The good news for conservatives is that new information about the IRS controversy came to light late yesterday, which renewed coverage of the story Republicans are heavily invested in. The bad news for conservatives it that the revelations were the opposite of what they wanted to hear.
Following up on Rachel’s segment from last night, the last remaining pillar of the Republican talking points — groups on the right were singled out for unfair scrutiny — has collapsed.
The instructions that Internal Revenue Service officials used to look for applicants seeking tax-exempt status with “Tea Party” and “Patriots” in their titles also included groups whose names included the words “Progressive” and “Occupy,” according to I.R.S. documents released Monday.
The documents appeared to back up contentions by I.R.S. officials and some Democrats that the agency did not intend to single out conservative groups for special scrutiny. Instead, the documents say, officials were trying to use “key word” shortcuts to find overtly political organizations — both liberal and conservative — that were after tax favors by saying they were social welfare organizations.
But the practice appeared to go much farther than that. One such “be on the lookout” list included medical marijuana groups, organizations that were promoting President Obama’s health care law, and applications that dealt “with disputed territories in the Middle East.”
The fact that the practice apparently went “much farther” than previously thought certainly doesn’t cast the IRS in a more positive light, but as far as the ongoing political controversy is concerned, this new information is the final nail in the coffin. Americans have been told repeatedly that conservative groups had been singled out for unfair scrutiny and we now know that isn’t true.
There was no effort to penalize White House critics; there was no partisan or ideological vendetta; there was no conspiracy involving President Obama or his campaign team.
There’s just nothing left. Since this “scandal” erupted in early May, the right has raised a series of allegations, and as of this morning, each of them have been discredited. It’s remarkably similar to the efforts to turn the Benghazi attacks into a political controversy — serious allegations, followed by plenty of sound and fury, resulting in a “scandal” that ends with a whimper.
There is, however, one thing I’d like to know: why didn’t we learn about this new information sooner?
We learned about the extent of the problem related to Tea Party groups seeking tax-exempt status through an inspector general’s report released several weeks ago. But why did that document overlook these relevant details about liberal groups being subjected to the identical treatment?
House Democrats are eager to find out.









