Especially when things only got marginally better for a great deal of the nation throughout his first four years.
Roosevelt was an amazing leader. But much of his leadership was rooted in his ability to inspire. Even when, in the 1930s, Americans still faced the prospects of unemployment and homelessness, they still had faith in Roosevelt.
A great deal of it was blind faith. A great deal of it was just hope that he knew what he was doing.
Even though at first it didn't appear things were getting much better.
In fact, in the second year of Roosevelt's second term, the United States was in a recession. Unemployment hit 26% (
http://www.nber.org/chapters/c2644.pdf">1).
But Americans didn't give up on his presidency. The a great deal of the left didn't, either.
Which is why I believe if Roosevelt were around today, that's exactly what would happen. They would've given up on him because for a good stretch of his administration, unemployment only decreased slightly throughout his first term - before again spiking during the recession of 1937.
Now imagine if unemployment rose to 20% nationally and then only fell slightly until another recession hit in 2012, spiking it back up to 26%.
Do you believe Pres. Obama would stand a chance at being re-elected that same year? Doubtful.
Not only did Roosevelt go on to win re-election with a high unemployment rate and a country still devastated by economic depression - he did it with the largest landslide in modern American history.
Much of his accomplishments were real. But it took a lot more blind faith to continue on with his presidency than even with what we're seeing today.
If only some liberals could see this.
Then maybe they'd understand the entire scope of this problem and realize that it's going to take more than just a year and a half to get the economy back to pre-2007 levels.
What's more is that if it is a depression we're in like so many on the left and right proclaim, then it's going to take even longer.
The Great Depression lasted almost four years. The Great Recession roughly a little less than two years.
And that doesn't count the 1937 recession, which could be considered one of the worst recessions of the 20th Century. But since it happened in the shadows of the Great Depression, it was an afterthought.