roosevelt had a teddy bear named after him so it refers to roosevelt.
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it didnt...roosevelt did not like laissez-faire he actually wanted to change that from President Hoover's time to being involved in businesses and the econmoy.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was mainly focused on defeating the incumbent president Herbert Hoover in the 1932 election. Roosevelt's campaign centered on addressing the economic hardships of the Great Depression, which had worsened under Hoover's administration. By promoting his New Deal policies aimed at relief and recovery, Roosevelt sought to garner support from those who were struggling and disillusioned with Hoover's leadership. Ultimately, Roosevelt won decisively, reflecting widespread desire for change.
Hoover was president immediately before Franklin Roosevelt.
Hoover was Republican; Roosevelt and Truman were Democrats.
Bank failures during Hoover's administration had left finance officials in need of rest
Herbert Hoover preceded Franklin Roosevelt.
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No. But after Franklin Roosevelt's administration established NARA (National Archives and Records Administration), presidents have had presidential libraries. There's a total of 12 libraries. Any president prior to Hoover's administration has a private company or local/state supporting the library.
Hoover
Hoover took a hands-off approach, and Roosevelt did the opposite.
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.