they favored big buisness
Favor big buisness over small
Theodore Roosevelt held a complex view of big business; he believed it could be a force for good if properly regulated. He advocated for fair competition and sought to curb monopolistic practices through antitrust actions, famously taking on trusts like Standard Oil and Northern Securities. Roosevelt aimed to balance the interests of business with those of consumers and workers, promoting the idea that government should intervene to prevent corporate abuses and ensure a level playing field. His approach, often termed "trust-busting," was a key aspect of his progressive legacy.
Teddy Roosevelt's corollary to the Monroe Doctrine revolved around big stick policy. The term originated from the phrase "Speak softly and carry a big stick." This is the idea of negotiating peacefully, simultaneously threatening with the "big stick", or the military. Roosevelt first used the phrase in a speech at the Minnesota State Fair on September 2, 1901, twelve days before the assassination of President McKinley, which subsequently thrust him into the Presidency.
This big.
Middle America: Panama, Cuba and Venezuela.
doing his buisness
big stick diplomacy
Speak softly but carry a big stick, which was Theodore Roosevelt's statement not his nephew Franklin's
William Howard Taft continued to attack on Rosevelts big business
Roosevelt introduced the Big Stick Diplomacy during 1901. "Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick."
The New Deal
tatics of big buisness leaders
Theodore Roosevelt's "Big Ditch" is the Panama Canal, which is in ... you guessed it ... Panama!
purchase of a French route for a canal in central America.
Theodore Roosevelt The gunboat(big stick) policy, which meant that if the US was threatened or wanted something, then it would use its army Franklin Delano Roosevelt The New Deal policy meant that if you gave an American money, then he/she would spend it check New Deal
they favored big buisness