Teddy Roosevelt did. He was the one who came up with it. He thought it would help us get out of the great depression. [It was not Teddy Roosevelt. It was Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) who created The New Deal.]
The New Deal was a mix of legislative hit and miss actions but it did preserve the people's confidence in America's institutions and government. The relief measures of the New Deal were considered a success. FDR defended the acts under the New Deal as necessary measures. If one did not work, they simply tried something else. The fact that the government was doing "something" gave confidence to the people. FDR's Fireside Chats provided confidence and reassurance to many. Rural electrification, Social Security, insurance of bank accounts, protection for labor unions, and federal controls over the economy gave many a sense of security in the future and in the government. While there were some radical movements during the Great Depression, the faith Americans had in their system of government did not falter.
they though it was a important progams that will help people.
New Deal
To get more New Deal supporters on the Court.
Supporters of the New Jersey Plan called for a legeslature in which each state had one vote.
The New Deal.
The Great Compromise
The New Deal
apples
Federalists
I think you are confused. Jackson supporters accused Henry Clay of making a deal with John Quincy Adams in 1824. The supposed deal was that Clay got his supporters to support Adams for president over Jackson in exchange for which, Adams would appoint Clay his Secretary of State.
Thomas Bracken wrote God Defend New Zealand.
Federalists
Andrew Jackson was the first President to openly defend the custom of appointing supporters to federal office positions. Jackson believed in the spoils system, where political supporters were given government jobs as a reward for their loyalty and contributions to his campaign. This practice became known as the "spoils system" and was common during his presidency.