Calls
on
Administration
to
Cooperate
with
Investigation,
Supports
New
Taxpayer
Protections
Washington –
U.S.
Senator
Tim
Scott
(R-SC)
today
took
action
regarding
the
Internal
Revenue
Service
(IRS)
targeting
conservative
groups
for
extra
scrutiny.
Scott
joined
his
colleagues
in
sending
a
letter
to
President
Obama
calling
on
the
Administration
to
comply
with
all
congressional
inquiries
on
the
matter,
and
also
co-sponsored
new
legislation
to
protect
taxpayers
against
ideology-based
targeting.
Last
Friday,
the
IRS
apologized
for
unfairly
targeting
conservative
groups
applying
for
tax-exempt
status.
In
the
days
since,
an
internal
IRS
report
compiled
by
the
Treasury
Inspector
General
for
Tax
Administration
shows
that
executives
at
the
agency
knew
about
the
targeting
a
year
ago.
The
report
can
be read
here.
"With
each
passing
day,
the
facts
of
the
IRS
scandal
become
more
troubling,"
Scott
said.
“Targeting
groups
based
on
their
political
beliefs
is
an
outrage,
and
the
American
people
deserve
answers.
The
President
must
provide
complete
transparency
and
cooperation
as
we
get
to
the
bottom
of
this
administration's
troubling
pattern
of
intimidation
and
overreach."
The
Protecting
Against
Ideology-Based
Targeting
Act,
introduced
by
Senator
Jeff
Flake
(R-AZ),
would
prohibit
the
IRS
from
developing
discriminatory
methodologies
for
organizations
under
or
applying
for
501(c)(3)
or
501(c)(4)
status
due
to
the
ideologies
expressed
in
the
organizations’
names
or
purposes.
It
also
requires
the
semi-annual
report
to
Congress
from
the
Treasury
Inspector
General
for
Tax
Administration
to
include
information
about
complaints
of
ideology-based
targeting.
The
text
of
the
Senate
Republican
Caucus’
letter
to
the
White
House
is
below.
The
Honorable
Barack
Obama
1600
Pennsylvania
Avenue,
NW
Washington,
DC
Dear
Mr.
President:
We
are
writing
to
express
our
grave
concerns
and
deep
disappointment
about
the
revelations
in
a
report
by
the
Treasury
Inspector
General
for
Tax
Administration
(TIGTA)
that
the
Internal
Revenue
Service
(IRS)
had
specifically
targeted
certain
organizations
for
extra
scrutiny
as
part
of
their
approval
review
of
applications
for
tax-exempt
501(c)(4)
status.
This
appears
to
be
a
wholly
inappropriate
action
that
threatens
to
silence
political
dissent
and
brings
partisan
politics
into
what
used
to
be
a
nonpartisan,
unbiased
and
fact-based
review
process.
The
public’s
confidence
in
the
IRS
relies
on
fair
and
apolitical
application
of
the
law.
Actions
such
as
these
undermine
taxpayers’
ability
to
trust
its
government
to
fairly
implement
the
law.
According
to
information
given
to
Congress
in
a
timeline
provided
by
the
Treasury
Inspector
General
for
Tax
Administration
(TIGTA),
in
early
2010
"specialists
had
been
asked
to
be
on
the
lookout
for
Tea
Party
applications,
and
the
IRS
Determinations
Unit
had
begun
searching
its
database
for
applications
with
'Tea
Party,'
'Patriots,'
or
'9/12'
in
the
organization's
name.”
The
report
goes
on
to
state
that
“By
June
2011,
some
IRS
specialists
were
probing
applications
using
the
following
criteria
to
identify
tea-party
cases,
according
to
the
Treasury
inspector
general
findings:
"'Tea
Party,'
'Patriots'
or
'9/12
Project'
is
referenced
in
the
case
file;
issues
include
government
spending,
government
debt
or
taxes;
education
of
the
public
by
advocacy/lobbying
to
'make
America
a
better
place
to
live';
statements
in
the
case
file
criticize
how
the
country
is
being
run."
We
are
deeply
disturbed
that
agents
of
the
government
were
directed
to
give
greater
scrutiny
to
groups
engaged
in
conduct
questioning
the
actions
of
their
government.
This
type
of
purely
political
scrutiny
being
conducted
by
an
Executive
Branch
Agency
is
yet
another
completely
inexcusable
attempt
to
chill
the
speech
of
political
opponents
and
those
who
would
question
their
government,
consistent
with
a
broader
pattern
of
intimidation
by
arms
of
your
administration
to
silence
political
dissent.
These
disclosures
are
even
more
unsettling
as
they
contradict
prior
statements
made
by
representatives
of
the
Administration
on
this
matter.
In
response
to
questions
raised
in
2012
on
this
issue
by
Republican
Senators,
Steven
T.
Miller,
the
Deputy
Commissioner
for
Services
and
Enforcement
at
the
IRS,
specifically
(and
falsely)
stated
that
there
was
an
unbiased,
technical
screening
process
used
to
determine
which
applications
for
501(c)(4)
organizations
merited
further
review.
In
two
separate
letters
to
Finance
Committee
Ranking
Member
Orin
Hatch,
Mr.
Miller
failed
to
note
that
explicitly
political
screens
were
used
in
reviewing
applications,
despite
the
fact
the
practice
was
apparently
well
known
within
the
IRS
as
early
as
2010.[1]
Given
these
strong
and
clear
statements
by
the
Administration
in
2012
that
no
such
targeted
review
or
specified
politically
motivated
criteria
existed,
these
revelations
raise
serious
questions
about
the
entire
application
review
process,
and
the
controls
in
place
at
the
IRS
to
stop
this
sort
of
political
interference
once
and
for
all.
According
to
TIGTA
these
actions
took
place
more
than
two
years
ago,
yet
without
this
information
becoming
public,
there
is
no
evidence
that
your
administration
would
have
done
anything
to
make
sure
these
abuses
were
brought
to
light
and
dealt
with
in
a
transparent
way.
The
American
people
deserve
to
know
what
actions
will
be
taken
to
ensure
those
who
made
these
policy
decisions
at
the
IRS
are
being
held
fully
accountable
and
more
importantly
what
is
being
done
to
ensure
that
this
kind
of
raw
partisanship
is
fully
eliminated
from
these
critically
important
non-partisan
government
functions.
As
such,
we
demand
that
your
Administration
comply
with
all
requests
related
to
Congressional
inquiries
without
any
delay,
including
making
available
all
IRS
employees
involved
in
designing
and
implementing
these
prohibited
political
screening,
so
that
the
public
has
a
full
accounting
of
these
actions.
It
is
imperative
that
the
Administration
be
fully
forthcoming
to
ensure
that
we
begin
to
restore
the
confidence
of
our
fellow
citizens
after
this
blatant
violation
of
their
trust.
We
look
forward
to
working
on
this
critical
issue
with
the
Administration’s
full
cooperation.
###
[1] April
26,
2012
and
September
11,
2012,
letters
to
The
Honorable
Orrin
G.
Hatch
from
Steven
T.
Miller,
Deputy
Commissioner
for
Services
and
Enforcement,
Internal
Revenue
Service.
|