President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal legislation restored the public’s confidence in the federal government through acts that protected and promoted the general welfare of American. The new direction abandoned the previous administration's laissez-fair style Roosevelt took immediate action after his inauguration signing the Banking Act of 1933. In the wake of the 1929 Stock Market Crash, the Banking Act, aliened with his first goal was to repair the people’s trust in the nation's financial system. Roosevelt described the law passed by Congress as having, “authority to develop a program of rehabilitation of our banking facilities.” The new regulations hinder the reopening of banks based on assessments that ensured only healthy banks would …show more content…
At the start of Roosevelt’s presidency, unemployed affected approximately 13 million people. Fueling his administration’s agenda to create job opportunities and protect workers. Roosevelt signed the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 (NRA) in reaction to a national emergency that caused extensive job losses and disorganization. “It represents a supreme effort to stabilize…the prosperity of the Nation, and the preservation of American standards”, Roosevelt said after signing the act into law. The NRA strived to reduce unemployment by aiding the people through work programs and economic reform of the industrial sector. In addition, the NRA forced businesses to provide collective bargaining in good trust with labor unions. Moreover, the NRA secured laborers the right to organize and negotiate with representatives of their own choosing. The act set to raise the minimum wage, limit working hours, and abolish child labor. protections are important examples of Roosevelt’s passion for defending the well-being of workers. Even though the NIRA was later affirmed unconstitutional, Roosevelt’s defense of laborers created powerful unions, positively influenced the American …show more content…
The Civilian Conservations Corps a New Deal program formed in March 1933 was one of Roosevelt’s public work programs aimed at rebuilding a stronger nation. The Corp’s purpose was to foster constructive jobs centered on environmental conservation. The Corps was responsible for building parks, planting trees, and developing natural resources. Thanks to the actions of the Corps the nation benefited from the wealth discovered in natural resources, not to mention the tangible developments made to national parks. These results fortified the American public's opinions on the government and followed suit in Roosevelt’s plan to defend and bolster the nation. Roosevelt’s belief that initiatives in environmental preservation would produce a generation of exceptional citizens saying, “More important than the material gain, however, is the improvement we find in the moral and physical well-being of our citizens who have been enrolled in the Corps and of their families.” His judgment proved right, the Corp’s programs improved unemployment in rural areas while engaging generations of youth workers. The public works programs established during the New Deal era repaired the nation's trust in the federal government furthermore the effects of these programs fulfilled the