The Progressive Era and The New Deal Liberalism Era were two very important eras in American History. Progressives contended that old ways of governing and doing business did not address modern conditions. Theodore Roosevelt believed that big businesses were America’s next step to success, consequently he also believed that these big businesses needed to be overseen to ensure greed did not get out of hand. “Then we have the New Deal Liberalism where President Franklin Delano Roosevelt referred broadly to providing a “new deal” and bringing to the White House “persistent experimentation.” New Deal Liberalism would mainly provide relief, put millions of people to work, raise prices for farmers, extend conservation projects, revitalize America’s …show more content…
Governing monopolies were aimed to cut back control of corporation trusts, in which they saw as a threat to economic and political democracy. I saw progressivism as an evolution, because it encouraged governmental intervention, yet they sought change without wholly altering capitalism or the democratic political system. “The AMA raised qualifications to increase the level of education required to practice medicine, thus limiting access to the profession; which in many ways drew many of its consistent followers from this new middle class.” This is where I would like to say that progressivism evolved, because they were people who believe that the problems society encountered on a day to day basis could best be addresses by providing quality education, a hazardless environment, and an efficient workplace. Progressives were city people, college graduates, and believed that government could be a tool for new …show more content…
In March 1933, President Roosevelt issued an executive order shutting down banks for several days to calm the panic that gripped many Americans in the wake of bank failures and the loss of their life’s savings. This measure created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), insuring personal saving accounts up to $5,000, and detached commercial banks from investment bank to avoid risky speculation. Rehabilitating agriculture and industry stood at the top of the New Deal’s priority list. In May 1933, Congress passed the Agriculture Adjustment Act, aimed at raising prices by reducing production. The AAA, paid farmers subsides to produce less in the future, and for farmers who had already planted their crops (including corn, cotton, rice, tobacco, and wheat) and raised livestock, the agency paid them to plow under a portion of their harvest, slaughter hogs, and destroy dairy products. By 1935the program succeeded in raising farm income by 50 percent. The second AAA, passed in 1938, offered agriculture subsidies to reduce cultivation on the basis of conservation and soil erosion prevention, which overcame judicial objections. Congress eventually provided loans for displaced farmers. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt had many critics about his strategies’;