For its part, the federal government, from the earliest census in 1790 to the creation of New
Deal social welfare programs, has long relied on aggregate as well as individual data to distribute resources and administer benefits.
Not exact matches
The New Nationalism he put forward in his quixotic Bull Moose campaign for the presidency in 1912, with its sweeping
program of federal regulation of the economy and guarantees for
social welfare, set the blueprint for the big government crusades of Progressivism, the New
Deal, and the Great Society.
There he attacked Reagan's view that «the best thing government can do is nothing,» and defended the New
Deal legacy of
social welfare programs and reforms, from Social Security through civil rights to Med
social welfare programs and reforms, from
Social Security through civil rights to Med
Social Security through civil rights to Medicare.
His economic and
social reforms through his New
Deal program were some of the most monumental in the history of the United States, affording citizens new consumer and
welfare protections.