Last week, the Daily Caller and Fox News thought they’d identified a “smoking gun” in the IRS controversy — relying on publicly available visitors logs, the outlets reported late last week that former IRS Commissioner Douglas Shulman visited the White House 157 times between 2009 and 2012. This was clear evidence of … something.
Except, it wasn’t. Not only was the total uninteresting, it was also wrong — The Atlantic’s Garance Franke-Ruta found that Shulman had been cleared for a series of routine White House gatherings, but only attended 11 events. The Daily Caller and Fox News got Politico to bite, but everyone else quickly realized this story was a dud.
But that’s the funny thing about Republican media chasing bogus stories: there’s always another one right around the corner.
The controversy over IRS targeting of conservative groups took a new turn this weekend when right-leaning websites drew a connection between the agency’s former head and his wife’s employment at a liberal group.
The conservative website Breitbart posted that “the goal of Public Campaign is to target political groups like the conservative non-profits at issue in the IRS scandal,” naming the campaign finance reform group where Doug Shulman’s wife, Susan Anderson, is the senior program adviser.
Hmm. So, in this new story, the man Bush/Cheney appointed to lead the IRS secretly targeted conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status because he’s married to a woman who works for a group opposed to said organizations.
You’re probably already rolling your eyes — it’s the appropriate reaction — because as conspiracy theories go, this one’s awfully silly. For one thing, there’s no evidence the IRS targeted conservative groups. For another, there’s no reason to believe Doug Shulman had anything to do with the bureaucratic errors that created the controversy in the first place.
As for his wife, Susan Anderson does work at Public Campaign, but the group’s “goal” has nothing to do with targeting far-right organizations. Rather, it’s a non-partisan group that works on campaign-finance reform. After the controversy first arose, Public Campaign endorsed an investigation into the IRS’s activities, but said, “There are legitimate questions to be asked about political groups that are hiding behind a 501(c)4 status. It’s unfortunate a few bad apples at the IRS will make it harder for those questions to be asked without claims of bias.”
For the Daily Caller, this is proof of nefarious motivations that somehow connect back to the former IRS chief.
Josh Marshall said something last week that resonated with me:
“[A]s a group, the standards of most institutional right wing journalism are just so appallingly bad that their stories simply aren’t credible…. [I]f you wonder why conservative scandal mongers can’t have nice things, look at the conservative media.”
Examples to reinforce this keep popping up.









