[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 134 (Wednesday, September 7, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H5099]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, to understand what is wrong with
American politics, especially the dysfunctional Republican House of
Representatives, look no further than the spectacle surrounding the IRS
and the impeachment of its Commissioner.
The Internal Revenue Service impacts 150 million American taxpayers
every year, virtually every family and all legal businesses. This is
how we finance essential services, from Social Security to medical
research, our national defense, national parks, veterans' services, and
so much more. Everything that matters to Americans depends on the
ability to finance government efficiently and fairly.
Look, Americans from the dawn of the Republic have chafed at paying
taxes, continuing a tradition that dates back to Biblical times, and
almost everybody says they hate the IRS, which is the cheapest,
quickest political applause line for any politician. Yet, over the
years, we have managed to collect money that allows us to win wars,
struggle through depressions, and provide what used to be some of the
finest public services on the face of the planet.
Yes, the Internal Revenue Service administers a hopelessly complex,
convoluted, and unfair Tax Code because that is what the American
Congress has given them to work with. Congress created this mess and
then blames the people who try to administer it.
If we are ever to make the IRS better, more efficient, and fairer, it
is going to require a degree of cooperation, candor, and hard work. The
current spectacle of destroying the reputation of a distinguished
public servant, an accomplished businessman, is going to make that task
even harder.
Make no mistake. The treatment of John Koskinen, with the possibility
of being the first Cabinet official impeached in nearly 140 years, is
not just embarrassing for the people who are perpetrating it; it
represents a threat to the ability to administer the IRS.
John Koskinen came to this position after a lifetime of success in
business as a turnaround expert at the highest levels as well as in
public service, holding senior positions in both Republican and
Democratic administrations. The Bush administration turned to him to
prevent the implosion of the housing finance giant, Freddie Mac, and he
spent 3 years guiding and rebuilding it.
There is absolutely no evidence that he did anything wrong. The
Republican inspector general, a former Republican staff member, found
nothing wrong. This impeachment action is going nowhere in the Senate.
It has got to be an embarrassment for the Speaker, committee chairmen,
and Republicans everywhere. It only serves to highlight ideological
divisions, lack of respect for due process, and the exaggerated power
of the Republican echo chamber of rightwing talk radio.
But it does more than add to disdain for the political process. It is
a cloud over public service. While people claim we don't need the IRS
or that our tax filing can be reduced to a postcard and that we can
generate all the money we need with reduced tax rates and more
exemptions, it is a fantasy that any responsible Republican
businessperson or independent economist will verify.
Going down this impeachment path will make it harder to recruit
somebody for the hardest job in government and will only deepen the
divides at a time when we need clear thinking and nonpartisan
cooperation to fix a broken IRS, establish the trust and hard work to
make the mechanics of revenue collection work, and avoid the breakdown
of the system.
This is playing with fire and should be beneath America's elected
officials. Tarnishing the stellar reputation of an outstanding citizen
who is doing his country a favor by volunteering to take this thankless
task is simply something that should not be tolerated.
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