LAST EDITED ON 12-21-12 AT 11:12 AM (EST)Here's the link for the Plan B chart. As cahaya's number show, everything would basically stay the same except for people making over $1 million; the changes relate to deduction changes:
http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/numbers/displayatab.cfm?DocID=3749
And here's the chart for the Dem plan:
As you can see, under the Dem plan, the average increase in annual tax in the top 3 categories is:
$200K to $500K: $813
$500K to $1M: $13,212
Over $1M: $134,177
In looking at those numbers, you can see why the negotiations between Obama and Boehner had been headed toward a $500K limit on the rate hike (Obama had hinted that he'd live with $400K; Boehner had hinted that he'd take $600K, and it's obvious where that was headed); the extra money raised from the $250K threshold isn't that much. The problem was that, to get Republicans to move to accept ANY hike, Boehner also needed some tangible spending cuts, and Obama simply hasn't been willing to include any.
Realistically, Boehner needs Democratic votes to pass any compromise. He can't pass the compromise on Republican votes alone, because there are too many Republican reps who won't vote for any tax increase. He's well aware of that fact.