There’s no love lost between Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings and Republican Rep. Darrell Issa.
The two lawmakers, who sit on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, are sparring this week over the Internal Revenue Service scandal, with each accusing the other of being “reckless.”
It started last week when Issa asserted the IRS scrutiny of conservative groups began in Washington.
The California congressman, who chairs the committee, released partial transcripts of IRS officials in Cincinnati, including one unnamed employee saying they took “all my direction from Washington.”
Cummings–the top-ranking Democrat on the committee–immediately ripped Issa’s claims, calling them “reckless” and “inconsistent with the findings of the Inspector General, who spent more than a year conducting the investigation.” (President Obama has said he was unaware of the IRS’s practice and has promised to hold other officials in the tax collection agency accountable. The disclosure has led to the resignation of two top IRS officials).
So why not release the entire transcript? Other IRS employees in the same division, including a manger of the group and the person responsible for the extra targeting, contradict the cherry-picked statements Issa released. Cummings made public more of the transcripts over the weekend.
In one, an IRS manager–a Republican–is asked if the decision to screen Tea Party groups was made with the goal of “targeting of the president’s political enemies.” The employee responded, “I do not believe that the screening of these cases had anything to do other than consistency and identifying issues that needed to have further development.”
The employee was also asked if he believed that anyone in the White House was involved, to which he said, “I have no reason to believe that.”









