Franklin D. Roosevelt Denies Communist Agenda and related media

  • Log out

Franklin D. Roosevelt Denies Communist Agenda (1:35)

Find out how Franklin D. Roosevelt responded to being called a communist by his detractors during his 1936 presidential campaign.

Watch Similar Videos

  • This video can be viewed when you log in with your TV provider.

    Select your TV provider to log in to have full access to videos

    • Select your TV provider
    • See More Providers
    Don't see your TV provider? Learn more

Your Parental Control settings do not allow you to view thiscontent.

Related Videos (10)

  • Franklin D. Roosevelt Denies Communist Agenda
    Franklin D. Roosevelt Denies Communist Agenda

    Video Clip (1:35)

    Find out how Franklin D. Roosevelt responded to being called a communist by his detractors during his 1936 presidential campaign.

    Video Clip (1:35)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt's Personal Strength
    Franklin D. Roosevelt's Personal Strength

    Video Clip (3:21)

    How did Franklin D. Roosevelt's flexibility and charisma help him tackle the challenges of his presidency?

    Video Clip (3:21)
  • John F. Kennedy and the TVA
    John F. Kennedy and the TVA

    Video Clip (1:24)

    President Kennedy is forced to improvise a stump speech in Tennessee, after discovering that his speech didn't make the trip.

    Video Clip (1:24)
  • Eisenhower Defeats Stevenson
    Eisenhower Defeats Stevenson

    Video Clip (1:51)

    Eisenhower defeats Adlai Stevenson to become the 33rd President.

    Video Clip (1:51)
  • Republicans Nominate Eisenhower
    Republicans Nominate Eisenhower

    Video Clip (2:18)

    Watch as General Dwight D. Eisenhower becomes the Republican nominee for President, in this History Channel video. He adds Richard Nixon as his running mate in this presidential race. Nixon was the youngest VP candidate in history.

    Video Clip (2:18)
  • Don't Ask Don't Tell
    Don't Ask Don't Tell

    Video Clip (1:01)

    Ted Sorensen, JFK's 1960 Campaign speechwriter, tells the story of a congratulatory misunderstanding on the campaign trail.

    Video Clip (1:01)
  • McGovern, Beatty, and Emerson
    McGovern, Beatty, and Emerson

    Video Clip (1:33)

    Bob Shrum, staff member of George McGovern's 1972 Campaign, tells the story of Warren Beattys speech writing duties on the McGovern campaign.

    Video Clip (1:33)
  • Campaign Spot: Ice Cream (1964)
    Campaign Spot: Ice Cream (1964)

    Video Clip (1:00)

    Another in the series of LBJs spots against Barry Goldwater. Ice Cream first aired on Saturday, September 12, 1964, days after the broadcast of the controversial Peace Little Girl/Daisy ad.

    Video Clip (1:00)
  • Campaign Spot: Jimmy Carter's Bio (1976)
    Campaign Spot: Jimmy Carter's Bio (1976)

    Video Clip (4:24)

    Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter was a Washington outsider, a position he stressed during his campaign.

    Video Clip (4:24)
  • Campaign Spot: Kennedy, Kennedy (1960)
    Campaign Spot: Kennedy, Kennedy (1960)

    Video Clip (1:01)

    This 1960 campaign spot makes use of JFK's relative youth and a repetitious jingle.

    Video Clip (1:01)

Related Speeches & Audio (10)

  • Lyndon Johnson's Inaugural Address
    Lyndon Johnson's Inaugural Address

    Audio Clip (2:02)

    On January 20, 1965, Lyndon B. Johnson began his first elected term as president of the United States. In his inaugural address, Johnson calls for the nation to unite toward a common goal.

    Audio Clip (2:02)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt Accepts Fourth Term Nomination
    Franklin D. Roosevelt Accepts Fourth Term Nomination

    Audio Clip (2:08)

    Broadcast from a Pacific coast naval base to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Illinois, on July 20, 1944, Franklin D. Roosevelt accepts his party’s nomination for an unprecedented fourth presidential bid and speaks about postwar preparations now that victory is close at hand.

    Audio Clip (2:08)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt on New Deal Programs
    Franklin D. Roosevelt on New Deal Programs

    Audio Clip (2:25)

    In his April 28, 1935, fireside chat radio broadcast, President Franklin D. Roosevelt praises the newly adopted Works Relief Program and discusses the new Social Security Act recently introduced in Congress.

    Audio Clip (2:25)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inaugural Address
    Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inaugural Address

    Audio Clip (3:39)

    On March 3, 1933, the newly elected president of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, promises a country battered by the Great Depression a renewed prosperity, setting forth plans to put the government to work.

    Audio Clip (3:39)
  • George McGovern Picks Eagleton as Running Mate
    George McGovern Picks Eagleton as Running Mate

    Audio Clip (1:48)

    On July 14, 1972, presidential candidate Sen. George McGovern announced the selection of Sen. Thomas Eagleton as candidate for vice president. Eagleton describes his reaction when he received the phone call from McGovern.

    Audio Clip (1:48)
  • Reagan and Carter in 1980 Presidential Debate
    Reagan and Carter in 1980 Presidential Debate

    Audio Clip (1:06)

    Held on October 28, 1980, the debate between former California governor Ronald Reagan and incumbent President Jimmy Carter covers the issues of inflation, the energy crisis and terrorism. In his closing statement, Reagan makes an impact when he poses this question: "Are you better off now than you were four years ago?"

    Audio Clip (1:06)
  • Nixon Reelected to Presidency
    Nixon Reelected to Presidency

    Audio Clip (1:03)

    On November 7, 1972, incumbent President Richard Nixon won a second term in a landslide victory over Democrat George McGovern. In a brief statement from the Oval Office, President Nixon promises to bring "peace with honor" in Vietnam and to usher in a "new era of peace" with the Soviet Union.

    Audio Clip (1:03)
  • Nixon’s First Inaugural Address
    Nixon’s First Inaugural Address

    Audio Clip (1:13)

    After losing his first presidential bid to John F. Kennedy in 1960, former Vice President Richard Nixon brought the Republican Party back into power with a win in the 1968 presidential election. On January 20, 1969, he takes the oath of office and promises to heal a divided nation.

    Audio Clip (1:13)
  • Nixon Resigns
    Nixon Resigns

    Audio Clip (4:16)

    After the revelations of the Watergate scandal, President Richard Nixon announces to the nation on August 8, 1974, that he will resign the presidency at noon the following day.

    Audio Clip (4:16)
  • Nixon's Second Inaugural Address
    Nixon's Second Inaugural Address

    Audio Clip (1:42)

    After a landslide reelection victory, incumbent President Richard Nixon stresses America's role in the pursuit of world peace during his second inaugural address, delivered on January 20, 1973.

    Audio Clip (1:42)

Related Photo Galleries (9)

  • Bill Clinton
    Bill Clinton

    20 Photos

    View an image slideshow on President Bill Clinton.

    (20 Photos)
  • Grover Cleveland
    Grover Cleveland

    14 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of Grover Cleveland.

    (14 Photos)
  • James Madison
    James Madison

    10 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of James Madison.

    (10 Photos)
  • John Quincy Adams
    John Quincy Adams

    8 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of John Quincy Adams.

    (8 Photos)
  • John Tyler
    John Tyler

    6 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of John Tyler

    (6 Photos)
  • Martin Van Buren
    Martin Van Buren

    6 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of Martin Van Buren.

    (6 Photos)
  • Millard Fillmore
    Millard Fillmore

    8 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of Millard Fillmore.

    (8 Photos)
  • William Henry Harrison
    William Henry Harrison

    7 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of William Henry Harrison

    (7 Photos)
  • James Monroe
    James Monroe

    8 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of James Monroe.

    (8 Photos)

Shop HISTORY