The New Deal
Explore the creation of Social Security in 1935, one of America's most transformative New Deal programs. Host James Hartley examines how Franklin Roosevelt and Frances Perkins developed this groundbreaking social insurance system during the Great Depression, fundamentally changing government's role in protecting citizens from economic uncertainty. Learn about the fierce political opposition, constitutional challenges, and the revolutionary three-pronged approach covering retirement, unemployment, and aid to dependent families. Discover how the program evolved from Ida May Fuller's first $22.54 payment in 1940 to become America's most popular government program. The episode covers the initial exclusions of agricultural and domestic workers, the program's expansion during and after World War II, and additions like disability insurance and Medicare. Social Security lifted millions of seniors from poverty and established a new social contract between government and citizens. This comprehensive look at Social Security's origins reveals how crisis-driven innovation created lasting change, transforming retirement security and proving government's potential for positive social impact while preserving individual dignity.
9 episodes
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