Republicans keep shouting from the rooftops that the White House is guilty of scandalous behavior involving the acknowledged bad behavior from IRS agents. The calls have become so fierce that it almost seems as if the GOP believes that the volume with which these charges are voiced can make up for the lack of substance in these allegations.
Several GOP lawmakers appeared on the Sunday news shows over the weekend promising to investigate any potential White House involvement in the tax agency’s wrongful targeting of conservative groups before the 2012 election. But any evidence of such a link is, to this point, largely non-existent.
President Obama–who accepted the resignation of two top agency staffers last week–said he was unaware of the IRS’ practice until media reports surfaced earlier this month. He has promised to hold other IRS officials accountable and work with Congress to make sure “this doesn’t happen again”.
Related: Treasury knew of IRS audit, but likely little more
White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer said as much over the weekend, hitting all five major Sunday morning talk shows to defend Obama on the IRS, as well as against Republican accusations that the administration was involved in a cover-up on the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi and the Justice Departments’ decision to issue a subpoena for AP journalists’ phone records.
Pfeiffer told NBC’s Meet The Press that the IRS targeting is a “problem that needs to be addressed. We need to make sure it never happens again.” He added, however, that he doesn’t buy the theory that there’s a cloud of scandal that’s hanging over the president.
“I think we’ve seen this playbook from the Republicans before. What they want to do when they are lacking a positive agenda is try to drag Washington into a swamp of partisan fishing expeditions, trumped up hearings and false allegations,” said Pfeiffer. “We’re not going to let that happen. The president has got business to do.”
It’s not stopping GOPers from trying.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell appeared on the same show insisting “there is a culture of intimidation throughout the administration. The IRS is just the most recent example.”
Meet The Press host David Gregory pressed further, asking the Kentucky lawmaker if there was any evidence that the president directed a “culture of intimidation” at the IRS to target his opponents. McConnell acknowledged “I don’t think we know what the facts are.” Gregory noted, “That hasn’t stopped you from accusing.”
Republican Rep. Dave Camp of Michigan, who chairs the House committee looking into the IRS, also admitted there was no evidence. “We don’t have anything to say that the president knew about it.” At the Congressional hearing on Friday, he went as far as to say the IRS scandal shows a “culture of cover-ups” and “political intimidation” within the Obama administration.









