The correct answer to this open question is the following.
A recession in 1937 supported critics regarding the New Deal's success. Critics were severe as unemployment rates raised to 18%.
The New Deal program of President Franklin D. Roosevelt had good things, although, in 1937, the program faced a setback. Those were the years of the Great Depression, and in 1937, the economy again had a turn back. The workers' wages were poor, the production of the fabrics was limited, and the profits were short. Critics of the New Deal program severe signaled the negatives of the program as the situation became more difficult at the turn of the year.