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Congressional Dish

CD028: The IRS Scandal

Congressional Dish

Jennifer Briney

News, Congress, Government, Politics, Corporations

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 18 May 2013

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, highlights from the House Ways and Means Committee IRS scandal hearing. IRS staffers made a list of keywords including Tea Party, 9-12, Patriot, etc. to help them find social welfare groups applying for tax exempt status that were actually political in nature. This is the scandal you've been told about; the real scandal is how many of them have been approved. Background In January of 2010, the Supreme Court ruled in the infamous Citizen's United case that corporations count as people and that corporation donations count as speech, making them protected by the Constitution. This opened the floodgates to large amounts of corporate money making its way into U.S. elections. At the same time, the IRS saw a sharp increase in the number of groups claiming tax-exempt status under section 501(c)(4) of the U.S. tax code. Groups that qualify do not have to pay taxes to the U.S. government and, more importantly to political groups, do not have to disclose their donors. The law for 501(c)(4) groups says that they must exist "exclusively" for social welfare purposes, but an I says that they must exist "primarily" for social welfare purposes. That wiggle room has been applied broadly, to put it mildly, and we now have clearly political groups claiming tax-exempt status as 501(c)(4) organizations. In March of 2010, the division of the IRS charged with making sure that groups claiming tax-exempt status under section 501(c)(4) of the U.S. tax code were "primarily" social welfare groups, not political groups, made a list of keywords to look for in the names of groups that might indicate the groups were political in nature. The keywords they looked for include: "" "Patriots" "" References to government spending, government debt, or taxes "Make America a better place" Statements criticizing how the country is being run. The IRS employees also asked questions that were considered unnecessary when they were finally analyzed by IRS management. Although the list was inappropriate, most of the groups analyzed during the same time period had names unrelated to the list. In the end, the IRS Inspector General found no evidence of corruption at the IRS; instead, they concluded the problems arouse out of mismanagement. However, the real problem as far as us American citizens are concerned, is that clearly political groups are being given tax-exempt status, allowing them to keep their donors secret. Out of the 298 applications the IRS Inspector General reviewed, 0 had been denied. Here are some examples of groups that enjoy tax-exempt status as social welfare groups: , the group co-founded by Karl Rove the group that worked on behalf of the Obama campaign. and , front groups for the billionaire Koch brothers' interests , the group that focuses on "building the progressive movement". Further Reading Also in This Episode Bills that passed the House of Representatives this week: People Quoted in This Episode Steve Miller, acting Commission of the IRS (has since resigned) Russel George, Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration

Transcript

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0:00.0

and Hello friends, family, loyal congressional dish listeners and new congressional dish

0:23.9

listeners. I'm your host Jennifer Briny and welcome to another episode of

0:27.3

Congressional dish. Now for those of you that are new to the show, this show focuses

0:31.8

on the House of Representatives. Sometimes I will

0:34.2

talk about the Senate, but what I'm doing here is I'm reading the bills that

0:37.8

passed the House of Representatives and essentially letting you know what's in

0:41.1

them. Now for this week there weren't a lot of bills. They did

0:44.4

a lot of bills that are not interesting at all and they passed those under

0:49.4

something called suspension. Suspension is when almost everyone says yes to these things and there was very little

0:56.1

to talk about there so I'm not going to but there were two big bills that passed

1:00.3

the house and those are the two I'm going to talk about very quickly

1:04.6

because there's not much to him.

1:06.4

The first bill was H.R. 45 and that bill repealed Obamacare again.

1:14.0

Now this bill did leave one part of Obamacare intact.

1:18.3

Now if you listen to the Republican's rhetoric,

1:20.4

you might think that the part that was left intact was the part protecting people with

1:23.9

preexisting conditions because they say that that's the part that they would keep.

1:27.9

That is not true.

1:29.3

The one part that was kept was this board, an independent medical advisory board and this board is

1:35.8

one that is designed to keep the costs of Medicare under control so that's

1:40.3

the only part of Obamacare that will survive.

1:43.0

Now those of you that have listened, especially to last week's episode,

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