ER
resigned from the offices she held in the Democratic Party
when FDR
became governor of New York to protect FDR from possible
political embarrassment; however, she continued to exert
her influence in the party and within the powerful network
of women with which she was now allied. She retained complete
editorial control over Women's Democratic News
even though her name was removed from its masthead. She
helped secure Frances
Perkins' appointment as industrial relations commissioner
and worked to have more women appointed
to government
positions.
Convinced
that former Governor
Al Smith wanted to run the party, she persuaded FDR
to keep his key aides at a distance. She remained active
in labor issues, working with the
WTUL and supporting the International
Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU) when they struck
a popular Fifth Avenue hatmaker. At FDR's request she
represented
him at Democratic Party gatherings around the state and
accompanied him on inspection tours of hospitals, prisons,
and other state institutions. Also, at FDR's request, she
served as his emissary when he wanted to rein in the Tammany
Hall machine.
She continued to write, lecture, and help run the
Val-Kill furniture factory. She also continued the teaching
she loved at the Todhunter
School. She spent the first few days of each week teaching
in Manhattan, returning on Wednesdays to fulfill her role
as the governor's wife. Because of her growing reputation
as a person interested in helping other people, ER received
many letters asking for assistance. She began a habit that
would continue throughout FDR's governorship and presidency:
she referred the letters to an appropriate government official
or agency, often answering many of them herself, or occasionally
passing them on to FDR with a note asking his advice or
recommending action.