The New Deal witnessed an increased role for intellectuals
in government. The Brains Trust, a term coined by James
Kieran, a New York Times reporter, refers to the
group of academic advisers that FDR
gathered to assist him during the 1932 presidential campaign.
Initially, the term applied to three Columbia University
professors: Raymond Moley, Rexford
Guy Tugwell, and Adolph A. Berle, Jr. Within a few
months, Basil ("Doc") O'Connor, Samuel I. Rosenman, and
Hugh Johnson would join the group. These men would quickly
help FDR develop
an economic plan whose programs became the backbone of
the New Deal: regulation of bank and stock activity,
large scale relief and public works programs for people
living
in both urban and rural areas.
Moley, a professor of government and law who recruited
the group, argued that a regressive tax (a flat tax
all
citizens
pay: sales taxes, a flat tax on specific amount of salary,
etc.) was the only way to rebuild the economy. Tugwell
shaped
much of the administration's agricultural policy, believing
that the key to
easing
some of the
depression's
hardships
lay in the ability of the federal government to
address the growing imbalance between wages and prices.
However,
Berle
rejected
the
idea
of a planned economy per se, but suggested a "new economic
constitutional order," that would include a larger federal
role in the balancing of the economy.
In their first one hundred days in office, the Brains
Trust helped Roosevelt enact fifteen major laws. One of
the most important initiatives was the Banking Act of 1933,
which put an end to the banking panic. After the Brains
Trust defended its reform recovery program in 1933, it disbanded
to make room for other advisers and lawyers capable of legislative
draftsmanship.
Sources:
Graham, Otis L., Jr. and Meghan Robinson Wander. Franklin
D. Roosevelt, His Life and Times. New York: Da
Capo Press, 1985, 40-41.
Kennedy, David. Freedom From Fear: The American People
in Depression and War, 1929-1945. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1999, 119-124.
Leuchtenburg, William E. The FDR Years: On Roosevelt
and His Legacy. New York: Columbia University Press,
1995, 230, 244.
For more information of the Brains Trust, visit
the following web sites:
- "The
New Deal Years" in Franklin Delano Roosevelt: President
of the Century on the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt
Institute website