Tell us how you really feel, Heritage Action for America.
The lobbying arm of the conservative group that scores Republican lawmakers on the their votes, made it very clear that its members are enjoying the negative attention President Obama has received this week. In a letter addressed to Speaker Boehner and Majority Leader Eric Cantor, the group’s CEO discouraged the Republican leaders from bringing any legislation to the floor that could distract from Obama’s scandal trifecta.
Heritage Action CEO Michael Needham wrote that “it would be imprudent to do anything that shifts the focus from the Obama administration to the ideological differences within the House Republican Conference,” in his letter posted on the group’s website Thursday–one day before lawmakers were set to convene for the first of many hearings into the actions taken by IRS officials to target Tea Party groups for special scrutiny.
Republican lawmakers have this week stayed on message in denouncing the IRS controversy and the Obama administration. Speaker Boehner accused the White House of “remarkable arrogance” over the IRS controversy, as well as news that the Justice Department seized phone records of Associated Press journalists. Tea Party leaders also mounted a unified attack of the president’s policies in a press conference Thursday.
Many have wondered how the Benghazi, IRS, and AP controversies would affect Obama’s ambitious second-term agenda, which consists of immigration reform, a deficit deal, and gun control. And if Heritage Action’s letter is any indication of how Republican lawmakers will proceed, Obama’s agenda is in serious jeopardy.
Read the full text of Heritage Action’s letter:
Dear Speaker Boehner and Leader Cantor:
For the first time, the activities of the Obama administration are receiving a sustained public vetting. Americans’ outrage over Benghazi is amplified by the Internal Revenue Service’s intimidation of conservative grassroots organizations and a cascade of negative headlines. There is the real sense the Obama administration has been less than forthright with the American people, the press and lawmakers.









