Every
member of the House of Representatives is required to take an oath of
office before they begin serving their term, and although it has changed
slightly since the nation’s founding, its basic premise is that
regardless of party affiliation, they swear they will “support and
defend the Constitution of the United States,” and that they “will well
and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to
enter.” For the past two sessions of Congress, Republicans in the House
of Representatives have not “well and faithfully” discharged the duties
of their office and it is a mystery whether it is because they believe
they are tasked with obstructing governance or are grossly unaware of
their duties. It is likely they know one of their primary duties
according to the Constitution they swore to support is to “lay and collect taxes… to pay the debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States,”
but it is fairly common knowledge repugicans oppose the concept of
laying or collecting taxes regardless the intended use of the revenue.
As part of their aversion to taxation, and the Internal Revenue Service, House repugicans are planning on slashing
$3 billion from the IRS’s already pathetically underfunded budget, and
besides just hating the concept of taxation, there are several likely
reasons for starving one of the most critical departments in government.
For one thing, repugicans have made no secret underfunding the IRS is
punitive for what they cite as “inappropriate actions” over the
phony scandal when IRS employees performed their due diligence in
scrutinizing political groups filing applications for 501(C)(3) “social welfare”
tax exempt status to conceal dark money donors in political campaigns.
In fact, slashing the IRS funding is part of a series of GOP bills to
punish the IRS that includes withholding 10% of the agency’s
enforcement budget until they stop investigating conservative political
groups’ applications according to a so-called “taxpayer watchdog” group.
The
bad news for government revenue is part of a spending bill for fiscal
2014 released by Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Hal
Rogers (r-KY), that allocates $4 billion less than President Obama’s
budget called for and over $3 billion less than House repugicans
allotted last year. However, there is more at stake than just crippling
the IRS from collecting revenue to keep the government operating and
providing for the general welfare. The repugicans have panted for a means
of blocking execution of the Affordable Care Act, and underfunding the agency effectively denies their request for 16,500 new IRS agents over the next decade to oversee implementation of the health law.
Cutting the IRS budget, especially enforcement and collections,
is starving the government of much needed revenue, especially when repugicans are in a debt and deficit cutting frenzy. In 2006 alone, the
IRS was so pathetically underfunded, and understaffed, they left $385 billion
in owed and uncollected taxes primarily from corporations and the rich.
The repugicans’ deliberate underfunding serves more than just
punishing the agency for doing its job policing phony “social welfare”
applications and thwarting the Affordable Care Act’s implementation,
they are letting their wealthy contributors off the hook for taxes they
owe. Plus, as a value-added benefit, starving the government of funds is
part and parcel of their oath to lobbyist Grover Norquist to assist him
in cutting “government down to size where he can drown it in a
bathtub.” What better way to underfund the government than neutering the
agency responsible for executing House repugicans’ oath to “lay and collect taxes… to pay the debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States?”
For
the past four-and-a-half years repugicans have openly campaigned, and
worked diligently, to “limit the size of government” they claim is their
mandate from their masters the Koch brothers, ALEC, and various
belief-tanks, but they swore an oath to the Constitution to “faithfully discharge the duties of the office” and according to the Constitution their primary duty is to “lay and collect taxes;” not underfund the agency tasked with collecting revenue so necessary to “pay the debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States.”
But that is the real issue; repugicans have shown a predilection for
not providing anything for the general welfare of the United States that
historically has been a number of national interests ranging from
federal courts, policing, imprisonment, and national security to social
programs, environmental protection, and education.
According to Eric Cantor, slashing the IRS budget serves what he calls “a
growing sense of distrust of what this administration and what
Washington is doing, and that’s why we in the House this month will be
taking up a package of bills to stop this government abuse and put the
American people first.” For the record, the public’s distrust is for repugicans in Congress as evidenced by their pitiful 10% confidence rating
just a month ago, and who could blame them as they have spent no small
amount of time and energy obstructing any and all legislation to provide
for “the general welfare”
of the United States or the people. They did, however, enact severe
sequestration cuts, attempt to repeal the ACA, and block a variety of
bipartisan Senate bills that did, in fact, provide for the people’s
general welfare.
Slashing the IRS budget is more than just vindictive retribution for IRS employees scrutinizing perjury-laden applications for social welfare status, or obstructing implementation of the Affordable Care Act, or preventing
the wealthy from paying taxes, or even fulfilling their pledge to
Grover Norquist; it is dereliction of duty. The repugicans, like every
member of Congress, swore an oath to “faithfully discharge the duties of the office”
that includes “laying and collecting taxes” they are effectively
thwarting by underfunding the Internal Revenue Service. Their actions
are particularly egregious for withholding 10% of the funding
specifically for enforcement of IRS codes to prevent repugicans’
campaign donors from paying their taxes or concealing their dark money
donors.
Americans should be outraged their representatives are
deliberately undermining this government’s operation by starving it of
funding while protecting the wealthy and their corporations from paying
their fair share. There is no telling how many hundreds of billions of
dollars go uncollected, and if in 2006 the figure was $385 billion, it
is likely closer to $1 trillion in 2012 and if repugicans were as
frantic to reduce the debt and deficit as they claim, they would double
the IRS budget. However, that would reduce the deficit, fund the
Affordable Care Act, provide for the general welfare and foil Grover
Norquist’s plan to drown the government in a bathtub that may be the
real reason they are cutting the IRS budget.
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