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Eddi Din [679]
3 years ago
10

Critics of Roosevelt's New Deal policies would most likely have agreed with which statement?

History
2 answers:
kherson [118]3 years ago
5 0

<u>The right answer is:</u>

A. Roosevelt's federal policies upset the balance of power among the branches of government in order to redistribute wealth.

The reason why is:

<em>Critics most likely have agreed with this statement because they claim that it fostered bureaucracy and enlarged the powers of the government. The New Deal spearheaded an era when the state-federal power balance shifted further in favor of the federal government.</em>


Hunter-Best [27]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

A. Roosevelt's federal policies upset the balance of power among the branches of government in order to redistribute wealth.

Explanation:

New Deal is the name given by the president of the United States Franklin D. Roosevelt to his interventionist policy set in motion to fight the effects of the Great Depression in the United States. This program was developed between 1933 and 1938 to support the poorest layers of the population, reform financial markets and to revitalize a US economy that has been injured since the 1929 crash by unemployment and chain bankruptcies.

The fight against the crisis lasted until the United States mobilized its economy with World War II. The success of the New Deal is undeniable in the social sphere. The policy carried out by President Franklin D. Roosevelt changed the country through reforms and not through a revolution. On the other hand, the New Deal programs were overtly experimental, manifestly perfectible, and given the costs of this process, a more complete change program would have been preferable. However, the imperfect character of the New Deal allowed a constructive criticism and a more leisurely reflection that opened the way to an improvement of American democracy in the following years and that lasts until today. One of the most important critics was centered around the fact that the New Deal's policies gave too much power to the federal government, thus upsetting the balance of power among the branches of government.

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