about denmark and sweden. ainsley: what do they do. brian: they mischaracterize it number one. absolutely. the first thing that i pretty much learned in doing research for this is bernie sanders is too liberal to get elected in denmark. pretty much everything that they advocate for they don t actually do much of those things in scanned knave i can t. they have very low corporate taxes. they were much lower than ours until the trump tax cuts lowered our corporate taxes. they have no punitive wealth taxes. they tried that back in the 1970s and all of the wealthy left. the founder of ikea borg. so now their wealthy are taxed pretty much at the same level who make 60,000 a year. the big lie is it s a mathematics problem. if you want free healthcare and free college tuition, you pretty much only do that by taxing the middle class at about 60,000 60%. and they have a vat tax, a value added tax of 25% on everything they buy. a dozen eggs, a pair of
the new way forward for health care reform. senator casey thank you so much for being with us. you heard my conversation with gerrit. the republicans tried this a few ways. it seems to be a mathematics problem. the idea that you are a republican doesn t mean you share agreement on how repealing obamacare comes about. so this point, it looks like the party that governs in the senate and the house is going to have to reach out to democrats and find some alternative? ali, the good news is that not only will this bill not be considered this week, a very bad bill, especially with regard to medicaid. but the good news is, ali, that s already happened. democrats and republicans have worked together for weeks on the stabilization bill that republican leadership just kicked down the stairs last week. they should immediately commit to passing that stabilization bill and getting the children s health insurance reauthorization done. we could end this week on a very high note, a bipartisan note,