infrastructure bill, which is also important. we support roads and bridges. but it s no good to have roads and bridges if people don t have childcare to be able to get to work. if people don t have healthcare to be able to actually engage in society. and so, what we have achieved tonight is agreement that the two will move, together. that one is not going to pass without the other. the president said that multiple times today. and that we will negotiate as a united democratic party to get to a place where both can pass. and where the president can sign this agenda into law. the agenda he ran on, the agenda we ran on. i think it was dana bash was on the program after you spoke last night and one of the things she said is with senator manchin, that many of the things you are are really focused on and really want in this. and other progressives do. would actually benefit a lot of people in his state of west virginia. but some of those people have an ideological sort of point of
ct scan or hip replacement or to see a specialist. who wants to wait several weeks to see a specialist. brian: you talk to the brits they have a different opinion on bernie sanders. because he thinks they have it made. you can t have obamacare and medicare for all. do the democrats realize that while lauding obamacare they talk about medicare for all. that s where the candidates are going to divide by the way. that s where they can t have it both ways. i think they are going to realize. i think it s a campaign slogan, brian. i don t think it s ever going to happen. they will self-destruct by getting behind it. i can t believe they are making it a campaign issue. and so unpopular. brian: canada ihealthcare is amt people s. raise your hands if you want to destroy healthcare and replace it with something that will not work? steve: i don t see any hands. ainsley: my mother had a stroke. you helped me through that. if she had gone to any other hospital in our hometown, she went to the t
if the government said you have to go to that hospital and not this one she would not have made it. the one doctor who would perform the surgery on her brain to remove the clot was at that one hospital and he happened to be on call that night. if she had went to that one i would be motherless. if something happened to my daughter i want her at the best hospital and best doctors. i don t want the government telling me where she has to go. [cheers and applause] steve: where is kevin? healthcare for all. let the market drive down healthcare costs by perhaps having hospitals and healthcare centers publish price list so we could see who not necessarily the cheaper but better prices are much like the government might have putt putt ingredients on the food supply. brian: i heard that s coming. that is coming, he is right. [applause] that s a great point. steve: then people can shop around.
brian: elective. that s elective. i think that s a misnomer. also we have clinics in the united states that serve 22 million people paid for by the federal government. that s the safety net. so, it s a complete misnomer and fraudulent to go around saying you have a right to, you know get your blood pressure check here or to get your eye drops here. brian: ultimately, it s going to be a bipartisan solution because no matter who is in power is going to keep flipping the other person s program out. both sides have got to get together. almost every person in the country cares about healthcare. steve: yesterday mitt romney announced he has a replacement for obamacare he will announce it shortly. receive steve medicare for all has no traction. it s a complete waste. brian: coming up straight ahead, thank you very much, dr. siegel. bernie sanders just unveiled his [cheers and applause] defending democratic socialism. we will ask our audience what they think about that
cents on the dollar with medicare. all of the research that goes on in americans, all of me. all supporting it. you take that away and you end up with less research, less innovation, less new drugs. bright eyed medical students graduating. steve: let s see the hands here in the studio audience, bernie sanders has suggested that people would be willing to pay more in taxes for medicare for all. let me see the hands of the people okay nobody on that side. how about the other side? how many people would pay more for taxes for medicare for all? i don t see a single hand. here is, why steve. sounds great. 58% support it. sounds great. what s it going to cost? $30 trillion over 10 years. the hands go down. will you be able to have access to your physician or the healthcare you need? hands go down when you hear that in canada, which is single payer you have to wait several weeks for mri,