David T. Beito’s FDR: A New Political Life offers a bracing, deeply researched, and welcome reassessment of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, one that decisively breaks with the hagiographic tradition that has dominated twentieth century American historiography. The book’s central thesis is clear and consistently sustained: far from being a reluctant savior who rescued the nation from economic collapse and foreign aggression, Roosevelt was a highly ambitious political operator whose domestic and wartime policies entrenched executive power, prolonged economic dislocation, eroded civil liberties, and...
















