I)                    Presidential politics
A)    1936  Presidential election
1)      Roosevelt
   Landslide – Roosevelt used a great deal of populist rhetoric in the  
 election, calling the Republican Party “economic royalists” and   
“organized money.”
2)      Roosevelt
  won 60% of the popular votes  cast (greater than his victory over  
Hoover), and the electoral votes of  every state except Maine and  
Vermont.
(a)    African
   American vote – by 1936, African Americans voted overwhelmingly in   
favor of FDR over the Republican standard-bearer, in a reversal over   
long-standing tendencies to vote for the party of Lincoln.  This occurs,
   despite some discriminatory practices in New Deal programs, for  
several  reasons.
(i)                  “Black
   Cabinet” – second level bureaucrats and black leaders outside of the 
  administration who provided advice to the administration; these 
African   Americans were particularly influential upon Eleanor 
Roosevelt.
(ii)                 Eleanor
  Roosevelt – when African American singer Marion  Anderson was refused 
 the use of the DAR Hall in DC to hold a concert,  Eleanor R. resigned 
her  membership in the organization, and arranged  for Ms. Anderson to 
give  her concert on the Mall, on the steps of the  Lincoln Memorial.
B)     Roosevelt
  Recession – FDR’s lack of ideology  comes back to haunt him; because 
he  was not a true believer in  Keynesian economics, FDR’s lack of  
ideological commitment to his New  Deal Programs led him to cut  
government spending just as the economy  was beginning to recover.  
Roosevelt was never comfortable with the  sizable deficit that his  
government was running; with his sizable  victory in 1936, he decided to
  greatly reduce spending in 1937, with  disastrous results.
1)      Keynesian
   Economic Theory – the belief that the role of government was to use  
 government spending to regulate the country’s economy; in times of   
economic distress, this meant “priming the pump” by raising   
expenditures, even if this meant deficit spending.
2)      Economic
   recession – the Roosevelt Recession probably contributed most to the 
  disenchantment towards Roosevelt, and the gains by conservatives in 
the   elections in 1938.
3)      Political backlash
(a)    Reaction
   to “packing” the Supreme Court – a reactionary court had ruled 
against   Roosevelt policies in numerous cases to this point; FDR 
advocated  being  enabled to nominate an additional justice for each one
 over the  age of  seventy-five (which would have added four additional 
justices to  the  bench); both Republican and many Democrats claimed 
Roosevelt was   attempting to become dictator. The public fallout here 
was probably less   severe than the bad press this generated for the 
President.
4)      Backlash  against labor
(a)    Monroe  MI – Republic Steel private police  force gassed SWOC headquarters and set fire to it.
(b)   Youngstown
   – Gov. Davey, who labor had supported in the 1936 election, read the 
  handwriting on the wall, and used the National Guard to protect and   
escort strikebreakers to another Republic Steel plant on strike in this 
  city.  Phil Murray, whom Lewis had appointed to head up the SWOC 
Little   Steel organizing drive, called for FDR to assist in this 
crisis, which   he refused to do; this was the beginning of the rift 
between Lewis and   FDR.
(c)    Chicago
   Memorial Day Massacre – Republic Steel employees in Chicago on strike
   were rallying when Chicago police opened fire on the unarmed crowd,  
 killing several; newsreel footage of this incident was withheld because
   officials feared it would be incendiary.
C)    Temporary
   National Economic Committee – formed  to study corporate power and   
obstacles to competition, with an eye to transforming the US economy
1)      Reinvigoration  of Antitrust Division in Justice Department
D)    Political
   realities – the broad vision advocated the National Economic 
Committee   lost out to efforts to regulate and stabilize the economy 
through tax   measures and spending policies, rather than the 
redistribution of  wealth  and/or limiting corporate power
1)      Greater
   corporate opposition – corporate executives lobbied strenuously  
against  these timid efforts of greater regulation of the economy.
E)     New  Deal in the South
1)      New
   Deal programs reinforced Southern hierarchy – rather than transcend  
 social relations in the South (a difficult task), Roosevelt’s New Deal 
  policies reinforced many of these social relations, leaving the 
southern   aristocrats (heirs of the Bourbons) in control.
(a)    Southern
   political power – fewer than 10% of the adult population voted in   
elections in Virginia and Mississippi, through the use of poll taxes and
   other means to keep voter turnout low, and southern aristocrats in   
control
2)      1938
   Congressional Elections – in 1938, FDR attempts to jump start his New
   Deal programs by campaigning vigorously on the behalf of   
supporters—which did not include many old-line southern democrats or any
   Republicans.
(a)    Failure
  of “realignment” plan – backlash from  the worsening economic 
situation  (the Roosevelt Recession), the  political fallout from the 
court-packing  proposal, and the apparent  social unrest typified by the
 Flint Sit-Down  Strike (and the hundreds  of like-minded strikes that 
it inspired)  probably doomed this plan to  failure; without serious 
reform of the  southern electoral system (see  above), it had no chance 
of success in  that region anyway.
3)      Dixiecrat/Republican
   alliance – although they were not calling themselves Dixiecrats yet, 
  southern Democrats often cooperated with Republicans after this 
election   to stall New Deal programs.
II)                  Labor
  Divided – the success of the infant CIO inspired the AFL  to begin a  
vigorous organizing campaign of its own; in fact, the AFL  gained more  
members during this time period than did the CIO.  Rather  than  
cooperation between the two bodies, however, there was a great  deal of 
 animosity between leaders of the two bodies.
A)    AFL/CIO  rivalry
1)      Raiding
   – both organizations set up rival unions to attempt to steal members 
  that the other group had already organized; this allowed some 
employers   to play rival groups against each other, to the detriment of
   rank-and-file members.
2)      AFL
   attacks on NLRB – the AFL attacked decisions handed down by the   
National Labor Relations Board (which had been set up to adjudicate   
labor disputes arising from organizing drives, as well as disputes   
between unions and management) as favoring the CIO; this dispute finally
   forced Roosevelt to appoint new board members, who stressed the   
importance of stability and validity of craft union claims, which of   
course was the AFL’s position.
3)      House
   Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) – also known as the Dies  
 Committee, after its chair; the un-American activities it was looking 
to   root out were any kind of left-wing political activities, in  
particular  Communism.  Because the CIO leadership in a variety of  
unions was  people by Communists, suspected Communists, and Communist   
“sympathizers,” which the more conservative leaders of the AFL hated   
anyway, they saw denouncing these leaders to the Dies Committee as a way
   of promoting their own causes.
III)              Roosevelt
   turns to internationalism – the growing international crisis during  
the  latter 1930s gained more and more of Roosevelt’s attention as his  
New  Deal policies began stalling; Roosevelt’s background left him   
well-prepared to handle this problem, as well.
A)    Threat
   of Fascism – the world-wide economic crisis of the 1930s led many   
countries to experiment with new forms of government; one of the most   
popular was what we call fascism
1)      Definition
   of fascism – government control of all aspects of life, promising a  
 “third way” between Marxism and capitalism, emphasizing the organic   
national community; it glorified war and violence; it embraced the   
irrational (like the occult), and the presumption of revolutionary   
change.
B)     Italy
1)      Rise  of Mussolini
(a)    Fascism
  – rigid, one-party rule which crushes  opposition (especially on the  
left), retention of private ownership of  means of production (which  
differentiates it from the tenets of  Marxism), but which operates under
  centralized government control;  belligerent nationalism (and 
sometimes  racism); and the glorification  of war.
(b)   Il
   Duce (the leader) – former socialist; appealed to Italian 
nationalism,   and played upon the perceived slights to Italy from its 
participation on   the First World War.
(c)    Invasion
   of Ethiopia – the last independent state on the continent of Africa 
in   the 1930s, but it received no help from other countries to fight of
   Italian aggression.
C)    Germany
1)      National  Socialism (Nazi)
(a)    Hostile to all forms of democracy
(b)   Rise  of Adolph Hitler
(i)                  Appeals to  pride in German culture
(ii)                 Racism
  – believed in the “natural” superiority of the “Aryan”  race (whatever
  that is); racism was a much more important ideology for  German 
fascists  than it was for Italians.
(iii)               Compare
   Nazi ideas of the superiority of Aryans to the belief (backed by   
scientific “proof”) that Anglo-Saxons were destined by biology to rule  
 the earth.
(c)    Burning
   of the Reichstag – fire of suspicious origin (which has been probably
   rightly been blamed on the Nazis) destroyed the meeting place for the
   equivalent of the German congress, which then did not meet any 
longer.
(d)   Kristallnach  (November 9-10, 1938) – Nazis burned over 200 synagogues, and looted  thousands of Jewish-owned stores
(i)                   Signaled the beginning of a more aggressive anti-Semitism on the  part of the German government
(ii)                 Point
  of comparison – until Kristallnach, Jews in Germany  suffered less  
discrimination in that country than they suffered in the  United   
States  (no restrictions on residence, or clubs they could not  join).
(e)    Repudiation
   of the Versailles Treaty – moved arms into the de-militarized Ruhr   
 Valley, also began claiming the right to “lebensraum” or living space, 
  pieces of land that Hitler thought other European powers would not go 
to   war to prevent him from claiming.
D)    Japan
1)      Greater
   East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere – to ensure Japan’s continued access 
to   raw materials to run their industries, forced on other East Asian  
 countries by the military power of Japan.
(a)    Invasion
   of Manchuria – Manchuria lies between China and Russian Siberia, and 
  had traditionally been part of China; had the richest deposit of   
minerals in Asia.
(b)   1937
  Sino-Japanese War – the “Rape of Nanking”  which resulted in 300,000  
deaths of Chinese civilians; numerous women  were carted off to serve as
  “pleasure girls” (prostitutes for the  Japanese army—a practice which 
 they also practiced in other areas in  Asia)
2)      Racist  stereotyping
(a)    Japanese
  superiority – Japanese thought that  the Chinese were an inferior  
people, who gave them the rights to  dominate; in the Japanese view,  
westerners like the US and British were  decadent westerners who would  
crumble when confronted by the pure  Japanese spirit.
(b)   US
  racism – US saw Chinese has helpless  peasants, largely incapable of  
self-government; the Japanese, on the  other hand, were the “yellow  
peril,” devious, and set upon ruining the  West by exporting their cheap
  goods, and not buying enough western  goods.
E)     Spanish
   Civil War – the Spanish Civil War served as a surrogate battle 
between   fascist and communist forces, with the fascist forces 
prevailing.
F)     Isolationism
   – the foreign policies of the US government had long promoted   
isolationism from foreign entanglements, and this; although this had   
begun to dissipate, it had not disappeared.
1)      US  Senate rejected membership in the World Court


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