
The President’s Inbox America at 250: The Lend-Lease Act, With Lynne Olson
Mar 11, 2026
Lynne Olson, historian and author known for Those Angry Days, explores the politics behind the 1941 Lend-Lease Act. She traces 1930s isolationism, FDR’s strategy to aid Britain without troops, and the Capitol Hill battles that nearly derailed support. The conversation highlights how Lend-Lease and early mobilization reshaped America’s path to World War II.
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Nye Hearings Cemented Neutrality Fears
- The Nye hearings amplified belief that munitions makers and foreign influence pulled the U.S. into World War I, strengthening calls for strict neutrality.
- Senator Gerald Nye's investigations made isolationism a potent political force into the late 1930s.
FDR Put Domestic Recovery Before Intervention
- Franklin D. Roosevelt prioritized the New Deal and economic recovery over foreign policy early in his presidency, delaying interventionist moves.
- That domestic focus left the administration politically constrained as European threats grew.
Congress Feared Granting Presidential Leeway
- Many members of Congress feared giving presidential discretion over foreign policy because they worried it would lead to war.
- That tension shaped neutrality legislation and constrained Roosevelt's options before 1941.




