House Republicans are now one step closer to keeping the GOP firestorm over the Internal Revenue Service burning through the midterm elections.
In a 21-12 vote, the House Oversight Committee Thursday approved a resolution to hold former IRS official Lois Lerner in contempt of Congress. No Democrat on the committee voted for the measure.
Lerner is the central figure in the controversy after agency officials were pinned for improperly targeting tea party and conservative groups. Republicans seized the drama to stoke party rallying cries in the year since the revelations came to light.
Lerner appeared before House committees for two separate grillings. Last May, the former head of the agency’s tax-exempt division provided a personal statement before the House Oversight Committee and refused to answer questions, pleading the Fifth. She invoked her constitutional rights against self-incrimination once again in March.
Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the Oversight Committee, said the resolution to hold Lerner in contempt of Congress was not an action he took lightly. The California Republican argues that Lerner effectively waived her Fifth Amendment right by addressing the House panel in her opening statement.
The committee’s ranking Democrat, Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings, compared Issa’s crusade against Lerner to tactics practiced by late-Sen. Joe McCarthy, infamous for his witch hunt against alleged communists during the height of the Cold War.
“Today, this committee is trying to do something that even Joe McCarthy wouldn’t even do in the 1950s,” Cummings said, “something virtually unprecedented.”
Lerner’s attorney, William Taylor, condemned the committee’s move as a political stunt and said she did nothing wrong or illegal. “The notion that the majority is engaged in objective oversight or fact-finding is pure fiction,” Taylor said. “The vote is the latest event in the majority’s never-ending effort to keep the IRS story alive through this fall’s mid-term elections.”









