FDR and Chief Justice Hughes: The President, the Supreme Court, and the Epic Battle Over the New Deal [NOOK Book]

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Overview


The author of acclaimed books on the bitter clashes between presidents and chief justices—Jefferson and Marshall, Lincoln and Taney—over the character of the nation, constitutional power, slavery, secession and the president’s war powers, James F. Simon tells the dramatic story of the struggle between FDR and Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes that decided the fate of the New Deal.

The collision of Roosevelt and Hughes, like those of Jefferson and Marshall, Lincoln and Taney, occurred at a pivotal moment in American history. Roosevelt came to office in 1933 at the height of the Great Depression. He bombarded Congress with a fusillade of legislative ...

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Overview


The author of acclaimed books on the bitter clashes between presidents and chief justices—Jefferson and Marshall, Lincoln and Taney—over the character of the nation, constitutional power, slavery, secession and the president’s war powers, James F. Simon tells the dramatic story of the struggle between FDR and Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes that decided the fate of the New Deal.

The collision of Roosevelt and Hughes, like those of Jefferson and Marshall, Lincoln and Taney, occurred at a pivotal moment in American history. Roosevelt came to office in 1933 at the height of the Great Depression. He bombarded Congress with a fusillade of legislative initiatives that included shutting down insolvent banks, regulating stocks, imposing industrial codes, and rationing agricultural production. Major New Deal statutes, which Roosevelt considered critical to the nation’s economic recovery, were struck down by the Hughes Court as unconstitutional.

In 1936, FDR was reelected by a landslide and the exasperated president proposed legislation to relieve, he said, the overburdened and elderly justices of their heavy workload. He proposed the appointment of an additional justice for each sitting member over seventy years old. Six of the justices on the Hughes Court, including the Chief Justice, were over seventy. The proposal would have permitted the president to stack the Court with justices favorable to the New Deal. The Chief deftly rebutted the claim that the Court was not abreast of its work, and the proposal was defeated. In grudging admiration, FDR later said that the Chief Justice was the best politician in the country.

Despite the defeat of his plan, Roosevelt never lost confidence and, like Hughes, never ceded leadership. He outmaneuvered isolationist senators to expedite aid to Great Britain as the Allies hovered on the brink of defeat. He then led his country through the Second World War to become the greatest president of the twentieth century.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
This dramatic history illuminates the uniquely American conflict between constitutional reverence and popular politics. New York Law School prof Simon (Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney) spotlights the struggle between a conservative Court under Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, which struck down key New Deal measures in the 1930s, and a frustrated President Franklin Roosevelt, who counterattacked with a proposal to “pack” the Court with sympathetic appointees. Much of the book is a high-contrast dual biography of the two men—Roosevelt the impatient pragmatist, brushing aside legal restraints on federal action to drag the country out of the Depression; Hughes the Republican jurist, devoted to principle and precedent. Yet Simon’s colorful profiles show how much these adversaries shared—Hughes made his name investigating corporate malfeasance and supported civil rights, labor reforms, and welfare programs—and how both contributed to a revolution that demolished outdated constitutional dogmas while preserving constitutional forms. With the present-day Court poised to rule on health care reform amid controversies over the government’s power to address economic turmoil, Simon’s account of a very similar era is both trenchant and timely. 8 pages of b&w photos. (Feb. 7)
Library Journal
In this joint biography of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Charles Evans Hughes, who served as chief justice from 1930 to 1941, Simon (Martin Professor of Law, New York Law Sch.) thoroughly examines the personal and professional lives of both figures, focusing on the Supreme Court's opposition to the New Deal in its early years and Roosevelt's attempts to circumvent it. The court-packing plan that Roosevelt proposed would have increased the size of the court from nine to as many as 15 justices and mandated a retirement age of 70, which would have allowed the President to appoint justices sympathetic to the New Deal. Hughes and the conservatives on the court opposed the New Deal's regulation of private business, declaring the National Recovery Act and the Agricultural Adjustment Act unconstitutional. As the economy worsened and public opinion turned against the Court, Hughes attempted to compromise with Roosevelt to prevent him from meddling in the Court. Simon details these efforts, along with the key retirements that ended the court-packing controversy. VERDICT A well-executed study of a tumultuous period in American history, this book will appeal to enthusiasts of New Deal and Supreme Court history and to casual readers of biographies. [See Prepub Alert, 8/26/11.]—Becky Kennedy, Atlanta-Fulton P.L.
Kirkus Reviews
An instructive, vigorous account of FDR's attempt at court-packing, and the chief justice who weathered the storm with equanimity. Charles Evans Hughes (1862–1948) isn't one of the more studied justices, though he presided over the Supreme Court during the historic New Deal era, and enjoyed a long, fascinating career, as Simon (Emeritus/New York Law School, Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney, 2006, etc.) develops in depth. An adored only son of a minister who expected his son to pursue the ministry, Hughes went instead into law, eventually setting up a lucrative practice on Wall Street. He first gained an intellectually rigorous, high-minded reputation by taking on the utilities industry in New York; courted by the Republican party, he was elected governor, and first appointed to the Supreme Court by President Taft in 1910, only to resign to run for president in 1916, a campaign lost in favor of Woodrow Wilson. After serving as Secretary of State under President Harding, he was reappointed to the highest bench by President Hoover, this time as Chief Justice in 1930. Yet he proved to be no cardboard pro-business model, and when FDR was elected amid economic mayhem during the Great Depression, the court was split. FDR's emergency legislature during his 100 first days was challenged by the conservatives, precipitating one of FDR's worst blunders: a court reform proposal sent to Congress that would increase the number of justices and force retirement for the septuagenarians--as most of them were. "Shrieks of outrage" greeted the dictatorial proposal, which was resoundingly rejected by the Senate. However, Simon looks carefully at the change in court direction with the threats of reform, along with Hughes' own sense of consternation and later important decisions in the protection of civil rights--e.g., Gaines v. Canada. A fair assessment of Hughes' eminent career and an accessible, knowledgeable consideration of the important lawsuits of the era.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781416578895
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster
  • Publication date: 2/7/2012
  • Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
  • Format: eBook
  • Pages: 480
  • Sales rank: 161,479
  • File size: 3 MB

Meet the Author

James F. Simon is the Martin Professor of Law and Dean Emeritus at New York Law School. He is the author of six previous books on American history, law, and politics, including What Kind of Nation: Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States, and lives with his wife in West Nyack, New York.

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