[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 68 (Wednesday, May 15, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3505-S3506]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE IRS
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Madam President, I am here to speak today because
Washington, DC, and the rightwing outrage machine are all abuzz about
the scandal that the IRS appears to have targeted organizations for
inquiry based on tea party affiliation. Obviously, that is wrong, but
let's not forget that is not the only IRS scandal--that is not the only
scandal in town. There are two IRS scandals. The other is the IRS
allowing big, shadowy forces to meddle in elections anonymously through
front groups that file false statements with the IRS.
Let's go through this. Let's begin with the principle that it is
pretty clear that Americans have a strong democratic interest in
knowing who is trying to influence their vote in elections. That is
kind of democracy 101.
Even the Supreme Court, which can hardly agree 8 to 1 on what time it
is, agreed 8 to 1 that knowing who is trying to influence our votes is
really important. Here is what they said: ``Effective disclosure''
would ``provide shareholders and citizens with the information needed
to hold corporations and elected officials accountable for their
positions and supporters.'' That is very much a part of the democratic
process.
Some folks don't want us to know who they are when they meddle in our
politics, such as big companies taking positions that would annoy their
shareholders or their customers and secretive billionaires who want
influence without accountability. They want to pull the strings behind
the scenes. It also includes polluters, Wall Street, Big Oil, and other
folks the public is fed up with. They all have lots of reasons for
wanting to stay secret.
The law in America requires lots of disclosure, and the Supreme Court
has emphasized the importance of lots of disclosure.
What is a company or a billionaire trying to hide their influence-
seeking going to do? How does the secret money get in? Well, it is
easy. They create a front organization, usually with a phony-baloney
happy name, and hide behind that--except it is not quite that easy.
There are not that many types of organizations that can hide their
donors that way. The most commonly used is called a 501(c)(4), which is
a tax-exempt, nonprofit form of corporation that is regulated by--guess
who--the IRS.
There is one big problem for people wanting that secret influence in
politics; that is, that kind of organization, the 501(c)(4), needs to
be set up under the law ``for the promotion of social welfare''--
indeed, the law says ``exclusively'' for the promotion of social
welfare. According to the IRS's own regulations, ``The promotion of
social welfare does not include direct or indirect participation or
intervention in political campaigns on behalf of or in opposition to
any candidate for public office.'' So that is a problem.
Well, the first kind of miniscandal is that the IRS has decided that
an organization is organized exclusively for the promotion of social
welfare if it is primarily engaged in social welfare activities. By
``primarily,'' they mean 51 percent, so the other 49 percent can be
purely political. So ``does not include direct or indirect
participation in political activity'' has been turned into ``actually
does include but up to 49 percent,'' which is nonsensical. As I said,
that is a miniscandal of its own.
Let's go on. The IRS allowing a bunch of political operatives to form
nonprofit groups that don't disclose their donors and then collect
millions of dollars and spend them on elections in contravention of a
clear statute and seemingly in violation of their own rules also
requires that they usually make some false statements. That is where
the scandal really worsens.
There is a form called the 1024 form that is the application form for
501(c)(4) status. If we go to that form, we will see question 15.
Question 15 asks:
Has the organization spent or does it plan to spend any
money attempting to influence the selection, nomination,
election or appointment of any person to any Federal, state,
or local public office or to an office in a political
organization?
[[Page S3506]]
That is the question on the form, and it has to be answered under
oath.
A considerable number of groups appear to have lied on their
applications for nonprofit status as well as on their returns, and they
have lied with absolutely no consequences.
There is a Pulitzer Prize-winning, nonpartisan investigative group
called ProPublica. ProPublica has investigated these 501(c)(4) filings.
As part of their investigation, they looked at 104 different
organizations that had reported to the Federal Election Commission or
to the State equivalent Federal elective bodies--104 organizations that
reported electioneering activity, that they were involved in trying to
elect candidates. In those filings to the Federal and State election
boards, they said: Here is what we spent on influencing those
elections.
ProPublica cross-checked those 104 that had filed statements saying
how much they had spent to influence elections and 32 of them--32 of
them--told the IRS they spent no money to influence elections, either
directly or indirectly. Both statements cannot be true. An organization
cannot tell one Federal agency how much they spent to influence
elections and tell another Federal agency they spent no money to
influence elections and have both statements be true.
Then we look at these organizations' behavior and the false
statements look even worse. One organization said it would spend 50
percent of its effort on a Web site and 30 percent on conferences. The
investigation showed its Web site consisted of one photograph and one
paragraph; no sign of any conference. The same group declared it would
take contributions ``from individuals only'' and then took $2 million
from PhRMA, the pharmaceutical lobby.
Another declared to the IRS it had spent $5 million on political
activities, but it told the Federal Election Commission it had spent
$19 million on political advertisements.
Another pledged its political spending would be ``limited in amount
and will not constitute the organization's primary purpose.'' Then that
organization went out and spent $70 million on ads and robocalls in one
election season. It is almost funny it is so bad.
But there is nothing funny about making a material false statement to
a Federal agency. That is not just bad behavior, it is a crime. It is a
statutory offense under 18 U.S. Code section 1001. The Department of
Justice indicts and prosecutes violations of this statute all the time,
but they never do for this. Never. Why? It appears there is a bad
agreement between the Department of Justice and the Internal Revenue
Service that the Department of Justice will not prosecute false
statements if they are made on this form unless the case has been
referred to them by the IRS.
So that is really scandal two right there. No matter how flagrant the
false statement, no matter how great the discrepancy between the
statements filed with the IRS under oath and the statements also filed
with the Federal and State election agencies, no matter how baldly the
organization in practice contradicts how it answered IRS questions
about political activity, the IRS never makes a referral to the
Department of Justice. Thirty-two flagrantly false statements and, as
far as anyone knows, not one referral to the Department of Justice as a
false statement. It is a mockery of the law and it is a mockery of the
truth.
There is an easy solution. The Department of Justice prosecutes these
false statements in lots of other instances. Prosecute these. Juries
are good at sorting out what is a lie and what is not.
Investigations, interviews, statements, and subpoenas can look behind
what appears to be a false statement, and prosecutors can get a full
sense of the case, in a grand jury, before any charges are finalized.
But they can't if they don't even look.
Right now, multiple organizations lie with impunity and in large
numbers. It is indeed a scandal that the IRS will not even make a
referral. Frankly, it is no great credit to the Department of Justice
that the Department will not act on its own with all of this so public
and so plain. Hiding behind their agreement with the IRS, on these
facts, is not that great Department's finest hour.
So it is very wrong. It is very wrong that the IRS required
additional information from a number of organizations--mostly small
organizations--based on a screen that incorporates those organizations'
tea party orientation. But it is also very wrong that the IRS goes AWOL
when wealthy and powerful forces want to break the law in order to hide
their wrongful efforts at secret political influence. Picking on the
little guy is a pretty lousy thing to do; rolling over for the powerful
and letting them file false statements is pretty lousy too. Two
scandals. Let's not let one drown out the other.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.
Mr. RUBIO. Are we in morning business?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Yes, we are.
Mr. RUBIO. I don't anticipate using it all, but I ask unanimous
consent to be recognized for up to 15 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection.
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