“This is the kind of rhetoric Democrats have been afraid to voice for decades,” said Carter.

“The headache is part of the design: means-tested programs are designed to cut public spending by dropping people from the rolls on technicalities or intimidating them into giving up.”
—Meagan Day, Jacobin

Meagan Day, staff writer for Jacobin and outspoken Sanders supporter, said “Bernie’s right, means-tested social programs mean miles of red tape and people are sick of it”.

“But the headache is part of the design: means-tested programs are designed to cut public spending by dropping people from the rolls on technicalities or intimidating them into giving up,” Day tweeted.

After addressing attacks on the idea of tuition-free public college, Sanders also defended Medicare for All from former Vice President Joe Biden, who attacked the proposal as “unrealistic” and touted his public option alternative that—by his campaign’s own admission—would leave millions of people uninsured.

“The average worker in America, their family makes $60,000 a year. That family is now paying $12,000 a year for healthcare,” said Sanders. “Under Medicare for all, that family will be paying $1,200 a year, because we’re eliminating the profiteering of the drug companies and the insurance companies and ending this byzantine and complex administration of thousands of separate healthcare plans.”

When Biden responded that Medicare for All would raise taxes, Sanders said “that’s right, we are going to increase personal taxes.”

“But we’re eliminating premiums, we’re eliminating co-payments, we’re eliminating deductibles, we’re eliminating all out-of-pocket expenses, and no family in America will spend more than $200 a year on prescription drugs,” said the Vermont senator.

Watch the exchange:

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