Is IRS Being Unfairly Targeted?
Democracy, elections and voting at DC
Big government repressing political groups or bureaucrats doing their job? Election Law Blog, written by election expert Rick Hasen, has some interesting information about the current scandal at the Internal Revenue Service about Tea Party groups being targeted for scrutiny. But was the IRS just doing its job? First from the New Yorker:
It is certainly true that the I.R.S., and every other part of the government, should be evenhanded in how it applies the law, regarding liberal and conservative groups alike. If left-leaning organizations were disguising their true purposes to obtain 501(c)(4) status, the I.R.S. should have turned them down, too. And there will also be questions about how the Service, which is an independent agency, answered questions from Congress.
But let’s be clear on the real scandal here. The columnist Michael Kinsley has often observed that the scandal isn’t what’s illegal—it’s what’s legal. It’s what society chooses not to punish that tells us most about the prevailing ethical standards of the time. Campaign finance operates by shaky, or even nonexistent, rules, and powerful players game the system with impunity. A handful of I.R.S. employees saw this and tried, in a small way, to impose some small sense of order. For that, they’ll likely be ushered into bureaucratic oblivion.
Also from the New York Times Editorial Board:
The Internal Revenue Service was absolutely correct to look into the abuse of the tax code by political organizations masquerading as “social welfare” groups over the last three years. The agency’s mistake — and it was a serious one — was focusing on groups with “Tea Party” in their name or those criticizing how the country is run.
The I.R.S. should have used a neutral test to scrutinize every group seeking a tax exemption for “social welfare” activity — Democrat or Republican, conservative or liberal. Any group claiming tax-exempt status under Section 501(c)(4) of the internal revenue code can collect unlimited and undisclosed contributions, and many took in tens of millions. They are not supposed to spend the majority of their money on political activities, but the I.R.S. has rarely stopped the big ones from polluting the political system with unaccountable cash.
imntacrook says
Misleading article and it’s the IRS not the URS. This is so amateurish it stinks.
Adrian Tawfik says
The New Yorker and the New York Times are some of the best news available anywhere. Of course like everything they are bias but they are real investigative news. Nothing is perfect or unbiased.