And on Friday, MAD will digitally publish Jaffee’s latest fold-in, in which the cartoonist asks: “Who stands to benefit most from Trumpcare?” Here’s an exclusive sneak peek of his art:

Jaffee then offers his dire reply (complete with two-word caption), which reflects reports that tens of millions of Americans will lose their health coverage if the government repeals and replaces the Affordable Care Act, which Congress continues to debate.

His pointed verdict is viewed when you fold in the sides as such:

“The fold-in is a sort of bait-and-switch process,” Jaffee tells The Washington Post’s Comic Riffs. “The full-page scene asks and illustrates a question. After the page is folded, a surprise new scene and answer appear.

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“In that way,” he continues, “it’s not very different from what the Republicans did during the last election with the health-care plan.”

For part of his childhood, Jaffee grew up poor on a shtetl in Zarasai — “the Siberia of Lithuania,” he says — and those years fostered not only his artistic creativity, but also his distrust of adult authority. He says he has little patience for bloviators, and that, unfortunately, the world is stocked full of them.

Jaffee began satirizing political candidates in MAD’s pages in the ’60s, and his fold-ins have appeared in nearly every issue since 1964.

MAD’s editor in chief, John Ficarra, relishes that after a half-century, Jaffee’s art still delivers the spit and vinegar of acidic satire.

“Al has written and illustrated almost 500 fold-ins for MAD,” Ficarra says, “and he never stops surprising us.”

The new MAD issue, which also features an extended “Trump Art Gallery” of visual spoofs of famed artists, hits newsstands Aug. 8.