Franklin D. Roosevelt

Franklin D. Roosevelt in World War
Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected thirty-second President of the United States in 1932 and was reelected in 1936 and 1940.

In December of 1941 he asked for and received declarations of war against Germany and Japan following the latter's attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Thus, he led his nation into World War II. But that war was disrupted just a few months later when the Race's Conquest Fleet invaded Earth. Roosevelt escaped the destruction of Washington, DC by one of the Race's atomic bombs and provided his country with strong and inspiring leadership as it desperately battled the Race.

However, the grueling conditions he endured while the wartime United States and the stress of leading his country at such a desperate time took a great toll on his health, and he died in 1944. He was succeeded as President by Cordell Hull.

Franklin D. Roosevelt in Southern Victory
Franklin D. Roosevelt serve as Assistant Secretary of War to Presidents Al Smith and Charles LaFollette. His duties include oversight of the United States' project to build an atomic bomb as well as intelligence on other countries' own atomic projects. He has also become the Administration's point man for dealing with Congresswoman Flora Hamburger, who has begun to criticize the administration despite her belonging to the same Socialist Party as LaFollette. It was Roosevelt who decided to tell Hamburger about the classified atomic project.