Eccles was and is seen as an early proponent of demand stimulus projects to fend off the ravages of the
Great Depression. Eccles was famously rebuked by Congresswoman
Jessie Sumner (
R,
IL) during a House of Representatives hearing on the increasingly liberal policies of the Roosevelt administration and the Federal Reserve, when she said, "
you just love socialism." He became known as a defender of
Keynesian ideas, though his ideas predated Keynes'
The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936). In that respect, he is considered by some to have seen
monetary policy having secondary importance and that as a result he allowed the Federal Reserve to be sublimated to the interests of the Treasury. In this view, the Federal Reserve after 1935 acquired new instruments to command monetary policy, but it did not change its behavior significantly. The
Eccles Building that houses the headquarters of the
Federal Reserve in
Washington, D.C. was named after Eccles in 1982. The naming was a component of the
Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act lead-sponsored by Senator
Jake Garn (R,
UT) and Congressman
Fernand St. Germain (
D,
RI). == References ==