Describe the coalition of critics that opposed New Deal reforms. What was the variety of motivations behind the groups and individuals who expressed these criticisms?

What will be an ideal response?


Answer: The ideal answer should include:
1. The critics on the left included communists and socialists, along with people like William Lemke.
2. Those on the left argued that the government needed to do more to help laborers and farmers who had lost their land and those who had been ignored, like African Americans.
3. On the right there were groups like the Liberty League who said the New Deal had gone too far.
4. Those on the right said that the government was spending too much.
5. There were also those who said that the wrong people were being targeted (these critics included Charles Coughlin) and those who said that a more radical approach was needed (these included Francis Townsend and Huey Long).

History

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Which European nation had the first direct contact with China since Marco Polo?

a. Portugal b. Spain c. the Dutch Republic d. Russia e. England

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The sole communist leader of Eastern Europe who refused to compromise communist ideals was _______________

What will be an ideal response?

History

Do parents' ideologies about gender roles influence their children's behavior? Cite evidence to support your answer.

Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).

History

What was the relationship between the civil rights movement and the labor union movement during the 1940s?

a. Civil rights organizations generally distanced themselves from labor activism, which they regarded as a needless distraction, and even dangerously radical. b. Despite efforts by civil rights organizations to encourage the unionization of black workers, the entrenched racism of the industrial workplace proved too strong to overcome. c. Labor unions often worked closely with civil rights organizations, and also provided early training in the forms of mass protest which would be employed in the later civil rights movement. d. The civil rights movement and the labor union movement were actively hostile toward each other because each movement saw the other as an obstacle against desired change.

History