[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 67 (Tuesday, May 14, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S3393]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE IRS
Mrs. BOXER. Madam President, there is no room for politics at the
IRS. Senator McConnell is right. Senator Reid is right. They have both
addressed it. The issue is the IRS has to be completely neutral in
politics, but they do have to go after organizations and individuals
who are not abiding by the rules, whether they are right, left, center
or no ideology at all.
I remember during the Bush years we saw the IRS targeting liberal
churches. It was awful. They were harassing them and forcing them to
show that they were nonprofits. Now we see the IRS has been targeting
tea party groups. Whether they are targeting right or left, that is
wrong, and anyone doing it, frankly, needs to get another job because
that is against the law. We cannot have politically motivated audits or
harassing people, whatever their politics may be.
Here is what we do need. We do need a fair IRS that definitely looks
at whether organizations, be they left or right, are truly deserving of
tax-exempt status--that is important--but not targeting one group or
another. We also know the targeting of the tea party groups took place
while a Bush appointee was the head of the IRS, probably--perhaps was
quite unaware.
The bottom line is people at the top have to be held accountable. I
agree with that. He should have known what was going on. But there is
no room for this. I do believe there has to be serious action taken at
the personnel level; otherwise, people will just go ho-hum.
No, not ho-hum; you cannot use a position to harass people because of
their politics, regardless of where their politics may lie.
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