After a tumultuous week for the Obama administration, the House on Friday began holding the first of several hearings on the Internal Revenue Service.
President Obama, who said he was not aware that the tax-collecting agency had wrongly targeted conservative groups 18 months before the 2012 election until media reports surfaced late last week, has expressed his outrage, leading to the resignation of two top IRS officials. Obama has also promised to hold other IRS officials accountable and work with Congress to make sure “this doesn’t happen again.”
The trouble began, according to the inspector general report, in March of 2010 when IRS agents began zeroing in on tax-exempt applications with keyword searches for words like “Tea Party” and “Patriots.” In June 2011, lawmakers began sending letters to the IRS asking they explain complaints that conservative groups were being given extra scrutiny. That’s snowballed to where are today: an IRS with a bruised and battered image, Tea Party outrage, and Republicans wanting to know just how much the Obama administration knew.
As the hearings continue, here’s a who is who in the unfolding controversy.
Lois Lerner: At the end of June 2011, Lerner, who oversees tax-exempt groups at the IRS, learned at a meeting that conservative groups were being targeted, according to the IG report. The division subsequently switched to more general search criteria. Six months later, she met with some members of Congress to discuss the issue, but didn’t bring up the targeting of conservative groups, according to the IG report.
Lerner, last Friday, was the first IRS official to publicly acknowledge that the agency had targeted the groups, calling it “absolutely inappropriate.” She argued, however, that the motive was not political and that it was merely an effort to handle the influx of applications of groups seeking tax-exempt status. Some are calling for her resignation, and Lerner –who started at the IRS in 2001, has reportedly lawyered up. It’s not clear if Lerner will testify in front of Congressional members next week.
Douglas Shulman: The former IRS commissioner was appointed by George W. Bush. In Oct. 2011, GOP Rep. Charles W. Boustany of Louisiana, sent a letter asking Shulman to outline the policies of the tax-exempt division. In March last year, he told Congress that there was “absolutely no targeting” of groups based on their politics. His tenure at the IRS ended in November.
Steven Miller: He’s been the acting IRS commissioner since November and was the first to announce his resignation at the behest of President Obama on Wednesday. He testified in front of members of the House Ways and Means committee on Friday, insisting the targeting of conservative groups was a “mistake, not an act of partisanship.” Miller is expected to stay in his post until June to help with the transition.









