Brands’
biography is a mostly positive depiction of America’s 32nd
President. Born in 1882, Roosevelt was raised in a world of wealth and privilege. He grew up near presidential power, being a
cousin to Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt, America’s 26th
President. His mother, Sara Ann Delano
Roosevelt was
possessive and at times domineering.
In 1905
Roosevelt married his cousin, Eleanor
Roosevelt. In 1918, Eleanor discovered
that Franklin was having an affair. Afterward, she went on to have her own extramarital
relationships and the marriage become more of a partnership. Eleanor’s life is
in itself a fascinating story and Brands spends a good deal of pages exploring
it.
Roosevelt
worked his way up though both elected and appointed State and Federal
government as well as Democratic Party positions. After an unsuccessful bid for
Vice President in 1920, he contracted polio. The disease left him unable to
walk without artificial aids for the remainder of his life.
Undeterred
by the disability, Roosevelt was elected Governor of New York in 1929. After
the onset of the Great Depression, he was well positioned for a Presidential
victory in 1932. It is surprising that this great reformer was elected under a
relatively conservative platform.
President
Roosevelt shepherded America though the Great Depression. His “New Deal” was a
series of laws that fundamentally changed the United States and still resounds
into present times. Later, he was a key architect of the Allied victory in the
Second World War.
Brands’ book
is often very detailed. He provides a vivid account of Roosevelt’s life and career.
The New Deal legislation, as well as the men who helped Roosevelt to design and
implement it, are covered in intricate depth. The years leading up to and
through World War II are similarly explored.
This book is
not without some weaknesses, however. I found it slightly frustrating that, for
all its attention to detail, in some aspects this biography seems to skim over
key details and provides a weak analysis of certain important controversies and
topics.
For
instance, there is a somewhat heated debate these days concerning whether or
not Roosevelt’s policies ended and/or ameliorated the Depression. Brands skirts
around this issue. He does provide accounts of various Roosevelt Administration
officials’ opinions and analyses of this question, but fails to provide
detailed statistics or economic or objective political analysis to help
understand it. In the book’s conclusion, Brands devotes a few paragraphs to the
subject but I would have appreciated a little more space dedicated earlier on
to the issue.
A similar
treatment is accorded to the argument, which I call a myth, that in 1945 during
the Yalta conference between Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin, that Roosevelt
somehow gave away Eastern Europe to the Soviet Union. Brands does explain
Roosevelt’s actions at the conference in a positive light and hints at the
controversy. I feel that there was room for a more in-depth analysis here as
well.
Likewise,
Brands poorly handles what was the darkest moment of the Roosevelt
administration, the treatment of Japanese Americans during World War II. After
the Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor, Americans of Japanese descent, who were born
in the United States and who were American citizens, were rounded up and placed
into camps for the duration of the war. To add insult to injury, most of these
people had their homes, businesses and farms stolen by opportunistic neighbors
who took advantage of their fellow citizens’ misfortune. This outrage, directly
approved by Roosevelt, was one of the most egregious violations of the rights
of American citizens during the twentieth century. To my surprise, Brands devotes
only a few pages to this reprehensible, unconstitutional act. Furthermore,
while conceding that it was prompted by hysteria, Brands almost excuses
Roosevelt’s decisions here as occurring under the pressures of war.
Regardless
of these flaws, this is a solid account of Roosevelt and his life. The author
clearly portrays the fact that this President was one of the key makers of the
modern world. In the first days of his administration, Roosevelt took steps to
forestall the collapse of the American banking system. This bold and decisive
action may vary well have staved off a revolution in the United States (my
contention, not Brands’s). His New Deal Legislation changed the way that people
throughout the world thought of government. These policies expanded the size
and scope of government to unprecedented levels. It was characterized by
massive public works projects, the American Social Security system, and
government regulations in an entire host of areas such as finance, monetary
policy, labor relations, etc. Roosevelt
did not invent many of these initiatives; he did, however, put them together
into a package to forge what I would describe as a modern capitalistic
democracy with a government aimed at promoting the social good. Twenty-first
century democratic nations throughout the world are in part the legacy of
Roosevelt’s policies.
If helping
to invent the modern industrial and post industrial democracy was not enough, Roosevelt
played a key, and I would argue the most important role, of any individual in
defeating the Axis as well as shaping the postwar geo-political world. Well
before America’s entry into the Second World War, Roosevelt focused the massive
industrial production of the United States towards defeating the Axis. From
1937 on, Roosevelt began implementing a political and industrial strategy aimed
at supplying Great Britain, China and the Soviet Union with massive military
aid. This material assistance certainly changed the course of the war and
allowed these nations to hang on against the Axis onslaught. Simultaneously, he
maneuvered the United States into a policy of confrontation with Germany, Italy
and Japan. By the time the war broke out, conflict between the United States
and the Axis powers was inevitable. Of course, after the United States’ entry
into the war, Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin were the prime movers of allied
strategy that led to the eventual defeat of the Axis. Though he did not live to
see the post war world, he was instrumental in creating much of it. He championed
the founding of the United Nations and firmly established the concept of an
active and engaged American foreign policy that so affected the globe in the
ensuing decades.
I must admit
that I cannot discuss Roosevelt without being a little defensive. Though I certainly
recognize the man’s shortcomings and believe that, like most major world
leaders, he did some terrible things, I have an admiration as well as a little
bit of a defense instinct for this President. This protective tendency on my
part is the result of living at a time and in a nation where Roosevelt’s
reputation as well as legacy are under attack by forces of the political far right.
I must agree with Brands’ comment regarding the critics of the time,
“the objective and honest of those
who had once denounced Roosevelt for class betrayal recognized that in a decade
rife with fascists, militarists, and communists abroad and irresponsible
demagogues at home, he was the best thing that could have happened to them."
If one wants
to understand the modern world and how it got to be the way it is, then one must
understand Roosevelt and his administration. It can be argued that this man was
the most influential person of the twentieth century. As a student of history,
despite Roosevelt’s defects, I am in awe of his accomplishments. Though it is
difficult to say for certain how history would otherwise have played out, the
world may look very, very different today had he not become the American
President in 1932. This book is an informative and relatively complete account
of his life and accomplishments.