From the Wall  Street Journal.com:
'If your family earns less than $250,000  a year, you will not see your taxes increased a single dime. I repeat:  not one single dime." So spoke Barack Obama at his first address  to Congress in February. We're about to find out if the President cares  about that promise as much he does passing a health-care bill.
 
Congressional Democrats have loaded up  their health bills with provisions raising taxes on the middle-class  by stacks and stacks of dimes. And Senate Democrats on Tuesday made  clear they won't be bound by the President's vow; 54 voted to kill Idaho  Republican Mike Crapo's amendment to strip the bill of taxes on families  earning less than $250,000 and individuals earning less than $200,000.
 
Those tax hits include a mandate of up  to $750 a year for Americans who fail to purchase health insurance;  new levies on small businesses (many of which file individual tax returns)  that don't offer health care to employees; new tax penalties on health  savings accounts and flexible spending accounts; and higher taxes on  medical spending, including restrictions on medical itemized deductions,  as well as taxes on cosmetic surgery. A Senate Finance Committee minority  staff report finds that by 2019 more than 42 million individuals and  families—or 25% of all tax returns under $200,000—will on average  see their taxes go up because of the Senate bill. And that's after government  subsidies.
This profusion of tax hikes is central  to the Democratic fiction that the Senate bill is budget neutral. And  because many Senate Democrats are cool to the House proposal to fund  legislation with a surtax on the "wealthy," many of these  middle-tax hikes will likely remain in final legislation. Yet President  Obama is embracing the bill.
Democrats are instead trying to claim  that some taxes really aren't taxes. The President in September engaged  in a debate with ABC's George Stephanopoulos, with the President arguing  that the individual mandate isn't a tax since it is for the good of  America. Michigan Senator Debbie Stabenow says increasing the amount  of medical expenses a person must accumulate before deducting them also  isn't a tax because "most Americans" don't itemize. Except  the millions of middle-class Americans who do. Democrats have argued  their restrictions on health savings accounts simply close "tax  loopholes" and therefore also aren't new taxes.
 
