This Is No Ordinary Scandal
Political abuse of the IRS threatens the basic integrity of our government.
I received this from an email that is circulating and I think this is the most well written piece that summarizes all that is and has been happening for some time. VaTidbits
By PEGGY NOONAN - WSJ
We are in the midst of the
worst Washington scandal since Watergate. The reputation of the Obama White
House has, among conservatives, gone from sketchy to sinister, and, among
liberals, from unsatisfying to dangerous. No one likes what they're seeing. The
Justice Departments assault on the Associated
Press and the ugly politicization of the Internal Revenue Service has left the
administration's credibility
deeply, probably irretrievably damaged. They don't look jerky now, they look
dirty. The patina of high-mindedness the president enjoyed is gone.
Something big has shifted. The standing of the administration has
changed.
As always it comes down to trust. Do you trust
the president's answers when he's pressed on an uncomfortable story? Do you
trust his people to be sober and fair-minded as they go about their work? Do
you trust the IRS and the Justice Department? You do not.
The president, as usual, acts as if all of this is totally
unconnected to him. He's shocked, it's unacceptable, and he’ll get to the
bottom of it. He read about it in the papers, just like you.
But he is not unconnected, he is not a bystander.
This is his administration. Those are his executive agencies. He runs the IRS
and the Justice Department.
A president sets a mood, a tone. He establishes an atmosphere. If
he is arrogant, arrogance spreads. If he is too partisan too disrespecting of
political adversaries, that spreads too. Presidents always undo themselves and
then blame it on the third guy in the last row in the sleepy agency across
town.
The IRS scandal has two parts. The first is the obviously
deliberate and targeted abuse, harassment and attempted suppression of
conservative groups. The second is the auditing of the taxes of political
activists.
In order to suppress
conservative groups—at first those with words like "Tea Party" and
"Patriot" in their names, then including those that opposed ObamaCare
or advanced the Second Amendment—the IRS demanded donor rolls, membership
lists, data on all contributions, names of volunteers, the contents of all
speeches made by members, Facebook posts,
minutes of all meetings, and copies of all materials handed out at gatherings.
Among its questions: What are you thinking about? Did you ever think of running
for office? Do you ever contact political figures? What are you reading? One
group sent what it was reading: the U.S. Constitution.
The second part of the scandal is the auditing of political
activists who have opposed the administration. The Journal's Kim Strassel
reported an Idaho businessman named Frank VanderSloot, who'd donated more than
a million dollars to groups supporting Mitt Romney. He found himself last June,
for the first time in 30 years, the target of IRS auditors. His wife and his
business were also soon audited. Hal Scherz, a Georgia physician, also came to
the government's attention. He told ABC News: "It is odd that nothing
changed on my tax return and I was never audited until I publicly criticized
Obama Care."
Franklin Graham, son of
Billy, told Politico he believes his father was targeted. A conservative
Catholic academic who has written for these pages faced questions about her
meager freelance writing income. Many of these stories will come out, but not
as many as there are. People are not only afraid of being audited, they're
afraid of saying they were audited.
All of these IRS actions took
place in the years leading up to the 2012 election. They constitute the use of
governmental power to intrude on the privacy and shackle the political freedom
of American citizens. The purpose, obviously, was to overwhelm and
intimidate—to kill the opposition, question by question and audit by audit.
It is not even remotely possible that all this was an accident, a
mistake. Again, only conservative groups were targeted, not liberal. It is not
even remotely possible that only one IRS office was involved.
Lois Lerner, who oversees tax-exempt groups for the IRS, was the
person who finally acknowledged, under pressure of a looming investigative
report, some of what the IRS was doing. She told reporters the actions were the
work of "frontline people" in Cincinnati. But other offices were
involved, including Washington. It is not even remotely possible the actions
were the work of just a few agents. This was more systemic. It was an
operation. The word was out: Get the Democratic Party's foes. It is not
remotely possible nobody in the IRS knew what was going on until very recently.
The Washington Post reported efforts to target the conservative groups reached
the highest levels of the agency by May 2012—far earlier than the agency had
acknowledged. Reuters reported high-level IRS officials, including its chief
counsel, knew in August 2011 about the targeting.
The White House is reported
to be shellshocked at public reaction to the scandal. But why? Were they so
highhanded, so essentially ignorant, that they didn't understand what it would
mean to the American people when their IRS—the revenue-collecting arm of the
U.S. government—is revealed as a low, ugly and bullying tool of the reigning
powers? If they didn't know how Americans would react to that, what did they
know? I mean beyond Harvey Weinstein's cellphone number.
And why—in the matters of the
Associated Press and Benghazi too—does no one in this administration ever take
responsibility? Attorney General Eric Holder doesn't know what happened,
exactly who did what. The president speaks in the passive voice. He attempts to
act out indignation, but he always seems indignant at only one thing: that he's
being questioned at all. That he has to address this. That fate put it on his
plate.
We all have our biases. Mine
is for a federal government that, for all the partisan shootouts on the streets
of Washington, is allowed to go about its work. That it not be distracted by
scandal that political disagreement be, in the end, subsumed to the common
good. It is a dangerous world: Calculating people wish to do us harm. In this
world no draining, unproductive scandals should dominate the government's life.
Independent counsels should not often come in and distract the U.S. government
from its essential business.
But that bias does not fit these circumstances.
Peggy Noonan's Blog
Here are daily
declarations from the Wall Street Journal columnist.
And it would be shameful and shallow for any Republican operative
or operator to make this scandal into a commercial and turn it into a mere
partisan arguing point and part of the game. It's not part of the game. This is
not about the usual partisan slugfest. This is about the integrity of our
system of government and our ability to trust, which is to say our ability to
function.