Free Stuff 2020

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Presidential Candidates promise expensive new programs. We added up the cost.

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Never before have so many politicians promised to spend so much.

Among some candidates, the 2020 presidential campaign has turned into a contest to see who can offer the most “free stuff.”

So far no one has tracked their promises, so the Stossel team did.

Stossel compares the top five candidates, based on the betting odds. He looks at Senator Kamala Harris, Senator Elizabeth Warren, former Vice President Joe Bide, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Senator Bernie Sanders’ expensive promises, issue by issue: education, health care, climate, welfare, and … well, let’s make it a contest! There’s a grab-bag round too.

Some examples of what the Democrats would spend if they become president:

Sanders wants to “eliminate student debt” and “make public colleges and universities tuition-free.” Sound nice, but he seldom mentions the $220 billion. price tag.

Mayor Buttigieg promises to spend $31.5 billion to give teachers a pay raise. Kamala Harris likes that one too.

Senator Harris also wants government to pay your rent if it’s more than 30% of their income. $94 billion a year.

The Democratic candidate promises keep on coming: Medicare for All, $3 trillion.

Increase Food Stamps, $10.8 billion.

Expand National Service, $2 billion.

A federal job guarantee $158 billion.

But the Republican incumbent is a big spender too, says Stossel. Since Donald Trump became President, spending has risen about $500 billion.

But the Democrats want to spend MUCH MORE. Stossel’s tally includes more than 50 spending proposals.

Watch to see who wins the title, “Biggest Spender”.

Stossel says, no matter who wins, taxpayers are the losers.

Since we completed this video Friday, Senator Harris proposed her own “Medicare for All” plan. She says it will be cheaper than Senator Sanders’ version, but as of now there is no independent calculated cost. She also proposed a new plan to spend $75 billion on minority-owned businesses and historically black colleges.