A day before lawmakers plan to conduct their first hearing Friday on the targeting of Tea Party groups by the Internal Revenue Service, President Obama again expressed anger over the episode.
“We will be putting in new leadership that will be able to make sure that we…hold accountable those who have taken these outrageous actions,” Obama said at a news conference Thursday afternoon, adding: “It doesn’t matter whether you’re a Democrat or a Republican, you should be equally outraged.”
[Late Update 4:08pm: Obama has appointed Daniel Werfel, the controller of the Office of Management and Budget, to be acting IRS commissioner, the AP reports.]
Obama also said an independent counsel isn’t needed to probe the targeting. The Justice Department on Tuesday announced a criminal investigation.
Acting commissioner Steven Miller, who resigned Wednesday amid growing concern over the episode, is still set to testify Friday before the House Ways and Means Committee, the panel has said. Miller, who was deputy commissioner during the period at issue, will be joined by IRS Inspector General J. Russell George, whose report, released Tuesday, blamed lax management at the agency for allowing the targeting to take place, based on keyword searches for terms like “Tea Party” and “Patriot.”
Rep. Dave Camp, who chairs the committee, indicated that Miller’s resignation isn’t nearly enough. “This resignation does nothing to change the culture of discrimination at the IRS,” Camp, a Michigan Republican, said in a statement released Thursday morning. “There are still far too many unanswered questions and until we know what truly happened, we cannot fully fix what is wrong.”
The “culture of discrimination” appears to have emerged as a Republican talking point this week.
Sen. Marco Rubio also used the phrase several times Thursday as he sought to link the IRS story to other ongoing headaches for the administration. “This is an administration that has created a culture of intimidation through its campaign, and through the White House and throughout the federal government,” the Florida senator said on Fox News.
A letter sent Tuesday to Miller by Camp and Rep. Sander Levin, the ranking Democrat on the committee, offers a guide to the issues lawmakers may be aiming to zero in on.
Among other questions, it asks why IRS officials failed to tell lawmakers about the targeting despite the ongoing year-long investigation.









