asked 179k views
1 vote
Gorgia Gov Eugene Talmadge was supposed to the agricultural Act Why might Talmadge have been opposed to it

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

C. He believed the AAA was too much government control over farmers.

Step-by-step explanation:

Talmadge believed the AAA was too much government control over farmers. He was opposed to President Franklin Roosevelt's entire stable of "New Deal" programs, labeling them "Communist" efforts to extend government control over all people.

answered
User HungryBird
by
8.4k points
2 votes

The correct answer is C) He believed the AAA was too much government control over farmers.


As a way of raising long-depressed cotton prices, the Agricultural Adjustment Act established during Roosevelt's administration as part of his New Deal program, which was intended to pay farmers to plant less cotton as a mean of restricting the supply and increasing the price. Since Governor E. Talmadge considered increased federal spending and economic regulation wasn’t necessary, using this as an argument against the AAA.


answered
User Daniel Braun
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7.7k points
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