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Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order | Gary Gerstle

Hidden Forces

NOTE

The Influence of Populism, Progressivism, and the New Deal on Roosevelt's Language

Populism and progressivism of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as the New Deal, profoundly influenced Roosevelt's language and rhetoric. He framed economic elites as 'mal factors of great wealth' and 'Tories,' drawing on the American Revolutionary War to convey the need to strip them of power. Roosevelt used the founding story of the American Republic to emphasize that the concentration of wealth and power was a form of tyranny meant to be eliminated by the American Revolution and the Constitution. While the founding fathers were primarily concerned with political tyranny, Roosevelt modified this in the 1930s, asserting that the nation now faced economic tyranny. He proposed that the nation's heritage and founding moment could guide the establishment of a republic that successfully eradicated economic tyranny as it had political tyranny in the 18th century.

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