True answer: no one was squeezing the project for profit.
That’s it. Rich people don’t want anything to happen here they can’t grab a piece of. Fucking equity gooners
But they could, and did.
It’s frowned upon now because it benefitted people who weren’t already extremely wealthy
For people on the Right. FDR is the devil himself. Look up NAM (National Association of Manufacturers)
It was socialism.
It wasn’t. But it should have been.
What it was was the government doing stuff.
So I don’t know if the WPA itself would be considered socialism. I imagine it depends on your working definition of socialism.
What I can say with a little more confidence is that the WPA and a bunch of other New Deal programs were a direct result of pressure from American Socialists and Communists at the time.
I can’t recall if this is apocryphal or not, but the story goes that FDR told a private gathering of America’s biggest capitalists about his plans for the New Deal and told them they were going to pay for it through taxes. When they protested for a compromise, FDR said “this is the compromise. The alternative is guillotines.” But I can’t find that quote anywhere, so I may have made it up.
Why would being a good thing make it not socialism?
It’s nothing new. The WPA was created in the era of political machines and the Red Scare. Early on, opponents worried that Roosevelt was creating a nationwide political machine run by far-left radicals.
It’s not?
No.
The WPA was the government doing stuff.
Socialism is the workers owning the means of production.