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124 Pol. Sci. Q. 251 (2009-2010)
What the New Deal Did

handle is hein.journals/pclscceqry124 and id is 251 raw text is: What the New Deal Did

DAVID M. KENNEDY
The United States now confronts a cascading economic crisis.
Venerable banking houses collapse, once-mighty industries teeter on the brink
of oblivion, and unemployment mounts. The air thickens with recollections of
the Great Depression of the 1930s, and with comparisons between Barack
Obama and Franklin D. Roosevelt.
So what was the Great Depression, and what did FDR do about it? The
short answer is that the Great Depression was a rare political opportunity, and
Roosevelt made the most of it, to the nation's lasting benefit. A longer answer
would acknowledge that the Great Depression was a catastrophic economic
crisis that Roosevelt failed to resolve, at least not until World War II came
along, some eight years after he assumed office. A still longer answer would
recognize the connection between FDR's short-term economic policy failure
and the New Deal's long-term political success. Much misunderstanding
surrounds these matters.
At the heart of the New Deal, the distinguished historian Richard
Hofstadter once wrote, there was not a philosophy but a temperament.
As a writer in The New York Times put it not long ago, F.D.R. threw a bunch
of policies against the wall, and the ones that stuck became the New Deal.'
That view of the New Deal-as a kind of unprincipled, harum-scarum frenzy
of random, incoherent policies that failed to slay the Depression demon-
has become deeply embedded in our national folklore. It is badly mistaken. If
we are to understand the Great Depression's relevance to our own time, it is
imperative to understand the relationship between the economic crisis of the
1930s and that decade's signature political legacy, the New Deal.
Into the years of the New Deal was crowded more social and institutional
change than in virtually any comparable compass of time in the nation's past.
'Richard Hofstadter, The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It (New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1948), XXX; The New York Times, 16 January 2001, Sec. A, p. 23.
DAVID M. KENNEDY is the Donald J. McLachlan Professor of History Emeritus and Co-Director
of the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University. He is the author of the Pulitzer
Prize winning Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945.

Political Science Quarterly Volume 124 Number 2 2009

251

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