Verdict: Stefano was wrong, and didn't school anyone.

Stefano claim: Only 14 percent of Obamacare enrollees had no coverage

Stefano referenced a recent survey from the McKinsey consulting firm that found most people who signed up for insurance on the individual market this year had insurance previously. The thing is, the analysts "did not break down their results for people who specifically purchased insurance through Obamacare," according to a McKinsey representative. It's hard to say how many people who previously had insurance enrolled in Obamacare, but health policy expert Robert Laszewski told Politifact it was probably closer to 50 percent.

Verdict: Stefano was likely wrong again.

Stefano claim: $94,000 a year is 133 percent of the poverty level

Stefano argued that while some Republican governors have expanded Medicaid in states like Ohio (true) and Pennsylvania (not true), the expansion is bad because it gives tax resources to wealthy people. "Take 133 percent of the poverty level in states like Pennsylvania and others, you get $94,000 a year," she said. Hayes called that a "math train wreck," which is probably being generous. Philip Klein, a senior writer at the conservative Washington Examiner, pointed out that your family would have to be Duggar-sized:

@StamfordYankee @brianbeutler @chrislhayes I'd love to scrap ACA , but just isn't true that 138% of FPL = $94K unless household has 15+ ppl — Philip Klein (@philipaklein) March 27, 2014

Verdict: So, so wrong. It's worth noting that Stefano is Americans for Prosperity's Pennsylvania director.

Stefano claim: Hayes has no right to under cut her voice like Harry Reid

This one is kinda true. “How dare you, like Harry Reid, try to undercut the voice of a woman simply because she disagrees with you," she told Hayes. "Now you may not like where I’m coming from on policy, but you have no right to undercut my voice.”

He did interrupt her, but Stefano is bringing up a conservative talking point. Reid called Americans for Prosperity's anti-Obamacare ad featuring Julie Boonstra untrue because, well, it was. Conservatives argued that he was silencing her voice, when in fact he was challenged the validity of her argument. That's more or less what happened on MSNBC last night.

Verdict: Literally no one was schooled during this interview. No one learned anything.

This article is from the archive of our partner The Wire.