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Tax fight taking shape

<p>&lt;p&gt;For months, the argument within Democratic circles hasn&amp;#039;t been whether to let tax breaks for the wealthy expire, it&amp;#039;s been a
Tax fight taking shape
Tax fight taking shape

For months, the argument within Democratic circles hasn't been whether to let tax breaks for the wealthy expire, it's been a debate over where to draw the line at "wealthy." President Obama's original position from 2008 was to set the level at $250,000 (the top 2% of income earners), but over the last year or so, some Democrats have pushed to draw the line at $1 million.

Yesterday, Obama stuck to his guns. There was a real possibility that this would cause some intra-party trouble, but soon after the president's announcement, both Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) -- who had called for the higher $1 million threshold -- endorsed the White House position. Not all Dems are on board, but a united party leadership helps Obama with his broader public pitch.

But as the larger discussion moves forward, let's pause to note a detail that routinely gets lost in the shuffle: thanks to the way marginal tax rates work, even those with incomes above $250,000 would get a tax break. Kevin Drum put together this image yesterday to help drive the point home.

As Dan Amira added, "Obama is not proposing that families making up to $250,000 a year keep their tax cuts while families making more than that don't. He's proposing that every family keep their tax cuts on their first $250,000 of taxable income."

If your family makes $250,000 a year, under Obama's plan, every penny in income will get the tax break. If your family makes $260,000 a year, under Obama's plan, you'd get the tax cut for your first $250,000, then pay slightly higher taxes on the $10,000.

As a result, everyone with an income would get a tax break. Even those at the very top would end up paying less in taxes than they did under Clinton because Obama would still give them a break on their first quarter-million.

And while Republicans remain in a perpetual state of outrage over Obama's middle-class tax cut package, it's also worth emphasizing that the president's position is the popular one.