"Republicans Apologize to Top 1.5 Per Cent"
WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report) - In the aftermath of the fiscal-cliff
deal, Republicans in Congress issued a heartfelt apology to the top 1.5
per cent richest people in America, offering "messages of profound
condolence" for allowing their taxes to increase slightly.
"Our hearts go out to them," said House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio),
still teary-eyed after hanging up the phone with a multimillionaire in
Orange County, California. "We came to Washington to do the work of 1.5
per cent of the American people, and we didn't get it done."
The House Speaker said that he had spoken to several members of the top
1.5 per cent who were "understandably despondent" over seeing their
taxes rise marginally as a result of the deal: "Some of them were so
upset they even considered moving to Canada, until they found out the
taxes were higher there."
Mr. Boehner said that he tried to offer the wealthy consolation by
reminding them that because of an increase in payroll taxes, millions of
middle-class and working-class Americans would be suffering more than
they would: "That usually put them in a better mood."
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Virginia) assailed the fiscal-cliff
legislation today, calling it "a classic example of putting 98.5 per
cent of the American people ahead of the rest of the country."
Offering words of hope to the top 1.5 per cent, Mr. Cantor said, "In a
few months we'll have the next debate about the debt ceiling. As God is
my witness, we will try to do a better job of bringing this nation to
the brink of Armageddon."
But to billionaires such as Harland Dorrinson, a longtime super-donor to
the G.O.P., such assurances ring hollow: "If the fiscal-cliff deal is
the kind of performance we can expect from Republican politicians,
what's the point of owning them?"
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