Let's actually look beyond the spin, shall we?
First off, the cited article claims:
"In 2023, taxes will increase by $16.7 billion on American taxpayers earning less than $200,000
—a nearly $17 billion tax targeted solidly at low- and middle-income earners next year, amidst stagflation."
Gosh, since when is $200K/year "low- and middle-income"?
Because a quick google finds that $200,000 individual income is 97th percentile (97.4%).
So to SWAG what the per capita share of $16.7B taxes for them, ~97% of ~164.6M domestic
workers would be roughly just ~$104/year per household.
Checking the PDF, we find that only $1.4B of this $16.7B is paid for by those earning $50K or less,
who represent 55% of the workforce of 164.6M as of 2/20. As such, this clearly more "low- and
middle class" slice has a per capita share of ($1.4B/(.55*164.6M)) = $15.47 - - yup, fifteen bucks & change.
Now we have more insight on why SEN Mike Crapo (ID-R) chose to use an income of up to $200K.
-hh