Franklin Roosevelt is my favorite American President. With all the depressing news lately, I wanted to read about a time when the seemingly political impossible was made possible. Something that could give me a glimpse of political hope. So I finally picked up this FDR biography.
FDR grew up in wealth and privilege. He traveled the world with his parents as a child and fell in love with sailing boats. His father died when he was young and he was a mama’s boy, with a very overbearing mother. He attended Harvard and Columbia Universities and became an attorney in 1908.
Eleanor was Teddy Roosevelt’s niece. Her father was an alcoholic who abandoned the family and died young, as did her mother. Eleanor was raised by her grandparents who didn’t show love for her and she was also likely sexually abused by her uncles. After she married Franklin, in 1905, their early marriage was dominated by Franklin’s mother.
FDR considered his cousin/uncle, Teddy Roosevelt, a role model, though they weren’t personally close. FDR won election in 1910 to the New York state senate and revealed himself a progressive when he immediately picked a fight, over the selection of a Senator in 1911, and won against the corrupt Democratic political machine of Tammany Hall. He then backed Woodrow Wilson in the primary and general election of 1912. FDR won reelection to that state senate with the help of his committed advisor, Louis Howe, despite being sick with typhoid. He was then quickly appointed Assistant Navy Secretary in Wilson’s Administration, where he learned to work with unions representing shipyard workers and advocated for their higher pay. FDR ran for Senate in 1914, but lost in the primary.
Franklin and Eleanor’s relationship began to fracture and Franklin had an extended affair with Eleanor’s assistant, Lucy Mercer, which Eleanor learned about in 1918. Franklin would renew his affair with Mercer years later as President and in between he likely had an extended affair with his own assistant and defacto Chief of Staff, Missy LeHand.
FDR was learning as he watched Wilson try to keep the U.S. out of WWI, but ultimately felt forced to join the war when Germany started indiscriminately sinking U.S. ships. He also learned as he watched Wilson wait until public support for war built before declaring war. FDR traveled to the front and planned to resign his position in the Wilson administration in order to enlist to fight, but the war ended before he could. FDR’s experience during WWI was probably the greatest influence on his perspective during his Presidency, including how he handled the Great Depression and conducted the Second World War.
Roosevelt eventually established a truce with Tammany Hall and was selected as the Democrats’ Vice Presidential candidate in the 1920 election. The Democrats had no chance in the election due to the unpopularity of Wilson’s League of Nations proposal and the economic turmoil that followed the end of the war. Republicans swept the election in a landslide.
FDR contracted polio in 1921 and became paralyzed. He began spending time at a resort in Warm Springs, Georgia, for the seemingly therapeutic waters. Roosevelt eventually bought the resort, expanded it and turned it into a camp for polio victims that was run by a charitable organization he created. During his time in Georgia he witnessed southern poverty and, together with his overall experience with his disability and working with polio victims, his time in Georgia greatly impacted his perspective.
During the 1920s, Eleanor, originally very shy and lacking confidence, got involved with Democratic women’s groups where she met a lesbian couple who radicalized her politics. Eleanor later had a romantic relationship with journalist Lorena Hickock and began to develop her own political agenda separate from Franklins. As First Lady, she actively lobbied Franklin on her political priorities.
FDR was campaign manager for Al Smith in the 1924 Presidential primary election and, while Smith narrowly lost the Democratic nomination, Roosevelt was the star of the national convention. The convention was marked by chaos and battles over whether to condemn the KKK and positions on prohibition. FDR then backed Smith again for the 1928 election in which Smith was the Democratic nominee. Smith lost, but FDR reluctantly had agreed to run for Governor of New York and won despite it being a strong year for Republicans nationwide.
As Governor, FDR became a master of the new medium of radio, but Republicans in the state legislature blocked his every effort for progressive reform. FDR knew the strong economy of the 1920s wouldn’t last, so he positioned himself to be the voice of the people when the bottom fell out of the economy, which it of course did with the crash of 1929, plunging the world into the devastating Great Depression.
FDR ran for reelection as Governor in 1930 and won in a landslide. He focused his energy on implementing social relief programs and then ran for President in 1932, promising a more activist government. Once again, he won in a landslide.
Interestingly, after watching Douglas McArthur crack down on veterans protesting outside the White House during Hoover’s Presidency, FDR concluded that McArthur was the most dangerous man in America. FDR felt McArthur was capable of leading a military coup if the Depression got bad enough and that he was willing to establish an authoritarian government with himself (McArthur) at the head.
In February, 1933, while FDR was President-elect, there was an assassination attempt on his life in Miami by a mentally unstable Italian immigrant.
As President, FDR’s first move was to take the U.S. off the gold standard and to stabilize the nation’s banks. He held his first “fireside chat” over the radio to explain his policies to the nation. FDR was also open to the press in a way no prior President had been.
FDR’s next move as President was to address over production and low prices in the ag industry by paying farmers to pull acreage out of farm production. He also created the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in order to employ men and improve our public lands. He created the Tennessee Valley Authority and passed the Public Work Administration to create jobs and improve the nation’s infrastructure. From his experience observing successful economic planning during WWI, FDR passed legislation authorizing national economic planning through the National Recovery Administration (NRA). All told, it was the most successful first one hundred days in Presidential history.
Much more radical figures and proposals were being advocated for in the early 1930s, including socialists, Huey Long (later assassinated), Father Coughlin, Francis Townsend, Upton Sinclair and the Longshoremen union. These people and proposals made FDR’s policies look tame in comparison and also pushed FDR to pass Social Security, unemployment insurance, and disability benefits in 1934.
Also in 1934, the Supreme Court ruled against the National Recovery Administration (doing the national economic planning). In 1936, FDR proposed expanding the court to undermine the conservative majority on the court, but this move was widely unpopular and never went anywhere. The threat, however, forced the court to temper its opposition to FDR’s policies and FDR achieved a liberal court over time through regular appointments.
Early in his Presidency, FDR scuttled an international economic deal that would have tied his hands in dealing with the Depression and later he officially recognized the Soviet Union in order to boost American exports. He also lost a vote in Congress for the U.S. to join the World Court.
In 1936, FDR campaigned for reelection by attacking the rich and won in the biggest landslide in American history (losing only Vermont and Maine), but his friend and key political strategist, Louis Howe, died in April before the election.
Of particular note about FDR’s personality, everyone remarked of his cheery, easy-going and playful nature, even during the most stressful moments of his Presidency. He was also surprisingly very religious, though he was quiet about his religiousness.
In 1937, New Deal spending was declining in response to pressure from big business, which was interested in hurting the New Deal’s reputation. A major recession took hold in response and FDR was forced to decide whether to continue to cut spending and balance the budget as big business was pushing for, or listen to a new group of young economists who were urging government spending as a way to boost the economy when private capital failed. FDR, after some indecision, decided to push for increased government spending in 1938.
Also in 1938, FDR passed legislation banning child labor, establishing a very weak minimum wage, and establishing a forty-hour work week that had lots of loopholes. Then Congress passed tax breaks for the rich against FDR’s wishes and conservatives made gains in the 1938 elections, emboldening them.
The strength of isolationists in Congress tied FDR’s hands in responding to the international crises instigated by Mussolini in Italy, Franco in Spain, Hitler in Germany and Japan. Following the outbreak of WWII, however, FDR campaigned successfully for the repeal of an arms embargo established in the Neutrality Acts.
Eleanor, by this time, had her own fully developed political perspective and constituency. She published an influential newspaper column and traveled around the country in support of her causes. She pushed FDR for an anti-lynching law, but FDR didn’t want to risk losing the support for his New Deal policies from southern Democrats.
FDR didn’t indicate that he wanted to run for a third term until the Democratic convention and nearly caused a revolt when he insisted that liberal Henry Wallace be his running mate. Republicans accused FDR of wanting to be a dictator for running for a third term and trying to pack the Supreme Court, but FDR won reelection anyway in 1940.
In early 1941, FDR passed the Lend-Lease program which provided weapons to Britain. In August, he met for the first time with Churchill in Greenland where they agreed to the Atlantic Charter which outlined the post-war world order, including the end of colonialism. After Japan invaded Indochina, FDR put the U.S. on a war footing, passed legislation authorizing the first mandatory registration for the draft in peacetime, froze Japanese assets in the U.S. and put an embargo on oil and gas exports to Japan. That September, he declared that the U.S. would attack German vessels in the Atlantic.
FDR felt war in Europe and Asia was inevitable, but still treaded carefully because of the isolationists in Congress. FDR wanted to hold off war in Asia long enough to focus on Europe, but in November, 1941, he learned that Japan planned to attack due to the economic embargo. But the assumption was that any Japanese attack would be in the U.S. held Philippines or British Southeast Asia and the U.S. was surprised by the attack on Pearl Harbor a few weeks later. The U.S. declared war on Japan and Germany declared war on the U.S. five days later.
In early 1942, FDR issued the order allowing for the internment of Japanese-Americans over fears they could aid in a Japanese invasion of the west coast. Easily his worst and most shameful decision.
There was a big debate in 1942 between FDR, Churchill and Stalin over where the U.S. should open a second front, with Stalin and initially FDR wanting a quick invasion of France and Churchill wanting a North Africa defense to prevent the Nazis from taking the Suez Canal. If the Nazis took the Suez Canal, they could block Britain’s access to its Indian colony which was at the time at risk of a Japanese invasion. Churchill eventually won the debate with FDR. The issue arose again with question of whether to invade France or Italy first and Churchill again convinced FDR to delay the invasion of France.
The war economy in the U.S. caused an inflationary spike in 1942, causing FDR to pass price controls and taxes at near 90% for the highest incomes.
With China as an ally in the war against Japan, FDR repealed the Chinese Exclusion Act of the 1880s, which Japan was using as an example to show that U.S. calls for freedom in the Atlantic Charter were a sham. In the face of large protests by black workers, FDR ordered the desegregation of defense contractors but he refused to desegregate the military fearing once again that he would lose support of southern Democrats in Congress.
In 1944, FDR announced his intention to establish an economic bill of rights following the war, but he also refused to allow labor strikes during the war.
When FDR ran for reelection in 1944, he chose not to run again with Henry Wallace both because of conservative opposition and because he felt Wallace had become too extreme. The Democratic Party instead selected Harry Truman over the more liberal William Douglas to be FDR’s running mate. FDR campaigned on setting up the post-war United Nations and won reelection easily, despite the nation’s rejection of the League of Nations twenty-five years earlier.
At the 1945 conference in Yalta; FDR, Churchill and Stalin agreed on the structure of the United Nations and the division of Germany. FDR also got Stalin to agree to elections in Poland and to enter the war against Japan.
FDR died of a stroke in April, 1945, just a month before the Nazis surrendered. Eleanor lived until 1962. She served as American delegate to the United Nations and helped draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
FDR is among the top three greatest Presidents in U.S. history. Though he clearly had serious and tragic short comings on issues of race and human rights. He is one of the few Presidents, together with his cousin Teddy, who really stood up to powerful economic interests on behalf of average Americans. He showed us that the federal government is capable of addressing the nation’s, and the world’s, greatest challenges if there is political will to do so. Hopefully, one day soon, we will learn that lesson again.