[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 132 (Tuesday, September 16, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7535-H7536]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IRS ACCOUNTABILITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Carter) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CARTER. Madam Speaker, today, I rise in support of five
commonsense bills that hold the government accountable to the people it
was created to serve.
It is amazing that we have an agency called the Internal Revenue
Service to which we have surrendered almost unlimited power for the
purposes of collecting revenues of this country. Arguably, American
citizens will tell you that the IRS has control over their lives, their
liberty, and their property, and, some would argue, without due process
of law.
You don't tell your taxman: I am not going to answer that question, I
am going to take the Fifth, because immediately he will seize your
property.
Yet we witnessed on television--as we found out--that the IRS was
being looked into for being incompetent and corrupt and maybe the most
incompetent and corrupt Federal agency in the country, and that they
were actually out investigating groups who were voicing their absolute
constitutional right to express their opinion in the political arena
and the right to gather and meet, which is guaranteed by the
Constitution.
But, no, the first thing we get from the person in charge is: I am
going to take the Fifth Amendment. As many can see, we have been
battling in the committee process in Congress over and over with the
IRS. They have abused our tax system to target conservative political
organizations, and this abuse has to be stopped and they have to be
held responsible. Of course, when we actually have someone that we see
is responsible, the quick solution for the IRS is transfer them
someplace else.
Well, I am proud the House has taken action to curb the power of the
IRS by streamlining the removal of Federal bureaucrats who engage in
misconduct or destroy Federal records. In front of a Federal District
Court, you just try shredding records that a court has ordered you to
bring before them and see what that Federal judge will do to you.
We are also voting to prohibit the IRS officials from using personal
email
[[Page H7536]]
to conduct official business, putting fairness back into the appeals
process, and ensuring taxpayers know the status of IRS investigations.
This is not much to ask. Just tell us what is going on.
These bills are important steps toward a level of accountability the
Obama administration has been unwilling to take. This is good
legislation. It sets our bureaucrats straight.
____________________