immigrants, most of whom lived on the Pacific Coast. They were forced to liquidate their properties and businesses and interned in hastily built camps in interior, harsh locations.
Roosevelt delegated the decision for internment to Secretary of War Stimson, who in turn relied on the judgment of Assistant Secretary of War John J. McCloy. The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the executive order in the 1944 case of Korematsu v. United States.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=549–53}} A much smaller number of German and Italian citizens were arrested or placed into internment camps. Unlike Japanese Americans, however, they were not sent to them on the sole basis of racial ancestry.{{cite web|title=World War II Enemy Alien Control Program Overview|publisher=National Archives|date=September 23, 2016|url=https://www.archives.gov/research/immigration/enemy-aliens-overview.html}}{{sfn|Beito|2023|pp=180-183}}
=The Holocaust=
There is controversy among historians about Roosevelt's attitude to Jews and the Holocaust. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. says Roosevelt "did what he could do" to help Jews; David Wyman says Roosevelt's record on Jewish refugees and their rescue is "very poor" and one of the worst failures of his presidency.{{cite web|last=Everhart|first=Karen|title=FDR defenders enlist TV critics to refute Holocaust film|url=https://current.org/1994/05/fdr-defenders-enlist-tv-critics-refute-holocaust-film/|date=May 9, 1994|website=Current|access-date=April 16, 2022}} In 1923, as a member of the Harvard University board of directors, Roosevelt decided there were too many Jewish students at Harvard and helped institute a quota to limit the number of Jews admitted.{{cite news|last=Medoff|first=Rafael|author-link=Rafael Medoff|title=What FDR said about Jews in private|url=https://www.latimes.com/opinion/la-xpm-2013-apr-07-la-oe-medoff-roosevelt-holocaust-20130407-story.html|date=April 7, 2013|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|url-access=subscription|access-date=April 16, 2022}} After Kristallnacht in 1938, Roosevelt had his ambassador to Germany recalled to Washington. He did not loosen immigration quotas but did allow German Jews already in the U.S. on visas to stay indefinitely.{{sfn|Breitman|Lichtman|2013|pp=114–15}} According to Rafael Medoff, Roosevelt could have saved 190,000 Jewish lives by telling his State Department to fill immigration quotas to the legal limit, but his administration discouraged and disqualified Jewish refugees based on its prohibitive requirements that left less than 25% of the quotas filled.
Adolf Hitler chose to implement the "Final Solution"—the extermination of the European Jewish population—by January 1942, and American officials learned of the scale of the Nazi extermination campaign in the following months. Against the objections of the State Department, Roosevelt convinced the other Allied leaders to issue the Joint Declaration by Members of the United Nations, which condemned the ongoing Holocaust and warned to try its perpetrators as war criminals. In 1943, Roosevelt told U.S. government officials that there should be limits on Jews in various professions to "eliminate the specific and understandable complaints which the Germans bore towards the Jews in Germany." The same year, Roosevelt was personally briefed by Polish Home Army intelligence agent Jan Karski who was an eyewitness of the Holocaust; pleading for action, Karski told him that 1.8 million Jews had already been exterminated.{{cite encyclopedia|title=Jan Karski|url=https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/jan-karski|encyclopedia=Holocaust Encyclopedia|publisher=United States Holocaust Memorial Museum|access-date=April 16, 2022}}{{cite web|title=Jan Karski, Humanity's hero: The Story of Poland's Wartime Emissary|url=http://www.karski.muzhp.pl/karski_en/misja_raporty_karskiego_rozmowa.html|website=Museum of Polish History|access-date=April 16, 2022}} Karski recalled that Roosevelt "did not ask one question about the Jews".{{cite web|last=Glass|first=Andrew|title=Holocaust eyewitness briefs FDR, July 28, 1943|url=https://www.politico.com/story/2018/07/28/holocaust-eyewitness-briefs-fdr-july-28-1943-735759|date=July 28, 2018|website=Politico|access-date=April 16, 2022}} In January 1944, Roosevelt established the War Refugee Board to aid Jews and other victims of Axis atrocities. Aside from these actions, Roosevelt believed that the best way to help the persecuted populations of Europe was to end the war as quickly as possible. Top military leaders and War Department leaders rejected any campaign to bomb the extermination camps or the rail lines leading to them, fearing it would be a diversion from the war effort. According to biographer Jean Edward Smith, there is no evidence that anyone ever proposed such a campaign to Roosevelt.{{sfn|Smith|2007|pp=607–13}}
Legacy
{{Progressivism|politicians}}
=Historical reputation=
Roosevelt is widely considered to be one of the most important figures in U.S. history,{{cite magazine|title=The 100 Most Influential Figures in American History|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2006/12/the-100-most-influential-figures-in-american-history/305384/|access-date=October 13, 2017|last1=Appleby|first1=Joyce|last2=Brands|first2=H.W.|last3=Dallek|first3=Robert|last4=Fitzpatrick|first4=Ellen|last5=Goodwin|first5=Doris Kearns|last6=Gordon|first6=John Steele|last7=Kennedy|first7=David M.|last8=McDougall|first8=Walter|last9=Noll|first9=Mark|last10=Wood|first10=Gordon S.|magazine=The Atlantic|date=December 2006}} and one of the most influential figures of the 20th century.{{cite magazine|last1=Walsh|first1=Kenneth T.|title=FDR: The President Who Made America Into a Superpower|url=https://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/ken-walshs-washington/2015/04/10/fdr-franklin-delano-roosevelt-made-america-into-a-superpower|access-date=October 13, 2017|magazine=U.S. News & World Report|date=April 10, 2015}} Historians and political scientists consistently rank Roosevelt, George Washington, and Abraham Lincoln as the three greatest presidents, although the order varies.{{cite web|title=Presidential Historians Survey 2017|url=https://www.c-span.org/presidentsurvey2017/?page=overall|department=C-SPAN Survey of Presidential Leadership|publisher=C-SPAN}}{{cite news|title=Presidential Leadership – The Rankings|url=http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110007243|date=September 12, 2005|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051102135447/http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110007243|archive-date=November 2, 2005|newspaper=The Wall Street Journal|access-date=May 4, 2015}}{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2015/02/16/new-ranking-of-u-s-presidents-puts-lincoln-1-obama-18-kennedy-judged-most-over-rated/|title=New ranking of U.S. presidents puts Lincoln at No. 1, Obama at 18; Kennedy judged most overrated|newspaper=The Washington Post|last1=Rottinghaus|first1=Brandon|last2=Vaughn|first2=Justin|date=February 16, 2015|access-date=May 4, 2015}}{{cite journal| first=Arthur M. Jr. |last=Schlesinger|title=Ranking the Presidents: From Washington to Clinton|journal=Political Science Quarterly|date=Summer 1997|volume=112|issue=2|pages=179–90|jstor=2657937|doi=10.2307/2657937}} Reflecting on Roosevelt's presidency, "which brought the United States through the Great Depression and World War II to a prosperous future", biographer Jean Edward Smith said in 2007, "He lifted himself from a wheelchair to lift the nation from its knees."{{Sfn|Smith|2007|p=ix}}
His commitment to the working class and unemployed in need of relief in the nation's longest recession made him a favorite of blue-collar workers, labor unions, and ethnic minorities.{{Cite book|last=Greenstein|first=F I|title=The Presidential Difference Leadership Style from FDR to Barack Obama|edition=3rd |publisher=Princeton University Press|year=2009|isbn=978-0-691-14383-5|location=United Kingdom|page=14}} The rapid expansion of government programs that occurred during Roosevelt's term redefined the role of government in the United States, and Roosevelt's advocacy for government social programs was instrumental in redefining liberalism for coming generations.{{Citation|author-link=Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.|last=Schlesinger|first=Arthur M. Jr|contribution-url=http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/50s/schleslib.html|contribution=Liberalism in America: A Note for Europeans|title=The Politics of Hope|publisher=Riverside Press|year=2007|orig-date = 1963|isbn=978-0-691-13475-8}} Roosevelt firmly established U.S. leadership on the world stage with his role in shaping and financing World War II. His isolationist critics faded away, and even the Republicans joined in his overall policies.{{sfn|Black|2005|pp=1126–27}} He also permanently increased the power of the president at the expense of Congress.{{sfn|Leuchtenburg|2015|pp=174–75}}
His Second Bill of Rights became, according to historian Joshua Zeitz, "the basis of the Democratic Party's aspirations for the better part of four decades".{{cite news|last1=Zeitz|first1=Joshua|title=Democrats Aren't Moving Left. They're Returning to Their Roots.|url=https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/11/04/elections-2018-democrats-history-liberal-progressive-socialist-222187|access-date=November 17, 2018|work=Politico|date=November 4, 2018}} After his death, Eleanor continued to be a forceful presence in U.S. and world politics, serving as delegate to the conference which established the United Nations and championing civil rights and liberalism generally. Some junior New Dealers played leading roles in the presidencies of Truman, John F. Kennedy, and Lyndon B. Johnson. Kennedy came from a Roosevelt-hating family. Historian William Leuchtenburg says that before 1960, "Kennedy showed a conspicuous lack of inclination to identify himself as a New Deal liberal." He adds, as president, "Kennedy never wholly embraced the Roosevelt tradition and at times he deliberately severed himself from it."{{Citation|first=William E.|last=Leuchtenburg|title=In the Shadow of FDR: From Harry Truman to George W. Bush|publisher=Cornell University Press|year=2001|isbn=978-0-8014-8737-8|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/inshadowoffdrfro00leuc_0|pages=128, 178}} By contrast, young Lyndon Johnson had been an enthusiastic New Dealer and a favorite of Roosevelt. Johnson modelled his presidency on Roosevelt's.Leuchtenburg, pp. 208, 218, 226.John Massaro, "LBJ and the Fortas Nomination for Chief Justice". Political Science Quarterly 97.4 (1982): 603–621.
During his presidency, and continuing to a lesser extent afterwards, there has been much criticism of Roosevelt, some of it intense. Critics have questioned not only his policies, positions, and the consolidation of power that occurred due to his responses to the Depression and World War II but also his breaking with tradition by running for a third term as president.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|pp=624–25}} Long after his death, new lines of attack criticized Roosevelt's policies regarding helping the Jews of Europe,{{Sfn|Wyman|1984}} incarcerating the Japanese on the West Coast,{{Sfn|Robinson|2001}} and opposing anti-lynching legislation.{{Sfn|Dallek|2017|p=626}}
Roosevelt was criticized by conservatives for his economic policies, especially the shift in tone from individualism to collectivism with the expansion of the welfare state and regulation of the economy. Those criticisms continued decades after his death. One factor in the revisiting of these issues was the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980, who opposed the New Deal.Bruce Frohnen, Jeremy Beer and Jeffery O. Nelson, eds. American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia (2006). pp. 619–621, 645–646.[https://www.nytimes.com/1981/12/23/us/no-headline-143644.html "Reagan says many New Dealers wanted fascism"]. The New York Times. December 22, 1981.
=Memorials=
{{Main|List of memorials to Franklin D. Roosevelt}}
Roosevelt's home in Hyde Park is now a National Historic Site and home to his Presidential library. Washington, D.C., hosts two memorials: the {{convert|7+1/2|acre|ha|0|abbr=off|adj=on}} Roosevelt Memorial, located next to the Jefferson Memorial on the Tidal Basin,{{cite web|title=Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial|url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/presidents/fdr_memorial.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090430111022/http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/presidents/fdr_memorial.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=April 30, 2009|website=National Park Service|access-date=January 19, 2018}} and a more modest memorial, a block of marble in front of the National Archives building suggested by Roosevelt himself, erected in 1965.{{cite web|author1=jessiekratz|title=The other FDR Memorial|url=https://prologue.blogs.archives.gov/2015/04/10/the-other-fdr-memorial/|website=Pieces of History|publisher=National Archives|access-date=June 19, 2017|date=April 10, 2015}} Roosevelt's leadership in the March of Dimes is one reason he is commemorated on the American dime.{{cite news|title=Conservatives want Reagan to replace FDR on U.S. dimes|url=https://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/washington/2003-12-05-reagan-dime_x.htm|access-date=January 22, 2018|agency=Associated Press|newspaper=USA Today|date=December 5, 2003}} Roosevelt has also appeared on several U.S. Postage stamps.{{cite web|title=Franklin Delano Roosevelt Issues|url=https://postalmuseum.si.edu/exhibition/about-us-stamps-modern-period-1940-present-commemorative-issues-1940-1949-1944-1945-5|publisher=National Postal Museum|access-date=May 11, 2021}} On April 29, 1945, seventeen days after Roosevelt's death, the carrier USS Franklin D. Roosevelt was launched and served from 1945 to 1977.{{Cite web|title=FDR Library – USS Roosevelt|url=http://docs.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/ussroos4.html|access-date=September 25, 2021|website=docs.fdrlibrary.marist.edu}} London's Westminster Abbey also has a stone tablet memorial to Roosevelt that was unveiled by Attlee and Churchill in 1948.{{Cite web|title=Franklin Delano Roosevelt|url=https://www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/commemorations/franklin-delano-roosevelt|publisher=Westminster Abbey|access-date=April 16, 2022}} Welfare Island was renamed after Roosevelt in September 1973.{{Cite web|title=COMING TO LIGHT: The Louis I. Kahn Monument to Franklin D. Roosevelt|url=https://archweb.cooper.edu/exhibitions/kahn/history_01.html|access-date=September 25, 2021|website=archweb.cooper.edu}}
File:FDR-Memorial-Grosvenor-Square.jpg|1948 statue of Roosevelt in Grosvenor Square, London
File:FDR Memorial wall.jpg|Engraving of the Four Freedoms at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial, dedicated in 1997 in Washington, D.C.
File:FDR, 1945 issue.jpg|Set of four stamps honoring FDR, issued only two months after his death in 1945
Works
{{Incomplete list|date=May 2025}}
- [https://archive.org/details/bwb_S0-BIL-348 The Happy Warrior Alfred E. Smith (1928)]
See also
Notes
{{Notelist}}
References
=Citations=
{{Reflist|22em}}
=Print sources=
{{Further|Bibliography of Franklin D. Roosevelt}}
{{refbegin|30em}}
- {{Cite book| last = Alter| first = Jonathan| author-link = Jonathan Alter| year = 2006| title = The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope| publisher = Simon & Schuster| isbn = 978-0-7432-4600-2| type = popular history| url = https://archive.org/details/definingmomentfd00alte_0}}
- {{cite book | last=Beito | first=David T. | author-link = David T. Beito| year=2023 | title = The New Deal's War on the Bill of Rights: The Untold Story of FDR's Concentration Camps, Censorship, and Mass Surveillance| edition=First | pages=4–7| location=Oakland | publisher=Independent Institute | isbn=978-1598133561}}
- {{Cite book| last = Black| first = Conrad| author-link = Conrad Black| year = 2005| orig-date = 2003| title = Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Champion of Freedom|url={{GBurl|id=lYVCi70HaigC}}| isbn = 978-1-58648-282-4|publisher=PublicAffairs| type = interpretive detailed biography}}.
- {{cite book|last=Brands|first=H. W.|author-link=H. W. Brands|title=Traitor to His Class: The Privileged Life and Radical Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt|url={{GBurl|id=bmKMa_y3hh0C}}|year=2009|publisher=Anchor Books|isbn=978-0-307-27794-7}}
- {{cite book| last1 = Breitman| first1 = Richard| first2 = Allan J| last2 = Lichtman| author2-link = Allan J. Lichtman| year = 2013| title = FDR and the Jews| publisher = Harvard University Press|isbn =978-0-674-05026-6|oclc=812248674}},
- {{cite book|last=Brinkley|first=Douglas|title=Rightful Heritage: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Land of America|url=https://archive.org/details/rightfulheritage0000brin|url-access=registration|year=2016|publisher=HarperCollins|isbn=978-0-06-208923-6}}
- {{cite book|last= Burns|first= James MacGregor|year= 1956|title= Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox|publisher= Easton Press|isbn= 978-0-15-678870-0|url= https://archive.org/details/rooseveltliont00jame}}
- {{cite book|last= Burns|first= James MacGregor|year= 1970|title= Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom|publisher= Harcourt Brace Jovanovich|isbn= 978-0-15-678870-0|author-mask= 3|hdl= 2027/heb.00626|url= https://archive.org/details/rooseveltliont00jame}}
- {{cite journal |last1=Campbell |first1=James E. |title=Party Systems and Realignments in the United States, 1868–2004 |url=https://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~jcampbel/documents/SSHRealignment06.pdf |journal=Social Science History |year=2006 |volume=30 |issue=3 |pages=359–86 |doi=10.1017/S014555320001350X |jstor=40267912 |via=Project Muse}}
- {{Cite Power Broker}}
- {{cite book|last=Churchill|first=Winston|author-link=Winston Churchill|title=The Grand Alliance|year=1977|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|isbn = 978-0-395-41057-8|title-link=The Second World War (book series)}}
- {{cite book|last=Dallek|first=Robert|author-link= Robert Dallek|title=Franklin D. Roosevelt and American Foreign Policy, 1932–1945|publisher=Oxford University|year=1995|isbn= 978-0-19-509732-0}} [https://archive.org/details/franklindrooseve00robe online free to borrow]
- {{cite book| last = Dallek| first=Robert| author-mask = 3| title = Franklin D. Roosevelt: A Political Life| date = 2017| publisher = Viking| isbn = 978-0-69-818172-4}}
- Dighe, Ranjit S. "Saving private capitalism: The US bank holiday of 1933." Essays in Economic & Business History 29 (2011) [http://www.ebhsoc.org/journal/index.php/journal/article/download/40/37 online]
- {{cite book| last1 = Doenecke| first1 = Justus D| last2 = Stoler| first2 = Mark A| year = 2005| title = Debating Franklin D. Roosevelt's Foreign Policies, 1933–1945| publisher = Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-8476-9415-0}}
- {{cite book |last1=Fink |first1=Jesse |title=The Eagle in the Mirror |date=2023 |publisher=Black & White Publishing |location=Edinburgh |isbn=9781785305108|ref=none}}
- {{cite book| last = Freidel| first = Frank| author-link = Frank Freidel| year = 1952–1973| title = Franklin D. Roosevelt| volume = 4 volumes| publisher = Little, Brown and Co.| oclc = 459748221}}
- Frank Freidel, Franklin D. Roosevelt The Apprenticeship (vol 1 1952) to 1918, [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.177661 online]
- Frank Freidel, Franklin D. Roosevelt The Ordeal (1954), covers 1919 to 1928, [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.151791 online]
- Frank Freidel, Franklin D. Roosevelt The Triumph (1956) covers 1929–32, [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.156788 online]
- Frank Freidel, Franklin D. Roosevelt Launching the New Deal (1973).
- {{cite book|last=Fried|first=Albert|title=FDR and His Enemies: A History|url={{GBurl|id=2_UACwAAQBAJ|p=120}}|year=2001|publisher=St. Martin's Press|isbn=978-1-250-10659-9|pages=120–23}}
- {{cite book| last1=Goldman| first1=Armond S.| last2=Goldman| first2=Daniel A.| year=2017| title=Prisoners of Time: The Misdiagnosis of FDR's 1921 Illness| publisher=EHDP Press| isbn=978-1-939-82403-5}}
- {{Cite book| last= Goodwin| first= Doris Kearns| author-link= Doris Kearns Goodwin| year= 1995| publisher= Simon & Schuster| title= No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II| isbn= 978-0-684-80448-4| url= https://archive.org/details/noordinarytimef000good}}
- {{Cite book| last = Gunther| first = John|year=1950| url = https://archive.org/details/rooseveltinretro00gunt| title=Roosevelt in Retrospect| publisher=Harper & Brothers}}
- {{cite book|last=Hawley|first=Ellis| year=1995| title= The New Deal and the Problem of Monopoly| publisher = Fordham University Press| isbn= 978-0-8232-1609-3}}
- {{cite book|last=Herman|first=Arthur|title=Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II|url={{GBurl|id=p3-H8rexHIoC|pg=PP1}}|year=2012|publisher=Random House|isbn=978-0-679-60463-1}}
- {{cite book|last1=Herring|first1=George C.|title=From Colony to Superpower; U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776|date=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507822-0|url=https://archive.org/details/fromcolonytosupe00herr}}
- {{cite book| last = Jordan| first = David M| year = 2011| title = FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944| publisher = Indiana University Press| isbn = 978-0-253-35683-3| url-access = registration| url = https://archive.org/details/fdrdeweyelection0000jord}}.
- {{cite book| last = Kennedy| first = David M| author-link = David M. Kennedy (historian)| year = 1999| title = Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn = 978-0-19-503834-7| type = wide-ranging survey of national affairs by leading scholar; Pulitzer Prize| title-link = Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945}}.
- {{Cite book| author-link = Joseph P. Lash| last = Lash| first = Joseph P| year = 1971| title = Eleanor and Franklin: The Story of Their Relationship, Based on Eleanor Roosevelt's Private Papers| isbn = 978-0-393-07459-8| publisher=W.W. Norton & Company}}
- {{cite book|last1=Leuchtenburg|first1=William|title=The American President: From Teddy Roosevelt to Bill Clinton|date=2015|publisher=Oxford University Press|url={{GBurl|id=inLNCgAAQBAJ}}|isbn=978-0-19-517616-2}}
- {{cite book|last= Leuchtenburg|first= William E.|author-link= William E. Leuchtenburg|year= 1963|title= Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932–1940|publisher= Harpers|url= https://archive.org/details/franklindrooseve00leuc|isbn= 978-0-06-133025-4}}
- {{cite book|last1=McJimsey|first1=George|title=The Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt|date=2000|publisher=University Press of Kansas|isbn=978-0-7006-1012-9|url=https://archive.org/details/presidencyoffran00mcji}} [https://archive.org/details/presidencyoffran00mcji online free to borrow]
- {{Citation| author-link = Ted Morgan (writer)| last = Morgan| first = Ted| year = 1985| title = FDR: A Biography| publisher = Simon & Schuster| isbn = 978-0-671-45495-1| type = popular biography| url = https://archive.org/details/fdrbiography00morg}}.
- {{cite book|last=Norton| first=Mary Beth|title=A People and a Nation: A History of the United States. Since 1865|url={{GBurl|id=129rne8WpyoC|p=670}}|year=2009|publisher=Cengage|isbn=978-0-547-17560-7}}
- Riesch Owen, A. L. Conservation under F.D.R. (1983) https://archive.org/details/conservationunde0000owen/page/n5/mode/2up
- {{Citation| last = Robinson| first = Greg| year = 2001| title = By Order of the President: FDR and the Internment of Japanese Americans|isbn=978-1-5226-7771-0}}
- {{cite book|last1=Roosevelt|first1= Franklin|last2=Roosevelt|first2=Elliott|date= 1970|title= F.D.R.: His Personal Letters, 1928–1945|volume=1|url= {{GBurl|id=MpkOAQAAMAAJ|q=taconic commission roosevelt tender you my resignation}}|publisher=Duell, Sloan, and Pearce|ref={{sfnRef|F. Roosevelt, E. Roosevelt}}}}
- {{cite book|last=Rowley|first=Hazel|author-link=Hazel Rowley|year=2010|title=Franklin and Eleanor: An Extraordinary Marriage|publisher=Farrar, Straus & Giroux|isbn=978-0-374-15857-6|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/franklineleanore0000rowl}}
- {{cite book|last= Sainsbury|first= Keith|title= Churchill and Roosevelt at War: The War They Fought and the Peace They Hoped to Make|publisher= New York University Press|year= 1994|isbn= 978-0-8147-7991-0|url= https://archive.org/details/churchillrooseve0000sain}}
- {{cite book|last=Savage|first=Sean J.|title=Roosevelt, the Party Leader, 1932–1945|url={{GBurl|id=J7QlafgkrnUC|p=160}}|year=1991|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|isbn=978-0-8131-3079-8}}
- {{cite book|last1=Schweikart|first1=Larry|last2=Allen|first2=Michael|title=A Patriot's History of the United States: From Columbus's Great Discovery to the War on Terror|url={{GBurl|id=igOXnmTZ_wIC|pg=PP1}}|date=2004|publisher=Penguin Group US|isbn=978-1-101-21778-8}}
- {{cite book|last=Smith|first=Jean Edward|author-link=Jean Edward Smith|publisher=Random House|title=FDR|year=2007|isbn=978-1-4000-6121-1|url=https://archive.org/details/fdr00smit}}
- {{cite journal|first = Bernard|last = Sternsher|title = The Emergence of the New Deal Party System: A Problem in Historical Analysis of Voter Behavior|journal = Journal of Interdisciplinary History|volume = 6|number = 1|date=Summer 1975|pages = 127–49|jstor=202828|doi=10.2307/202828}}
- {{cite book|last=Tobin|first=James|title=The Man He Became: How FDR Defied Polio to Win the Presidency|url=https://archive.org/details/manhebecamehowfd0000tobi|url-access=registration|year=2013|publisher=Simon and Schuster|isbn=978-1-4516-9867-1|pages=[https://archive.org/details/manhebecamehowfd0000tobi/page/4 4]–7}}
- {{cite book|last=Tully|first=Grace|author-link= Grace Tully| year= 2005| title= Franklin Delano Roosevelt, My Boss|publisher=Kessinger Publishing| isbn= 978-1-4179-8926-3}}
- {{cite book|last=Underwood|first=Jeffery S.|title=The Wings of Democracy: The Influence of Air Power on the Roosevelt Administration, 1933–1941|url={{GBurl|id=7BOe6NR-9BsC|p=11}}|year=1991|publisher=Texas A&M University Press|isbn=978-0-89096-388-3}}
- {{cite book|last1=Ward|first1=Geoffrey C.|author-link1=Geoffrey C. Ward|last2=Burns|first2=Ken|author-link2=Ken Burns|title=The Roosevelts: An Intimate History|url={{GBurl|id=V73CAwAAQBAJ|pg=PP1}}|year=2014|publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-385-35306-9}}
- {{cite book|last=Winkler|first= Allan M.| year=2006| title= Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Making of Modern America|publisher=Longman| isbn= 978-0-321-41285-0}}
- {{cite book| author-link = David Wyman| last = Wyman| first = David S| year = 1984| title = The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust 1941–1945| publisher = Pantheon Books|isbn=978-0-394-42813-0| title-link = The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust 1941–1945}}.
{{refend}}
External links
{{Sister project links|wikt=Roosevelt|commons=Franklin Delano Roosevelt|b=no|n=no|s=Author:Franklin Delano Roosevelt|v=no|d=Q8007}}{{Library resources box|about=yes|by=yes}}
- [http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/ Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum]
- On FDR's bad health in 1944–45, its coverup by his staff, and the use made of it by Stalin, see "Confront the Issue: FDR's Health" from FDR Library at http://www.fdrlibraryvirtualtour.org/graphics/07-38/7.5_FDRs_Health.pdf
- [https://www.nps.gov/frde/ Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial], Washington, DC
- [http://millercenter.org/president/speeches#fdroosevelt Full text and audio of a number of Roosevelt's speeches] – Miller Center of Public Affairs
- {{New York Times topic|new_id=person/franklin-delano-roosevelt|name=Franklin Delano Roosevelt}}
- [https://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/presidents/fdroosevelt/index.html Franklin Delano Roosevelt: A Resource Guide] from the Library of Congress
- {{C-SPAN|5157}}
- [http://www.c-span.org/video/?151628-1/life-portrait-franklin-d-roosevelt "Life Portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt"], from C-SPAN's American Presidents: Life Portraits, October 11, 1999
- [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/fdr/ The Presidents: FDR] – an American Experience documentary
- [https://archive.org/details/FDRSelectionsWritings Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Selections from His Writings]
- {{Gutenberg author| id=67| name=Franklin Delano Roosevelt}}
- {{Librivox author|id=11299}}
- {{Internet Archive author|sname=Franklin Delano Roosevelt}}
{{Franklin D. Roosevelt}}
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