Pod Save America - “Never bet against Mitch McConnell.”
Episode Date: July 1, 2017Jon and Tommy attend a health care rally outside the United States Capitol and talk to patients, doctors, activists, and politicians, including Senator Chris Van Hollen, Senator Brian Schatz, Congress...woman Debbie-Wasserman Schultz, Senator Ron Wyden, Senator Chris Murphy, and Senator Michael Bennet.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to a special bonus episode of Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Tommy Vitor.
We went to a healthcare rally in D.C. on Wednesday. Was it Wednesday? Can we set the scene currently?
We're in the Washington Hilton. That's right. We're in a part of the restaurant where we're not allowed to be sitting.
They don't seem to mind so far. We're just recording this intro a couple days later because it's
fucking hot outside uh it's hot we're leaving dc tomorrow but anyway anyway so tommy and i went to
this rally on wednesday it was outside the capital it's a couple thousand people there yeah and we
just interviewed a bunch of people and we saw some people who came to tell their stories about
health care we saw some doctors that we talked to people just drove down some people who came to tell their stories about healthcare we saw some doctors
that we talked to people just drove down some people from maryland virginia the district who
just came there because they were really worried about the bill and its repeal and like a bunch of
physicians who were talking about what it would mean for the hospitals where they work what it
would mean for them as caregivers for their families we uh powerful stuff organized by
planned parenthood move on.org so anyway we walked around the rally and we talked to people.
We interviewed them.
We thought maybe you guys would want to hear it.
And we also met a couple politicians were there too.
It was the last minute decision to come here.
We thought the vote was going to be this week.
We wanted to be on the ground and part of any effort to stop the bill.
Luckily McConnell realized he didn't have the votes and hopefully they will remain that way and this thing won't pass.
But we talked to a bunch of people.
We talked to a bunch of people we talked a bunch of senators it was inspiring stuff it made me
feel more energized and ready to get out there but what it really drove home was how important
the work is outside of dc for the next several weeks during recess to make sure senators realize
how much people oppose this god-awful bill uh and how much the work is ahead of us not behind us
and i said this on the pod yesterday but the nice thing about it was, is like, I didn't
hear Trump's name a lot.
No.
Like for all the people say about like, oh, the activists or the resistance of angry and
this, the people that we saw came there because like their healthcare meant everything to
them and they told really inspiring stories and it was not a game to them at all.
Like it really mattered.
And unlike Donald Trump, they knew exactly what this bill would mean for them for their community yeah and you'll hear
that they care about yeah and you'll hear it and it's really impressive yeah kyle i'm thinking of
a doctor who was a health care expert he was just like citing chapter and verse of what it would
mean for gunshot victims and physicians and patients yeah and then we um ran to chris murphy
ran into debbie warsham and schultz ran into brian shatz yep and senator from haw And then we ran to Chris Murphy, ran into Debbie Warsom and Schultz,
ran into Brian Schatz,
Senator from Hawaii.
We ran into Jason Kander,
our good friend,
but his, for some reason,
the mic wasn't on
when we talked to him,
so you won't be hearing
poor Jason Kander.
Sorry, Jason.
And then at the end of the day,
we actually went to
Michael Bennett's office,
Senator from Colorado,
and we sat down with him.
So you'll be hearing
all of this in this episode.
And this is our first kind of field reporting episode.
We're learning.
It's harder than it looks.
Let us know.
We got yelled at by the cops in the middle of a bunch of interviews.
There were some people with bullhorns that blew up our spot a few times.
We went up on stage and spoke a little bit.
Yeah.
Didn't know that was going to happen.
Didn't know that was going to happen.
Probably could have done more preparation.
Yeah, that's fine.
We were wearing shorts.
Yeah, we went to the center.
Go fuck yourself t-shirt.
Office in shorts, which is great, I guess.
But anyway, it was inspiring stuff.
I'm really glad you guys got to hear it.
And let's all get back out there.
Without further ado, here we go.
When we got to the rally, we ran into a bunch of people with personal stories and personal reasons for being there, including several doctors.
The first person we talked to was actually a guy named Kyle Fisher, who works at an ER at a county hospital in Maryland.
I work at Old County Hospital, a lot of patients in need. Medicaid is huge for our patients.
And I'm really concerned about both the huge cuts in the AHCA and the BCRA, as well as the caps.
The cap, I think, is the unreported story.
The lifetime caps on coverage?
Per capita caps financing system in Medicaid.
States aren't going to be able to handle it.
And I know that my patients, especially young childless adults, are going to be the first to get kicked off of Medicaid.
I do a lot of violence prevention work.
And before the ACA, 80% of gunshot wound victims were either uninsured or got some sort of public insurance.
So I know all of my patients are, for the most part, going to lose insurance.
And that's just unacceptable.
One of the big arguments that proponents of cutting Medicaid make is, you know what, people don't have insurance.
This whole idea that people are going to die is so crazy
because people can always go to the emergency room
or they can go to a public hospital.
What do you think about that?
I don't do chemo.
The emergency room, we can fix you up and we'll assist you.
If you have a heart attack, I can fix the heart attack.
If you're having a stroke, if you you get shot we can take care of that but if you have long-term diabetes that you need your medication taken care
of if you need chemotherapy we can take care of acute things but if you don't have somewhere to
go to afterwards that's not terribly helpful we've only patched things up we haven't moved on to
caring for you for the rest of your time there's nothing about this bill that's helpful in any way, shape, or form.
After talking to Kyle, we ran into another doctor named Kay Vandenberg from Maryland.
She was a practicing OBGYN, and her husband was also a trauma surgeon in the military.
It's hard to start anywhere. It's all bad.
Most of my patients were covered by Medicaid, and that was the only way they got prenatal care.
And if you cut people off from care, they come in sicker, and it's harder to help them.
One of the arguments that proponents of the bill make is say, well, even if people don't have health insurance,
they'll be able to go to the emergency room or go to a public hospital, and that's what all that's for.
Well, who pays for the public hospital? The taxpayers.
I mean, we pay for it one way or the other, so why not do it the cheaper way and get everyone health care so that they're taken care of and can catch things early.
Then we met a woman named Cosette from Canton, Ohio, who had a message for her undecided Senator Rob Portman.
My sign has a quote from Senator Rob Portman that says, I believe we can turn the tide and I believe we can save lives.
And I believe we can save lives, and I believe we cannot just save lives of those who otherwise may overdose,
but we can help all those who are addicted, the hundreds of thousands in Ohio.
More than 220,000 Ohioans with addiction or mental health disorders have coverage under the ACA, and I'm asking Senator Portman to stand by his words.
We also ran into a few people who had some pretty powerful personal stories and reasons for coming to the rally that day.
My name is Moira Pahala. I'm a student from Anchorage, Alaska, and I go to the University of Alaska Anchorage.
And I'm here today because I stand with Planned Parenthood.
And I stand with Planned Parenthood because when I was 15, I was sexually assaulted.
And coming from a small rural community in Soldotna, Alaska, I didn't have access to the health care that I needed.
And I am grateful today that Planned Parenthood was two blocks away from my home to give me the health care and the tools that I need to succeed after my incident happened.
I met with Senator Murkowski back in March, and I just want to tell her that I am so grateful that she has publicly stated that she's going to stand in Planned Parenthood. And really, I just want both my senators to know that when it comes to this health care bill, I will hold them accountable
if they vote the wrong way. This health care bill not only will impact Americans, but will
drastically impact Alaskans. And in the midst of our financial crisis, we cannot afford to lose
health care. When it comes down to it, Alaskan lives will be lost. And I hope that they really
stick with their constituents on this.
Hey, I'm Matthew. I'm from Boston, Massachusetts, and I'm here because I am alive because of Medicaid.
Between 2015 and 2016, it cost $730,000 to keep me alive.
And year-to-date, in 2017, the total cost of my medication so far, $73,000.
My name's Rebecca Wood. I'm from Charlottesville, Virginia.
And what's your name?
It's Charlie Wood.
So why are you here?
Charlie was born at 26 weeks, and she has Medicaid as her secondary insurance.
It's a Medicaid waiver, and if she loses it, we can't afford her services to help her grow and develop and have a typical adulthood.
A lot of people we talked to were just citizens who cared enough about this bill
and were concerned enough about what it would mean for our health care system that they came out.
But one personal story we heard was actually from a congresswoman, Florida Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz.
We met up with Congressman Schultz in the middle of the crowd.
You know, there's nothing more personal than your health.
If you don't have your health, you don't have anything.
That's what my parents told me my whole life.
And, you know, you have it hit you smack in the face.
When, like, I went through when I was 41 years old,
I was the picture of health on one day.
And the next day I found a lump in my breast and was a cancer patient.
And suddenly you have a pre-existing condition
that you know you're dealing with for the rest of your life.
And these evil people want to yank the rug out from under 129 million Americans like me
and millions of others who have a pre-existing condition.
On top of that, take the ability of seniors to live in nursing homes
and to be cared for in the waning years of their lives.
This is horrific legislation that is cruel and unacceptable.
I noticed this morning
that Senator from your state, Marco Rubio, yeah, we're a big fan too. He's just the worst.
So he started saying, you know what, Florida already has a waiver. These aren't Medicaid cuts.
These are just, you know, we're not going to accept the expansion and the media has been wrong
and saying that people are going to lose Medicaid. What do you say to that? You know, there's a reason
why Marco Rubio refuses to basically appear in public in the state of Florida.
Yeah, I know.
And that's because he's...
You notice he's...
Yeah, no town hall meetings.
He runs...
Find him on the side of a milk carton somewhere.
Yeah, he's been actually locked out and kicked out of almost all of his district offices
because there are too many protesters.
Marco Rubio, it's very nice to say that on camera and to say that up here in Washington, D.C.
He's not been able to look any of his constituents in the eye because we have the largest percentage of seniors of any state in the country.
And 65 percent of seniors who are in a nursing home are able to be there only because of Medicaid.
And so let's see him look the seniors in the eye in the state of Florida and actually try to get away with that argument.
You're not going to lose the health care you have.
You're going to lose the health care that you might need in the future.
Not a good message with constituents in Florida.
You know, if I were him, I would not be peddling that message to seniors.
They can see right through you, and they have a lot of time on their hands
to hold your feet to the fire, and they burn.
So as the march begins, we see our friend Ben Wickler jogging to the front.
Ben is a friend of the pod.
He's also the Washington director of MoveOn.org.
And Ben has been helping organize these rallies for the last few weeks.
He's been absolutely crushing it.
He was part of the impromptu rally vigil that was on the Capitol steps with Cory Booker and John Lewis a couple nights before.
Ben's awesome.
So we grabbed him for a few minutes to sort of talk about where the bill is,
what people can do, how they can get involved, and it was great.
This feels like the Super Bowl where we're in, like,
this insane overtime that wasn't supposed to happen,
and no one knows what the hell is going to happen. The problem is Mitch McConnell is a lot like Tom Brady.
Like, this is a guy you just never really want to bet against.
He's good at this game, right?
And that's why we need to expand the playing.
This is breaking out of the sports metaphor completely.
We need to expand the playing field.
This needs to go beyond the politics of this bill.
The way he's going to trade for votes in the Senate
is not by just adding and subtracting provisions to this bill.
It's by adding in other stuff that will make or break people's political careers.
So our movement, our pressure, needs to be at the level
that it feels like an existential threat to people's long-term careers. So our movement, our pressure, needs to be at the level that it feels like an existential threat to people's long-term careers. There are
senators that lost their Senate seats four years after major votes, like the
Iraq War or Obamacare. This needs to be one of those votes that people will not
be able to live down two, four, or six years from now.
So we get a lot of a lot of people saying either I live in a deep red state
my senators are definitely you know voting for this or I live in a deep blue
state and they're definitely voting again so what can I do to help? So what can we tell those
people? So if you are lucky enough to be represented by deep red Republicans, put the fear of God in
them. All these people talk. One thing that's been great over the last couple of weeks is that the
call volume to the swing Republican senators has exploded. We're back in the February days where
people couldn't get through, voicemail boxes are full. But that's really happened only to the swing Republican senators.
We've all been so targeted, which has been amazing. But there's all these other senators
that aren't having that experience right now. And some of them are like asking,
really, is there that much of a big deal? So this is actually a really important time.
Call Democrats and say you are doing everything you can. You expect them to do the same.
You expect them to keep up the fight. That heartens them.
I am like, I've been talking to senators and Senate staff.
There are a bunch of, like, senators are on fire right now.
They're on the front lines.
But there are some that are saying, I'm worried that it'll seem really obstructionist if we keep this up.
Like, at some point, we've got to go back to business as usual.
No.
Like, Democrats, keep it up.
They need to know they're being cheered on every time they stand up and fight.
And I saw you had a good idea today for a lot of these senators are going home over the Fourth of July recess.
They're not holding town halls. What's your suggestion for people whose senator is not
holding a town hall? We have this gift, Independence Day. It is this epic opportunity.
It is the one time when every senator has to go outside and face constituents. And here's the
thing. This is a great thing in deep blue and deep red democrats in the
deepest of deep blue states when they show up applaud them and go talk to them about health
care and if you see a reporter go and tell the reporter that you care about what the senator's
doing on health care literally major media outlets are going to blue states to see what the reaction
is to democrats standing up on health care in the deepest red states in the kansas's of the world
i guess the pre-brownback Kansas of the world,
booing Republicans on health care, that will show up. That will hit their radars.
And there are reporters, like I just got off the phone with a reporter asking me which states to go to.
Tweet out. If you're going to be at a Fourth of July parade, we want to hear about it.
We want to amplify it. Because the reaction that they get at home is the defining factor for the future of this bill.
This is the most uniting bipartisan political issue of
our time. Democrats, Republicans, everyone hates this bill except for billionaires. So we've got
to team up and stop the billionaires from passing it. Can I tell you something disgusting? Yes.
What is disgusting to me is like literal actual billionaires are being used to pressure
Republican senators to vote for this. They brought Steve Wynn to this meeting with Dean Heller.
Steve Wynn, the billionaire casino magnate. They brought him to the meeting to pressure Dean Heller perfectly.
Like, personally.
Like, these are people who will make millions of dollars
by throwing kids off their health care,
by throwing seniors out of nursing homes.
The billionaires are supposed to convince the Republicans
that they have to vote for this thing.
It just makes me want to vomit.
And, like, we need to show up in bigger numbers
than the dollars from the billionaires show up
to make sure that this thing is so toxic that they never want to touch it again.
We ran into another friend of the pod, Neera Tanden, who's the president of the Center
for American Progress, who talked with us about the current state of play of the health
care bill.
I guess my greatest fear is that, quote unquote, moderates will sell out for just pennies.
But I think we're hearing enough deep anxiety about this.
And truthfully, the American people
know a lot about this bill,
apparently more than Donald Trump,
and don't like it.
And so that's what's really going to help us.
But, you know, we can't give an inch.
People, like in Nevada,
Heller has to hear from folks day in and day out.
It can't just be like, we're safe.
We're never safe with Mitch McConnell.
This is Pod Save America.
Stick around. There's more great show coming your way. One thing about the rally that
was surprising in a good way was how many Democratic senators we ran into who were just
roaming through the crowd. So the first person we saw was Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen
from Maryland. And we talked to him for a little while. No time for a victory lap. We saw what happened in the House, right? First
time they killed it, but they brought it back to life. So right now, today and the next couple
weeks are the critical moments here, and it's really important that when these Republican
senators go home for the Fourth of July, people show up at the parades and the picnics and the
barbecues and tell them, stop this thing. What have you been saying? What's your quick pitch on the bill? Which part
are you targeting the most? Well, my quick pitch is this is not about health care. Yeah. It is
about wealth care. I mean, look, you had Warren Buffett. I'm going to say it. That's all I was
looking for. You got Warren Buffett on TV the other day just saying he's going to get a $670,000
in annual tax cut. He said we should name this the Take Care of the Rich Bill.
And the reality is that that is what this is all about.
If you go back and you look at the Paul Ryan Republican budget for the last many years,
very deep cuts to Medicaid, big tax breaks for wealthy people.
And that's why the core of this is broken and wrong.
So they need to back away from that.
We're happy to work with them on improving the exchanges.
There are things we can do.
They haven't shown any interest in doing that.
They're more interested in hiding out behind closed doors,
but we would like to do that.
Do we think Donald Trump knows what's in this bill?
I mean, how hard do you think he's lobbying for this bill?
Or is he just pushing these members off a cliff
without knowing what's in it?
I really don't think he knows what's in it.
Look, during the campaign, he tweeted out, no cuts to Medicaid.
And then he's supporting legislation with these gigantic cuts to Medicaid.
He has a big celebration in the White House.
This is great.
He goes behind closed doors, calls it mean.
I don't think he really knows the details of the bill.
I know he's hearing from people.
He's a wonk.
He's a policy guy. He's a tweet wonk, but that's about it and not even that.
Later, we met up with Hawaii Center and prolific tweeter Brian Schatz.
Now Mitch is essentially using the $200 or $300 billion in so-called savings.
Buying people off.
And trying to buy people off. And we don't know if it'll work,
called savings, which is... Buying people off. And trying to buy people off. And we don't know if it'll work.
But what we do know is that this bill gets more and more unpopular the more and more time people have a chance to talk about it and look at it. So we're just hoping people across the country
let their voices be heard. What is it like to be elected to this institution that's known for
debate and collegiality and to have the most important piece of legislation that will be written this congress done entirely behind closed doors with 13 guys and some lobbyists
i mean like is are people just up in arms yeah they are it's gross uh and you know part of it is
uh that we are supposed to be the world's greatest deliberative body because we have to be we're the
place where uh solutions have to be forged to be. We're the place where solutions have to be forged.
Whatever our faults, we're the place where problems get solved if they get solved at the federal level.
And there are a lot of members on both sides of the aisle that cherish their prerogatives
as a member of whatever committee they've worked so hard to get on.
And I'm thinking about Lamar Alexander, who did a bipartisan bill in education with Patty Murray,
or Orrin Hatch, who used to do deals with Teddy Kennedy.
And their gavels are essentially useless.
So part of the argument that I'm making internal to the Senate itself is to say, you know, you spent 20 or 30 years becoming the president pro temp of the United States Senate.
And you're the chairman of the finance. And now people are like, what's going on with the bill?
He's like, I don't know.
No one's telling me.
I'm third in line for the presidency. I'm third in line for the presidency.
He's third in line for the presidency.
He has a gavel.
And he's not in the room, but Ted Cruz is.
Senator Ron Wyden from Oregon, who's been an expert on health care for years, really knows this issue inside and out.
He was on his way out of the rally, and he actually grabbed us.
His son is a big friend of the pod.
And so he stopped us, and we chatted with him for a little bit about health care.
We cannot let up even a whit over the next two weeks,
because if I was going to predict,
and I'm kind of like Yogi Berra,
I don't do predictions, especially about the future.
We've all had a tough year for predictions.
If I was going to predict,
this bill will be back on the Senate floor two weeks from now.
And what we've got to do is, one, derail another bad bill that hurts people
and lay the foundation for a bill, for example, that holds down the cost of prescription drugs,
lifts the restrictions so that Medicare can bargain
to hold down the cost. Let's stop a bad bill, lay the foundation for the future.
You could not swing a dead cat without hitting a U.S. Senator. Later, we saw a friend of the pod,
Chris Murphy, right outside the Capitol. We had a great conversation about where things stand and
how to keep health care in the headlines in these coming weeks. I mean, this guy is a master tactician. McConnell is working it right now,
and he's got a lot of money to buy these guys off.
But at the same time, this is his worst nightmare.
He wanted this bill on the floor this week
because he knew that this rotting fish would stink throughout the recess
and it wouldn't help him get votes.
So, yeah, I think he's going to work
the votes, but he didn't want this to happen. And it's important to remember that. What's your
sense of the level of angst among people like Capito and Murkowski? And are these statements
just kind of window dressing? Do you think they're really, how gettable do you think they are?
I think the problem for Republicans is that they're looking at an electorate that has made up their mind about this bill.
It sort of feels like the public impressions on this piece of legislation are cooked.
They're only heading in one direction.
So even if they can get a little payoff for West Virginia or for Alaska, in the end, still, 13 percent of Americans want this.
And that's hard to bring home to your constituents.
I mean, Thad Cochran released his phone calls the other day, 750 against two for it.
That's Mississippi, and so that tells you what's happening in these offices.
That was Harry Moran. That was a surprise.
Yeah, but again, if the calls are going 700 to two against the bill in Mississippi,
then they're probably going the same way in Kansas,
in Alabama, in Arkansas. So you may find some weird members who you thought were good team members
starting to get cold feet. You could have stopped at weird members. Okay, so you're McConnell.
You've lived your entire life to be in power. This bill pulls at 12%. Why is he still pushing it?
I just think when you've been chasing the car right through the
streets of your neighborhood for seven years and then it stops like you can't stop but latch your
teeth onto it and that's what's going on they have created a perpetual motion machine that they can't
stop even if they wanted to and i think they're looking at what happened in Virginia. So this no-name guy who just
locks in his arms with Donald Trump almost beats the mainstream candidate. And if they don't do
health care, then there are a whole bunch of other Corey Stewart's out there who are going to
potentially score some big upsets. That's a reality for them, but it's a problem that they created.
How do you feel about our ability to keep this in the headlines for a week or two?
I'm nervous that the TV networks don't think that this gets eyeballs like Russia does in some of these other issues.
And so we are going to have to create news on this.
We are going to have to build crowds like this in every state to make sure that TV cameras have to turn out.
I'm not sure that without us and without
big numbers like we have today that we'll keep the nation's eyes focused on this, especially
because Trump is going to get up every day thinking about what new outrageous tweets he can
send out, what missile strikes he can launch to try to distract folks' attention from this.
I say that partially in jest. Don't go anywhere. This is Pod Save America, and there's more on the way.
We finally ended the day by visiting Colorado Senator Michael Bennett in his Senate office.
Bennett was around during the fight over the Affordable Care Act in 2009,
and he had some insightful things to say, not only about health care,
but about the state of our politics in general and how it's changed over the years.
It is hard to bet against Mitch McConnell. He's relentless at this stuff. And I think he's
defined, unfortunately, defined a politics that I've become very worried about, which is one where
there are no rules, there are no customs, There are no standards. And whatever you can get away with is what you can get away with.
So if you can block Merrick Garland, you block Merrick Garland.
If you can blow up the nuclear option on the Supreme Court, you do that too.
And I think he will stop at nothing to pass this bill.
I think that's a big mistake for the Republicans.
I can't imagine how he could make the bill any farther to the right and pass it. I just don't think that's a big mistake for the Republicans. I can't imagine how he could make the bill any farther to
the right and pass it. I just don't think that's a possibility, which gives you a sense of the jam
that they're in. I mean, nobody should take it for granted. And as I said earlier, nobody should
bet against Mitch McConnell's ability to get something like this done. But this bill is already
so far out of the mainstream of conventional Republican political thought,
much less what Democrats and independents have to say, I don't think he could possibly move it to the right.
I do remember what it was like to be on the other side of this when we were passing the Affordable Care Act.
And I was out doing town hall meetings in places like Lamar, Colorado, which is a place I treasure,
but not a place where I get a lot of votes.
And the Affordable Care Act was deeply unpopular.
I mean, the equivalent would have been doing a town hall meeting today in Boulder trying to support this bill.
So I have a sense of what the challenges are.
And I think people should, all across the country, use this as an opportunity to make sure their voices are heard
and that
everybody in the Senate understands what their position is. And if that happens,
this bill isn't going to pass. We have this shockingly secretive closed process,
and then this effort to jam a bill that would impact one-sixth of the American economy through
in a week. What does that say to you about the broader state of our politics?
It goes back to what I was saying earlier, that we've got a feeling in Washington,
which is not shared in local governments, and maybe even state governments, that whatever
you can get away with is okay. And being completely inconsistent is okay. You'll remember,
you guys will remember, how much Mitch McConnell complained about the
process with respect to Obamacare. And that was a bill that had over a year of public vetting and
countless hearings and almost 200, I think, Republican amendments were adopted as part of it.
And he said the American people are sick and tired of these things being jammed through in the middle
of the night. And he's doing exactly the same thing here because he thinks he can get away with it. And he thinks nobody cares that a
politician stands up and says, the process is terrible. And then when it's on the other side,
that you can just be inconsistent. I mean, I will say that was one of, I thought, one of the great
virtues of Barack Obama when he was president. He was, when he was in that job, he was in general fairly consistent about what
he said, and I think was a guy also who, if the facts changed and he had a reason to think
differently about something, he would explain that change of opinion or of his mind. You don't see
that in our politics today on Capitol Hill, and it is endemic, and I think it's epidemic.
It's a real problem for our
politics, because when we behave that way, it degrades the institution, it degrades the people
that are here, and the public's expectations of what can actually get done diminishes, and then
you can't get anything done, which is fine if your position is, we've all been sent here to
dismantle the federal government, which is the position of
some of these people. I mean, having a 9% approval rating for the Congress suits their purposes
because they get to say, see how much that place sucks. Unfortunately, if you are dealing with a
health care system, and I don't care whether you're a supporter of the Affordable Care Act
or whether you oppose it, the reality people need to understand is that the American people's intersection with health care, not the Affordable Care, but health
care, is unacceptable to them. And what we need is Democrats and Republicans to work together to
fill the gaps to make sure that people are covered at a reasonable price and that health care is
predictable. That can't happen with just Republicans or Democrats.
And so knowing that, what I think people ought to be doing here is helping to elevate the institution rather than degrade it.
And there's been too much degradation of it over a long period of time,
and we have a long way to build back.
So hope you enjoyed these conversations.
Hope you keep up the fight over the recess on health care.
Remember, go to those 4th of July parades and bring your signs, bring your t-shirts, find your senators,
find your representatives, and let them know what you think about this bill. It's really
important to keep up the pressure and we will talk to you next week. So take care, everyone. Thank you.