I am not sure what you want to know. Franklin Roosevelt believed in big government and an extensive array of radically new programs to regulate banks, provide power to rural areas, provide jobs and supply a safety net for the elderly and disabled and other social and intrusive measures. Simply put , he believed that every social and economic problem could be solved by the federal government and should be.
At the Yalta Conference of 1945, the military situation favored Joseph Stalin. The Yalta Conference was the World War II meeting of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Premier Joseph Stalin to discuss Europe's post-war reorganization.
The New Deal program was the name of the policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt during the Great Depression. Some programs that the New Deal introduced were social security and the WPA.
Theodore Roosevelt
There is some debate as to what Benjamin Franklin's favorite invention was. However, some believe that he favored his glass harmonica.
because the Egyptians were reverent
I believe he owned a donkey which he favored
No they didnt. The they favored business men and merchants. The democrats favored the farmers.
Actually, Roosevelt's policies were similar to Hoover's but more extreme, and even people from Roosevelt's administration later admitted that they developed some of their ideas from Hoover. Both presidents favored government intervention into the economy and it did not end the depression. Hoover's policies turned a recession into a depression, and Roosevelt's policies turned a short depression into a decade long debacle. The depression did not end until Roosevelt took the US into World War II, when virtually the whole country was in a wartime economy. It is a common misconception that Hoover favored "free-market" policies. His Republican predecessors, Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge did favor free market policies, and the result was the "roaring 20's" which was a period of economic prosperity. So to answer the question, Roosevelt's policies did not so much break from Hoover's, they only expanded upon them and kept the depression going.
government supervision of business
If you have one, it's a plan of action. If you have several, they are plans of action (or action plans).Republicans favored high tariffs while democrats favored low tarrifs ??
Actually, Roosevelt's policies were similar to Hoover's but more extreme, and even people from Roosevelt's administration later admitted that they developed some of their ideas from Hoover. Both presidents favored government intervention into the economy and it did not end the depression. Hoover's policies turned a recession into a depression, and Roosevelt's policies turned a short depression into a decade long debacle. The depression did not end until Roosevelt took the US into World War II, when virtually the whole country was in a wartime economy. It is a common misconception that Hoover favored "free-market" policies. His Republican predecessors, Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge did favor free market policies, and the result was the "roaring 20's" which was a period of economic prosperity. So to answer the question, Roosevelt's policies did not so much break from Hoover's, they only expanded upon them and kept the depression going.
Actually, Roosevelt's policies were similar to Hoover's but more extreme, and even people from Roosevelt's administration later admitted that they developed some of their ideas from Hoover. Both presidents favored government intervention into the economy and it did not end the depression. Hoover's policies turned a recession into a depression, and Roosevelt's policies turned a short depression into a decade long debacle. The depression did not end until Roosevelt took the US into World War II, when virtually the whole country was in a wartime economy. It is a common misconception that Hoover favored "free-market" policies. His Republican predecessors, Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge did favor free market policies, and the result was the "roaring 20's" which was a period of economic prosperity. So to answer the question, Roosevelt's policies did not so much break from Hoover's, they only expanded upon them and kept the depression going.