3. New Deal Constituencies
& the Broker State
• Civilian gov’t employees increased by 80%
• # of gov’t employees in Washington, DC doubled
in 10 years
• Power of federal gov’t increased drastically
• Acted as a broker state
– Gov’t acted as mediator in national marketplace
– Elevated & strengthened new interests
• Organized labor, women, African Americans, & other groups
joined the coalition the Democrats started to build
4. Organized Labor
• Huge arena for federal intervention
• Factors that led to growth of labor movement
– Inadequacy of welfare capitalism
– New Deal legislation; example=Wagner Act
– Rise of the Congress of Industrial Organizations
(CIO); est. 1936
• Growing militancy of rank & file workers
• By 1940, unionized workers=9 million
– 23% of the non-farm workforce
5. Organized Labor
• CIO promoted all workers, skilled & unskilled,
into one union
– Accepted women, blacks, & Mexican Americans
– John L. Lewis, once leader of United Mine
Workers, helped form CIO
– Competed w/ AFL; more militant
– Allied w/ Democratic Party
• Scored a victory with United Auto Workers &
GM (1936-1937)
– GM & other auto producers recognized the UAW
6. Organized Labor
• Steel workers struggled in battle for
unionization
• Memorial Day Massacre (1937), South Chicago
• Marching peacefully, fired upon, 10 killed & 90
wounded
• Strike failed
• 1937—4,720 strikes & 80% favored unions
7. Women & the New Deal
• Gains in government:
– Frances Perkins, 1st female in cabinet
– Molly Dawson, head of Women’s Division of the DNC
– Nellie, Tayloe Ross, 1st female director of the mint
– Eleanor Roosevelt, one of the 1st prominent First Ladies
• The “conscience of the New Deal”
• Setbacks:
– Low wages
– Low levels of employment
– CCC did not hire women
9. Blacks & the New Deal
• New Deal did little to battle racial
discrimination
• CCC segregated blacks & whites
• NRA codes did not protect black workers
• FDR repeatedly refused to ban lynching
– Said it would antagonize southern members of
Congress
• Their support was needed for New Deal measures
10. Blacks & the New Deal
• 18% of WPA recipients were black
• Resettlement Administration was set up to help small farmers
buy land
• Mary McLeod Bethune hired to run Office of Minority Affairs
• Eleanor Roosevelt was a champion of equal rights
• The belief that the White House was concerned for African
Americans shifted voting
– Republican Party had been party of blacks since time of
Lincoln
11. Politicization of Mexican Americans
• Benefited from labor policies
– But agencies paid at different rates based on race
– Tension & conflict between whites & Hispanics in
CCC camps
• Increasingly identified with US rather than
Mexico
• Democrats made it clear that they welcomed
Mexican Americans
12. Indian Reorganization Act
• Native Americans continued to be among the nation’s
most disadvantaged minorities
• Average annual income in 1934=$48!
• IRA reversed Dawes Act of 1887 by promoting
extensive self-government; tribal councils &
constitutions
• Tribal lands & agricultural profits both increased
greatly
• New Deal helped preserve Native languages, arts,
traditions
• However, problems were so severe that more change
was needed
13. The New Deal & the Land
• TVA was the biggest New
Deal environmental
undertaking
• 1933: task was to develop
region’s resources under
public control
• CCC & WPA created
several attractions
14. New Deal & the Arts
• Federal Art Project gave work to many of 20th
century’s leading painters, muralists,
sculptors
15. New Deal & the Arts
• Federal Music Project
employed 15K musicians
• Federal Writers Project
employed 5K writers
• Federal Theatre Project,
most ambitious, reached 25-
30 million in 4 years
– Terminated in 1939 over fears
of Communist influence
16. Legacies of the New Deal
• Set in motion far-reaching changes
• Growth of a modern state of significant size
• People experienced fed. gov’t as a part of
everyday life for first time
• In 1930s, over 1/3 of Americans received
direct gov’t services from fed. programs, from
Social Security, farm loans, relief work, etc.
17. Legacy of the New Deal
• Gov’t made a commitment to intervene in
economy when private sector could not
guarantee stability
• Stock market regulation, Fed. Reserve
reformed
• Accelerated pattern begun by Progressive of
using regulation to bring order to economic
life
18. Problems with the New Deal
• Social Security Act did not include national
health care
• Welfare system did not reach a majority of
American workers, including domestics & farm
workers
• Discriminated against women in terms of jobs
& wages
• Did not end Depression, only short-term fixes
19. Problems with the New Deal
• Forced FDR to be unable to challenge
marginalization of blacks in the South
• Needed white southern vote
• Court-packing scheme, recession of 1937,
Republican success in 1938 elections, &
inevitability of WWII—combined to bring end
to the New Deal
20. Successes
• Great political move;
gained support for
Democratic Party from
various groups
– 84% of those on relief
voted for FDR in 1936
– Middle class voters also
moved to Democratic
side
– Stay w/ Democrats for
years to come