Have you heard the GOP’s latest conspiracy theory?
Republicans are having difficulty conjuring widespread fear over the court approved search into former President Donald Trump’s estate. And the hair-on-fire, migrant caravan scare tactic isn’t hitting like it used to.
So Republicans have a new conspiracy theory: The tax man is coming to rob and maybe even shoot you.
Let’s start, as we do with most GOP claims these days, by dispelling some lies.
The GOP’s IRS fear-mongering is rooted in new funding allocated as part of the Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act.
The GOP’s IRS fear-mongering is rooted in new funding allocated as part of the Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, which President Joe Biden signed into law earlier this week. Republicans denounced all aspects of the bill, but they were particularly critical of its tax increases on large corporations. The bill also set aside money for the agency that will be tasked with enforcing these increases and cracking down on tax evaders: the IRS.
The new spending bill sets aside $80 billion, which the U.S. Treasury says will be used to hire new employees — many of them in IT — as the current group of IRS workers ages into retirement.
That rather practical reality hasn’t stopped some Republicans from conjuring elaborate mirages of gun-toting IRS agents. A small percentage of IRS employees are allowed to be armed, and Republicans have seized on that fact to suggest the IRS is hiring, in the words of Sen. Chuck Grassley, “a strike force that goes in with AK-15s already loaded, ready to shoot some small-business person in Iowa.”
(For what it’s worth: I know multiple IRS employees, and the closest they come to menacing is during a ruthless Scrabble tournament.)
I searched far and wide for examples of these tyrannical, armed tax-collectors invoked by the Republicans and came up with nothing. Well, almost nothing.









