"As David Burnham noted in "A
Law Unto Itself: The IRS and the Abuse of Power" (1990), "In
almost every administration since the IRS's inception the information and
power of the tax agency have been mobilized for explicitly political
purposes.""
OPINION
May 14, 2013, 8:18 p.m. ET
A Brief History of IRS Political
Targeting
One survey found that 75% of IRS respondents
felt entitled to deceive or lie to Congress.
By JAMES BOVARD
Many Republicans are enraged over
revelations in recent days that the Internal Revenue Service targeted
conservative nonprofit groups with a campaign of audits and harassment.
But of all the troubles now dogging the Obama administration -- including
the Benghazi fiasco and the Justice Department's snooping on the
Associated Press -- the IRS episode, however alarming, is also the least
surprising. As David Burnham noted in
"A Law Unto Itself: The IRS and the Abuse of Power" (1990),
"In almost every administration since the IRS's inception the
information and power of the tax agency have been mobilized for
explicitly political purposes."
President Franklin Roosevelt used the IRS to harass newspaper publishers
who were opposed to the New Deal, including William Randolph Hearst and
Moses Annenberg, publisher of the Philadelphia Inquirer. Roosevelt also
dropped the IRS hammer on political rivals such as the populist firebrand
Huey Long and radio agitator Father Coughlin, and prominent Republicans
such as former Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon. Perhaps Roosevelt's most
pernicious tax skulduggery occurred in 1944. He spiked an IRS audit of
illegal campaign contributions made by a government contractor to
Congressman Lyndon Johnson, whose career might have been derailed if
Texans had learned of the scandal.
President John F. Kennedy raised the political exploitation of the IRS to
an art form. Shortly after capturing the presidency, JFK denounced
"the discordant voices of extremism" and derided people who
distrust their leadersPresident Obama didn't invent that particular
rhetorical line. Shortly thereafter, JFK signaled at a news conference
that he expected the IRS to be vigilant in policing the tax-exempt status
of questionable (read: conservative) organizations.
Within a few days of Kennedy's remarks, the IRS launched the Ideological
Organizations Audit Project. It targeted right-leaning groups, including
the Christian Anti-Communist Crusade, the American Enterprise Institute
and the Foundation for Economic Education. Kennedy also used the IRS to
strong-arm companies into complying with "voluntary" price
controls. Steel executives who defied the administration were singled out
for audits.
A 1976 report by the Senate Select Committee on Government Intelligence
on the Kennedy program noted: "By directing tax audits at
individuals and groups solely because of their political beliefs, the
Ideological Organizations Audit Project established a precedent for a far
more elaborate program of targeting 'dissidents.'"
After Richard Nixon took office, his administration quickly created a
Special Services Staff to mastermind what a memo called "all IRS
activities involving ideological, militant, subversive, radical, and
similar type organizations." More than 10,000 individuals and groups
were targeted because of their political activism or slant between 1969
and 1973, including Nobel Laureate Linus Pauling (a left-wing critic of
the Vietnam War) and the far-right John Birch Society.
The IRS was also given Nixon's enemies list to, in the words of White
House counsel John Dean, "use the available federal machinery to
screw our political enemies."
The exposure of Nixon's IRS abuses during congressional hearings in 1973
and 1974 profoundly weakened him during the uproar after the Watergate
hotel break-in. The second article of his 1974 impeachment charged him
with endeavoring to obtain from the IRS "confidential information
contained in income tax returns for purposes not authorized by law, and
to cause, in violation of the constitutional rights of citizens, income
tax audits or other income tax investigations to be initiated or
conducted in a discriminatory manner." Congress enacted legislation
to severely restrict political contacts between the White House and the
IRS.
In the following decades, the IRS regularly sparked outrage by abusing
innocent taxpayers, but there was not much controversy about the agency's
politicizing until Bill Clinton took office.
In 1995, the White House and the Democratic National Committee produced a
331-page report entitled "Communication Stream of Conspiracy
Commerce" that attacked magazines, think tanks and other entities
and individuals who had criticized President Clinton. In the subsequent
years, many organizations mentioned in the White House report were hit by
IRS audits. More than 20 conservative organizationsincluding the
Heritage Foundation and the American Spectator magazineand almost a
dozen individual high-profile Clinton accusers, such as Paula Jones and
Gennifer Flowers, were audited.
The Landmark Legal Foundation sued the IRS in 1997 after being audited.
Its brief quoted an IRS official who had explained at an IRS meeting in
San Francisco that audit requests from members of Congress or their staff
had been shredded and also suggested how future requests from Capitol
Hill could be camouflaged. The IRS told the court that it could not find
114 key files relating to possible political manipulation of audits of
tax-exempt organizations.
One potential bombshell of the Clinton era that went relatively
unrecognized was an Associated Press report in 1999 that "officials
in the Democratic White House and members of both parties in Congress
have prompted hundreds of audits of political opponents in the
1990s," including "personal demands for audits from members of
Congress." Audit requests from congressmen were marked
"expedite" or "hot politically" and IRS officials
were obliged to respond within 15 days. Permitting congressmen to
secretly and effortlessly sic G-men on whomever they pleased epitomized
official Washington's contempt for average Americans and fair play. But
because the abuse was bipartisan, there was little enthusiasm on Capitol
Hill for an investigation.
The IRS has usually done an excellent job of stifling investigations of
its practices. A 1991 survey of 800 IRS executives and managers by the
nonprofit Josephson Institute of Ethics revealed that three out of four
respondents felt entitled to deceive or lie when testifying before a
congressional committee.
The agency also has a long history of seeking to intimidate congressional
critics: In 1925, Internal Revenue Commissioner David Blair personally
delivered a demand for $10 million in back taxes to Michigan's Republican
Sen. James Couzenswho had launched an investigation of the Bureau of
Internal Revenueas he stepped out of the Senate chamber. More recently,
after Sen. Joe Montoya of New Mexico announced plans in 1972 to hold
hearings on IRS abuses, the agency added his name to a list of tax
protesters who were capable of violence against IRS agents.
With the current IRS scandal, we may have seen only the tip of the
iceberg. Thorough congressional investigations would no doubt help reveal
the extent of the operation, and the criminal investigation announced by
the Justice Department on Tuesday may prove fruitful as well. Regardless
of what these inquiries uncover, though, we can be almost certain that
IRS audits will remain irresistible political weapons.
Mr. Bovard is the author, most recently, of the e-book memoir
"Public Policy Hooligan."
A version of this article appeared May 15, 2013, on page A15 in the
U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: A Brief
History of IRS Political Targeting.
http://stream.wsj.com/story/latest-headlines/SS-2-63399/SS-2-232185/
--
--
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum
* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls.
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "PoliticalForum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
- A Brief History of IRS Political Targeting MJ
- Re: A Brief History of IRS Political Targeting Keith In Tampa
- Re: A Brief History of IRS Political Targeting GregfromBoston
- Re: A Brief History of IRS Political Targetin... MJ
- Re: A Brief History of IRS Political Targ... GregfromBoston
- Re: A Brief History of IRS Political... Keith In Tampa
- Re: A Brief History of IRS Political Targeting plainolamerican
