Key Takeaways: The “Fair Deal”
- The “Fair Deal” was an aggressive agenda for social reform legislation proposed by President Harry Truman in January 1949.
- Truman had initially referred to this progressive domestic policy reform program as his “21-Points” plan after taking office in 1945.
- While Congress rejected many of Truman’s Fair Deal proposals, those that were enacted would pave the way for important social reform legislation in the future.
In his State of the Union Address, President Truman told Congress that that, “Every segment of our population, and every individual, has a right to expect from his government a fair deal.” The “Fair Deal” set of social reforms Truman spoke of continued and built on the New Deal progressivism of President Franklin Rooseveltand would represent the last major attempt by the Executive Branch to create new federal social programs until President Lyndon Johnson proposed his Great Societyprogram in 1964.
Opposed by the “conservative coalition” that controlled Congress from 1939 to 1963, only a handful of Truman’s Fair Deal initiatives actually became law. A few of the major proposals that were debated, but voted down, included federal aid to education, the creation of a Fair Employment Practices Commission, repeal of the Taft–Hartley Act limiting the power of labor unions, and the provision of universal health insurance.
The conservative coalition was a group of Republicans and Democrats in Congress who generally opposed increasing the size and power of the federal bureaucracy. They also denounced labor unions and argued against most new social welfare programs.
Despite the opposition of the conservatives, liberal lawmakers managed to win approval of some of the less controversial measures of the Fair Deal.
History of the Fair Deal
President Truman first gave notice that he would pursue a liberal domestic program as early as September 1945. In his first postwar address to Congress as president, Truman laid out his ambitious “21-Points” legislative program for economic development and expansion of social welfare.
Truman’s 21-Points, several of which still resonate today, included:
- Increases to the coverage and amount of the unemployment compensation system
- Increase the coverage and amount of the minimum wage
- Control the cost of living in a peacetime economy
- Eliminate federal agencies and regulations created during World War II
- Enact laws ensure full employment
- Enact a law making the Fair Employment Practice Committee permanent
- Ensure sound and fair industrial relations
- Require the U.S. Employment Service to provide jobs for former military personnel
- Increase federal assistance to farmers
- Ease restrictions on voluntary enlistment in the armed services
- Enact broad, comprehensive and non-discriminatory fair housing laws
- Establish a single federal agency dedicated to research
- Revise the income tax system
- Encourage the disposal through sale of surplus government property
- Increase federal assistance for small businesses
- Improve federal assistance to war veterans
- Emphasize conservation and protection of natural in federal public works programs
- Encourage foreign post-war reconstruction and settlements of Roosevelt’s Lend-Lease Act
- Increase wages of all federal government employees
- Promote the sale of surplus wartime U.S. naval vessels
- Enact laws to grow and retain stockpiles of materials essential to the future defense of the nation
Expecting lawmakers to take the lead in drafting the bills necessary to implement his 21-Points, Truman did not send them to Congress.
Focused at the time on dealing with rampant inflation, the transition to a peacetime economy, and the growing threat of Communism, Congress had little time for Truman’s social welfare reform initiatives.
Despite the delays and opposition from the conservative Republican majority in Congress, Truman persisted, continuing to send them an ever-increasing number of proposals for progressive legislation. By 1948, the program that had begun as the 21-Points had come to be known as the “Fair Deal.”
After his historically unexpected victory over Republican Thomas E. Dewey in the 1948 election, President Truman repeated his social reform proposals to Congress referring to them as the “Fair Deal.”
Highlights of Truman’s Fair Deal
Some of the major social reform initiatives of President Truman’s Fair Deal included:
- A national health insurance plan
- Federal aid to education
- Abolition of poll taxes and other practices intended to prevent racial minorities from voting
- A major tax cut for low-income workers
- Expanded Social Security coverage
- A farm assistance program
- Expansion of public housing programs
- A substantial increase in the minimum wage
- Repeal of the labor union-weakening Taft-Hartley Act
- A new TVA-style program to create public works projects
- Creation of a federal Department of Welfare
To pay for his Fair Deal programs while reducing the national debt, Truman also proposed a $4 billion tax increase.
The Legacy of the Fair Deal
Congress rejected most of Truman’s Fair Deal initiatives for two main reasons:
- Opposition from members of the majority-holding conservative coalition in Congress who viewed the plan as advancing President Roosevelt’s New Deal’s effort to achieve what they considered to be a “democratic socialist society.”
- In 1950, barely a year after Truman proposed the Fair Deal, the Korean War shifted the government’s priorities from domestic to military spending.
Despite these roadblocks, Congress did approve a few or Truman’s Fair Deal initiatives. For example, the National Housing Act of 1949 funded a program removing crumbling slums in poverty-stricken areas and replacing them with 810,000 new federally rent-assisted public housing units. And in 1950, Congress nearly doubled the minimum wage, raising it from 40 cents per hour to 75 cents per hour, an all-time record 87.5% increase.
While it enjoyed little legislative success, Truman’s Fair Deal was significant for many reasons, perhaps most notably its establishment of a demand for universal health insurance as a permanent part of the Democratic Party’s platform. President Lyndon Johnson credited the Fair Deal as being essential to the passage of his Great Society health care measures such as Medicare.