President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed a program called the New Deal that implemented relief, recovery and reform policies to the U.S from 1933 to 1939. These polices can be described as aims to solve the economic issues and social issues created by the Great Depression. Roosevelt pledged to help the American people recover from this depression during the Presidential campaign. For the first few years, he began to implement soup kitchens and shelter home across the nation for those who became homeless due to the depression. The government also, implemented new programs that helped those who were unemployed receive benefits or a new job including the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Eventually, the triple R’s took place and altered American society, but as time progressed, the main focus of the New Deal was recovery rather than relief and reform. The United States didn’t fully recover from the Depression till WWII when jobs became vacant and unemployed people began to aid in the war effort. A good portion of recovery was Roosevelt’s National Recovery Administration which regulated big business and corporations for fair…