The first sign of trouble came two weeks ago, when Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) started railing against President Joe Biden’s IRS plan. Politico reported yesterday that the Iowa Republican isn’t alone.
Add another obstacle to the growing list President Joe Biden faces in his negotiations over his massive spending plans: mounting opposition to one of the ways to pay for his proposal — growing the IRS. Conservative groups have launched a campaign of TV ads, social media messages and emails to supporters criticizing the proposal to hire nearly 87,000 new IRS workers over the next decade to collect money from tax cheats.
At first blush, this may seem like an obvious dog-bites-man story: A Democratic White House wants to strengthen the Internal Revenue Service, so the White House’s opponents on the right are complaining. There doesn’t appear to be anything especially surprising about any of this.
But just below the surface, there’s a little more to this. As we’ve discussed, Biden’s plan for the IRS is the kind of revenue-generating idea that conservatives should be comfortable with.
When it comes to financing the president’s domestic agenda, there’s a predictable fight underway about taxes — or more specifically, tax rates. Democrats want to ask more from the wealthy and big corporations, while Republicans want to shield the rich and powerful while pretending to be a working-class party.
But Biden’s IRS plan is a little different.
The service has been gradually undermined for years, which in turn has made it far more difficult for the agency to be aggressive in pursuing possible tax cheats, which in turn has meant less revenue for policy priorities. Spending more on the IRS would almost certainly mean a lot more money for the treasury, even with existing tax rates.
As Catherine Rampell explained in a recent column, “How do you raise tax revenue without raising taxes? By increasing enforcement of existing tax law and making sure every penny already owed gets paid.”
By some measures, strengthening the IRS could generate an additional $700 billion in tax revenue over the next decade — not by raising taxes, but simply by enforcing the laws already on the books. For the “law and order” party, this shouldn’t be too heavy a lift.
In effect, White House officials are telling Republicans, “We have an idea to raise federal revenue, to help pay for key priorities, without raising tax rates.”
To which Republicans are effectively telling the White House, “We’re against that, too.”








