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FDR is elected in 1932 as President, beating out Hoover in a campaign dominated by the Great Depression. Using the minimum amount of handwavium to prevent WWII (for example, Stresemann lives and the Germans remain relatively reasonable, Japan's leaders wake up one morning and become isolationist, and Stalin decides Socialism In One Country is what his foreign policy will be forever), how does FDR handle the ensuing term of a less tumultuous Europe, and possibly the years up to 1940's election as well, with no war abroad and a more peaceful planet.

What would FDR be like as a merely peacetime President? Obviously his service between 1933 and 1939 tells us a few things, but that was on a backdrop of a militarising Europe and increased tensions in the Far East. Without The War In Europe, does he win re-election in 1940? Without WWII, does he live longer, or would he surely step down at the 1944 election as there was none of the urgency of OTL's wartime election?

Finally, how is he remembered today? The right like to paint him as a meddler whose mistakes during the New Deal were masked by the massive industrialisation the USA underwent during WWII. Without this, would they have been proved right? Would he be a decent and respected President, rather than regularly in the top three 'all-time-greats' list?
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