The Great Depression
Voices of Protest

Huey Long was an indomitable force who campaigned tirelessly for the common man during the Great Depression. He demanded that Americans "Share the Wealth".
Despite the unprecedented actions taken in his first year in office, Roosevelt's initial relief programs could often be quite conservative. He had usually been careful to work within the bounds of presidential authority and congressional cooperation. And, unlike Europe, where several nations had turned toward state-run economies, and even fascism and socialism, Roosevelt's New Deal demonstrated a clear reluctance to radically tinker with the nation's foundational economic and social structures. Many high-profile critics attacked Roosevelt for not going far enough, and, beginning in 1934, Roosevelt and his advisors were forced to respond.
Senator Huey Long, a flamboyant Democrat from Louisiana, was perhaps the most important "voice of protest". Long's populist rhetoric appealed to those who saw deeply rooted but easily addressed injustice in the nation's economic system. Long proposed a Share Our Wealth program in which the federal government would confiscate the assets of the extremely wealthy and redistribute them to the less well-off through guaranteed minimum incomes. "How many men ever went to a barbecue and would let one man take off the table what's intended for nine-tenths of the people to eat?" he asked.
Over 27,000 Share the Wealth clubs sprang
up across the nation as Long traveled the country explaining his
program to crowds of impoverished and unemployed Americans. Long
envisioned the movement as a stepping-stone to the presidency, but his
crusade ended in late 1935 when he was assassinated on the floor of the
Louisiana state capitol. Even in death, however, Long convinced
Roosevelt to more stridently attack the Depression and American
inequality.
But Huey Long was not alone in his critique of
Roosevelt. Francis Townsend, a former doctor and public health official
from California, promoted a plan for old-age pensions which, he argued,
would provide economic security for the elderly (who disproportionately
suffered poverty) and encourage recovery by allowing older workers to
retire from the workforce. Reverend Charles Coughlin, meanwhile, a
priest and radio personality from the suburbs of Detroit, Michigan,
gained a following by making vitriolic, anti-Semitic attacks on
Roosevelt for cooperating with banks and financiers and proposing a new
system of "social justice" through a more state-driven economy instead.
Like Long, both Townsend and Coughlin built substantial public
followings.
If many Americans urged Roosevelt to go further in
addressing the economic crisis, the president faced even greater
opposition from conservative politicians and business leaders. By late
1934, complaints increased from business-friendly Republicans about
Roosevelt's willingness to regulate industry and use federal spending
for public works and employment programs. In the South, Democrats who
had originally supported the president grew more hostile toward programs
that challenged the region's political, economic, and social status
quo. Yet the greatest opposition came from the Supreme Court, filled
with conservative appointments made during the long years of Republican
presidents.
By early 1935 the Court was reviewing programs of the
New Deal. On May 27, a day Roosevelt's supporters called Black Monday,
the justices struck down one of the president's signature reforms: in a
case revolving around poultry processing, the Court unanimously declared
the NRA unconstitutional. In early 1936, the AAA fell.58