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President Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in 1933, in the depths of the Great Depression. To quickly alleviate immediate human needs for food and shelter as well as to stabilize the economy, Roosevelt created many new and innovative programs, known collectively as the New Deal. The New Deal programs were generally passed easily and quickly in Congress, especially in FDR's first 100 days in office. However, many of the programs, including the National Industrial Recovery Act, the Railroad Retirement Act, and the Agricultural Adjustment Act, were then struck down by the Supreme Court as exceeding the powers granted to the federal government under the U.S. Constitution.

After FDR's overwhelming victory in the 1936 Presidential election, he felt confident in proposing legislation that in effect would allow him to counter the negative opinion of New Deal reforms by the current Supreme Court. Although there were other judicial reforms in the bill, the crucial provision was one which would have allowed the President to appoint an additional member to the Supreme Court for every sitting justice over the age of 70, which would have resulted in a total of six new justices at the time the bill was introduced. This bill was referred to negatively as the "court-packing plan".

Of course, FDR's concern was not about the age of the justices but about his frustration with their conservative interpretation of the Constitution about the role of the national government. At the time FDR announced his plan, only one of the Justices on the Supreme Court (Harlan Stone) had been appointed by FDR. Two had been appointed by Woodrow Wilson, a Democrat, but a strong majority (six out of nine) had been appointed by conservative Republican Presidents Taft, Harding and Hoover. Not all of the Justices voted in accordance with the views of the president who had appointed them, but there was a consistent majority voting to strike down New Deal legislation. By adding more justices of his own choosing who adhered to his broader view of federal powers under the Constitution, FDR planned to create a Supreme Court with a majority in favor of his innovative programs.

To FDR's surprise, his plan was sharply criticized not only by lawyers and legislators, but also the public. People understood that in fact FDR was seeking to control the Supreme Court, which under the Constitution was supposed to be a co-equal branch of the federal government. Public support for the plan existed was eroded further by the publishing of a Supreme Court opinion (on a case decided before the court-packing plan was announced), upholding Washington state's Minimum Wage law, and then by the retirement of Justice Van Devanter in June of 1937, allowing FDR to appoint a Justice more compatible with his views.

FDR's "court-packing plan" was never passed into law.

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14y ago

President Roosevelt attempted to pack the Court with justices who supported his New Deal legislation by proposing to add one new justice for each sitting justice over the age of 70.5, to a maximum of six (for a total of 15 justices). Congress thwarted his unconstitutional court-packing plan by stripping Roosevelt's draft legislation from the judiciary bill.

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12y ago

Roosevelt planned to add more justices to the US Supreme Court to dilute the votes of the justices who opposed New Deal legislation.

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President Roosevelt drafted the "Judiciary Reorganization Bill (Act) of 1937" aka "Court-packing Plan" to add members to the Supreme Court. Roosevelt called the conservative Court the "nine old men," and was frustrated by the fact that they overturned much of his New Deal legislation as unconstitutional.

In Roosevelt's plan, the President could nominate one new justice for each sitting justice over the age of 70.5, up to a maximum of six new justices. Roosevelt hoped to create a more liberal Court that would support New Deal legislation.

Although Congress stripped the court-packing provisions from the bill, Roosevelt eventually got to replace eight of the nine justices, and succeeded in creating a more progressive Supreme Court.

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12y ago

FDR proposed a plan to add a new justice for each Supreme Court Justice over 70 years of age and increase the size of the Court up to 15. This would give the President the power to "pack the court" with justices who would support the New Deal. Reaction in both Congress and the nation at large was hostile. FDR's plan was considered to be tampering with the Constitution and the separation of powers.

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12y ago

he wanted to add up to six new judges to the court

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11y ago

make a bill that placed more justices on the Supreme Court

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Q: What did President Franklin D. Roosevelt attempt to do to the US Supreme Court when they opposed the New Deal?
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To many people president Franklin Roosevelt's attempt to reorganize the supreme court threatened?

checks and balances


Which action is often viewed as the most serious attempt to undermine the independence to the judiciary?

President Franklin D. Roosevelt's plan to reorganize the supreme court


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make a bill that placed more justices on the Supreme Court


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Supreme Court of the United States For more information, see Related Questions, below.


Do you agree with Congress' decision to stop President Roosevelt's court-packing bill?

Yes. President Roosevelt's attempt to pack the Supreme Court represented an unconstitutional violation of the separation of powers, and would have given him almost dictatorial control over the federal government.


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Franklin D Roosevelt was not successful in his efforts to impose new taxes on corporate savings in 1936. It was rejected by Congress. His attempt to win the US Senate seat for New York in 1914 failed too.


Was the New Deal under Franklin D. Roosevelt an attempt to abuse presidential power?

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What was the effect of president Roosevelt's attempt the balance the federal budget?

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