The steps Herbert Hoover took during the Great Depression were not sufficient to dig America out of the economy downfall. Creating programs to put people back to work and helped local and state charities with aid he hoped to make a change in the economy. However these programs didn’t benefit the majority of the population, compared to those who really needed it. The public grew increasingly unhappy with Hoover as the situation worsened. This caused a high disapproval rating for Hoover. Explicitly after Black Tuesday Hoover went to reassure America that all is well. In 1931, he pledged federal aid should he ever witness starvation in the country; however he still had yet to witness the devastating starvation of Americans from all social stances …show more content…
By late 1931, it became clear that the economy would not improve on its own, Hoover recognized the need for some government intervention. American citizens were feeling the impact of the Great Depression immensely and to have the president not realize this amount of help they needed from the government until it was too late create a fire within them that would outburst. As a result, he created the President’s Emergency Committee for Employment (PECE), later renamed the President’s Organization of Unemployment Relief (POUR). To emphasize his dissatisfaction of government handouts this organization did not provide direct federal relief to people in urgency. Instead, it assisted state and private relief agencies, such as the Red Cross, Salvation Army, YMCA, and Community Chest. A strong urge for a spirit of donation to the poor was exceeding imposed, he even took it privately to donate. Yet these private efforts were not sufficient to alleviate the amplitude of poverty in the …show more content…
On February 1932, it was defeated by fourteen votes with the disapproval from Hoover. In fact, his opposition for direct-relief federal government was not a sign of not being sympathetic or ignorant, though to the public’s opinion he was misnamed and saw redundant to the help of the economy. His want for the well-being of the economy to rise was boundless. Hoover was one of just two presidents to dismiss his pay for the workplace he held. Hoover's ardent adherence to a theory of independence as the way toward long haul American recuperation clarified a large number of his approach