From the beginning of the IRS “scandal”, it seemed obvious to me that with wingnut nonprofit groups outspending liberals by 34-1,
their activities would be more prone to scrutiny. Add into that mix the
fact that after Citizens United, these dark money groups sprang up in
order to avoid disclosure of donors, the fact that many of these “tea
party” groups were actually violating the rules of nonprofits by
engaging in political activities, and this scandal looked more like
preemptive pushback than a “targeting” scandal.
It seems some election lawyers agree. Over the holiday weekend, when almost no one was reading politics, the New York Times
published an article based on their review of IRS agency planning
documents. It turns out that “The I.R.S. is already separately reviewing
roughly 300 tax-exempt groups that may have engaged in improper
campaign activity in past years.”
Thus,
“Some election lawyers said they believed a wave of lawsuits against
the I.R.S. and intensifying Congressional criticism of its handling of
applications were intended in part to derail those audits, giving
political nonprofit organizations a freer hand during the 2014
campaign.”
The Times
examined more than a dozen of the organizations seeking nonprofit
status, and they appear to have earned this scrutiny the hard way, “… a
close examination of these groups and others reveals an array of
election activities that tax experts and former I.R.S. officials said
would provide a legitimate basis for flagging them for closer review.”
Of course, the very lawmakers in Congress who are leading the
“investigation” against the IRS are the people who stand to benefit from
intimidating the IRS into stopping their investigations into the dark
money groups. That would be repugican lawmakers.
Donald B. Tobin, a former lawyer with the Justice Department’s tax division, explained to the NYT,
“Money is not the only thing that matters. While some of the I.R.S.
questions may have been overbroad, you can look at some of these groups
and understand why these questions were being asked.”
I pointed out last week that Karl Rove’s “Crossroads” was still awaiting
IRS approval as tax exempt: “Rove’s Crossroads is the biggest spender,
reporting spending more than $87.9 million since 2010, but it’s still
waiting to be officially approved as tax exempt. Gee, do you think the
IRS will be able to be objective when it comes to Crossroads’ overtly
political purpose, or will they feel pressured to rubber stamp Karl so
as not to cause offense?”
It seems that the IRS is indeed being pressured into granting dark
money status to wingnut groups, to the benefit of Congressional repugicans in the 2014 elections.
The Times
detailed the partisan activities of some of these groups, from the Ohio
Liberty Coalition canvassing for Romney to an Alabama Wetumpka tea party group sponsoring training dedicated to the “‘defeat of President
Barack Obama’ while the I.R.S. was weighing its application.” Over a
week ago, it was revealed that the True the Vote tea party group was ruled by a judge to have engaged in illegal activities by supporting repugicans in Texas.
This group was quoted in many articles as an example of conservatives
being “targeted”. In other words, many of these groups were blatantly
flaunting the laws governing social welfare and nonprofit groups.
You can see why the IRS used words like “tea party” in sifting
through the huge onslaught of new applications post Citizens United.
This, however, was “inappropriate”. The understaffed and underfunded
agency of the IRS was supposed to pretend they didn’t know who was
gaming the system, because nothing benefits repugicans more than
killing the agency’s ability to provide oversight into the illegal
activities of alleged nonprofits acting in illegal ways to benefit their cabal.
Adding more fuel to the speculation that wingnuts/repugicans
hope to use their claims of persecution to game the ref is the fact that
this entire narrative was dropped on the press at a time when a repugican was also leaking edited Benghazi emails to the press in an
attempt to make the Obama White House and State Department look bad.
It turned out that the real emails proved the White House and State
Department had not asked for the talking points to be changed in order
to protect themselves, as repugicans had claimed. The press reported repugican claims as fact, just as they reported these claims of
persecution by the IRS as fact. The IRS story was buttressed in the
press by the interpretation of IRS briefings by “repugican congressional aides” (seriously), and these conclusions were backed up
by reporting the wild cries of persecution by True the Vote — the group a
federal judge ruled had illegally acted more as a repugican PAC than a
nonprofit.
Behind the witch hunts into alleged “targeting” of wingnut
groups, many of these groups were/are engaging in highly partisan
activities directly impacting elections. So the real questions are:
Will the Obama administration once again stab the
innocent-until-proven-guilty in the back in order to appease the
agenda-laden screams of repugicans, who are eyeing up juicy
free-for-alls in 2014, or will they stand tall for justice and let the
facts play out. Will the press do its job, after being played by
“congressional repugicans” multiple times in one week? Or, will they
continue to operate as stenographers for the latest repugican claims,
just as they did when the shrub was in office.
What we have here are repugican lawmakers who stand to benefit from the IRS witch hunt in charge of the said witch hunt.
The press might wish to make note of Jonathan Karl’s embarrassing
fall from grace, and consider not taking repugican congressional aides’
word for the meaning of a briefing or email. Just a thought.
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