Second and Third Sessions of the Seventy-fifth Congress, 1937–38*
O. R. Altman
American Political Science Review, 1938, vol. 32, issue 6, 1099-1123
Abstract:
The election returns of November, 1936, seemed to portray a democracy strongly united behind a leader and a program of action. It appeared that Franklin D. Roosevelt and his New Deal platform had been endorsed by nearly every interest and section in the United States, and an overwhelmingly Democratic Congress selected to enact into law those principles for which he “had just begun to fight.” Within six months, however, that unity started to disintegrate. Congress began to dissect carefully the program which the President proclaimed to be both beneficial for the entire country and politically prudent for the political party which he headed.
Date: 1938
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