[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 162 (2016), Part 9]
[House]
[Page 13229]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                   REPUBLICAN CRUSADE AGAINST THE IRS

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, currently, in the House Judiciary 
Committee, there is an unusual spectacle unfolding. Now, a number of my 
colleagues on the other side of the aisle have made it a crusade to war 
against the IRS. They have cut staff, budgets, refused to help it 
collect money that is due and owed. They have made it easier for cheats 
to avoid their obligations. But this assault on the IRS Commissioner 
takes that war to a new low.
  I would invite anybody listening to this presentation right now to go 
to the internal channel in the House, number 42, or go to cspan.org to 
be able to watch it yourself. Walk down to Room 2237 Rayburn and watch 
this play out.
  I have had a chance to get to know John Koskinen, the IRS 
Commissioner, over the course of this last year, and I have come to 
respect and admire him. I would suggest to anybody trying to put this 
in context, trying to understand the give-and-take, google Mr. 
Koskinen, and then google some of his fiercest critics who are going to 
be on display at the Judiciary Committee today.
  Which of his critics would you imagine to be entrusted with being the 
chair of the board of trustees for their prestigious university, should 
they have attended one? Mr. Koskinen was.
  Which of them would have been successful in business as a turnaround 
artist in some of the most difficult and challenging commercial 
transactions? Mr. Koskinen was. And then walk away from material and 
business success to volunteer for some of the most challenging jobs in 
Government? Mr. Koskinen did.
  Which of these members of the Judiciary Committee that are attacking 
Mr. Koskinen would have been picked by a President of their own party 
to take some of the most challenging and difficult and important tasks? 
Mr. Koskinen was. The Y2K czar, when we were concerned about what would 
happen in the year 2000 and the integrity of computer systems; Mr. 
Koskinen was administrator for the District of Columbia when that city 
was turned around.
  Which of them would have been asked by a President of the other party 
to step in and handle a major systemic challenge? The IRS Commissioner, 
a Democrat, was asked by the Bush administration to step in and right 
the ship of Freddie Mac during the near meltdown of the global economy.
  And he came back, volunteering for one of the most difficult tasks in 
government, to deal with an IRS that has been underfunded, 
understaffed, while Congress makes its job almost impossible by making 
the Tax Code more complex each and every year. John Koskinen did.
  Google the people who are attacking him and see if any of them have 
accomplishments that are remotely equal to what this distinguished 
American did and has done and continues to do.
  This is a shameful display. This gentleman is being attacked for 
things that predated his tenure, not high crimes and misdemeanors and 
corruption, but because they don't like what went on there, and they 
are trying to find somebody to blame other than themselves.
  Look at what is going on in the Judiciary Committee. Google these 
people; evaluate for yourselves.
  The American people deserve better than what is going on now, and 
certainly, Mr. Koskinen does.

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