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Inessa [10]
3 years ago
8

Liberal leaders wanted to change New Deal programs by making them smaller and less expensive. making the states responsible for

them. lowering the taxes that funded them. building onto and expanding them.
History
2 answers:
alex41 [277]3 years ago
6 0
Liberal leaders wanted to change New Deal programs by "<span>building onto and expanding them" since the New Deal was very liberal by nature so liberals wanted more of these policies, not less.</span>
GREYUIT [131]3 years ago
5 0

The correct answer is d. building onto and expanding them.

The New Deal was an interventionist policy implemented by American President Franklin D. Roosevelt in order to face the effects of the great depression in the United States. This program was developed between 1933 and 1938 with the goal of supporting the lower levels of the population, to reform the financial markets, and to improve the American economy that was damaged since 1929 crack due to a severe unemployment rate and bankruptcy.

For its objectives and the way it was implemented, the New Deal was a very liberal policy and President Roosevelt was supported by the majority of liberal leaders across the country. Therefore, liberal leaders wanted to build onto and expand these policies in order to fight poverty, to extend social and economic rights, to improve the quality of life of millions of workers, and to build up a welfare state system.

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Figure 19.4: Historical Number of Warm Nights

Historical Number of Warm NightsA map of the Southeast region shows the annual number of warm nights (those with a minimum temperature greater than 75 degrees Fahrenheit) averaged over the period 1976 to 2005. Historically, most of the region has experienced 5 or fewer warm nights, on average, per year. Exceptions include coastal Louisiana and South Florida, which both average 30 to 100 warm nights per year.

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Figure 19.5: Projected Number of Warm Nights

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