Noonan: An Antidote to Cynicism Poisoning
Restoring public faith will require a full investigation of the IRS's politicization.
By PEGGY NOONAN- The Benghazi scandal was and is shocking, and the Justice Department assault on the free press, in which dogged reporters are tailed like enemy spies, is shocking. Benghazi is still under investigation and someday someone will write a great book about it. As for the press, Attorney General Eric Holder is on the run, and rightly so. They called it the First Amendment for a reason. But nothing can damage us more as a nation than what is happening at the Internal Revenue Service. Elite opinion in the press and in Washington doesn't fully understand this. Part of the reason is that it's not their ox being gored, it's those messy people out in America with their little patriotic groups.
Those who aren't deeply distressed about the IRS suffer
from a reluctance or inability to make distinctions, and a lack of civic
imagination.
An inability to make distinctions: "It's always been
like this." "Presidents are always siccing the IRS on their enemies." There's
truth in that. We've all heard the stories of the president who picked up the
phone and said, "Look into this guy," Richard Nixon most showily. He got
clobbered for it. It was one of the articles of impeachment.
But this scandal is different and distinctive. The abuse
was systemic—from the sheer number of targets and the extent of each targeting
we know many workers had to be involved, many higher-ups, multiple offices. It
was ideological and partisan—only those presumed to be of one political view
were targeted. It has a single unifying pattern: The most vivid abuses took
place in the years leading up to the president's 2012 re-election effort. And in
the end several were trying to cover it all up, including the head of the IRS,
who lied to Congress about it, and the head of the tax-exempt unit, Lois Lerner,
who managed to lie even in her public acknowledgment of impropriety.
It wasn't a one-off. It wasn't a president losing his
temper with some steel executives. There was no enemies list, unless you
consider half the country to be your enemies.
It is considered a bit of a faux pas to point this out,
but what we are talking about in part is a Democratic president, a largely
Democratic professional administrative class in Washington, and an IRS whose
workers belong to a union whose political action committee gave roughly 95% of
its political contributions last year to Democrats.
Tim Carney had a remarkable piece in the Washington
Examiner this week in which he looked for campaign contributions from the IRS
Cincinnati office. "In the 2012 election, every donation traceable to this
office went to President Obama or liberal Sen. Sherrod Brown." An IRS employee
said in an email to Mr. Carney, "Do you think people willing to sacrifice
lucrative private sector careers to work in tax administration . . . are
genuinely going to support the party directed by Grover Norquist?" Mr. Carney
noted that one of his IRS correspondents had an interesting detail on his social
media profile. He belongs to a Facebook FB -2.64%group
called "Target the Shutdown at the Tea Party States." It advised the president,
during the 2011 debt-ceiling fight: "For instance, shut down air traffic control
at airports in Norfolk, Tampa, Nashville."
Wow. I guess that was target practice.
Peggy Noonan's Blog
Daily declarations from the Wall Street Journal columnist.
Here is the thing. The politicization of government
employees wouldn't have worried a lot of us 40, 30 or even 20 years ago. But
since then, as a country, we have become, as individuals, less respectful of
political differences and even of each other, as everything—all parts of
American life—has become more political, more partisan, more divided and more
aggressive.
There has got to be some way to break through this, to
create new rules for the road in a situation like this.
Because people think the IRS has always, in various past
cases, been used as a political tool, they think we'll glide through this
scandal too. We'll muddle through, we'll investigate, the IRS will right itself,
no biggie.
But when a scandal is systemic, ideological and focused
on political ends, it will not just magically end. Agencies such as the IRS are
part of what Jonathan Turley this week called a "massive administrative state,"
one built with many protections and much autonomy.
If it is not forced to change, it will not.
Which gets us to the part about imagination. What does
it mean when half the country—literally half the country—understands
that the revenue-gathering arm of its federal government is politically corrupt,
sees them as targets, and will shoot at them if they try to raise their heads?
That is the kind of thing that can kill a country, letting half its citizens
believe that they no longer have full political rights.
Those who think this is just business as usual are
ahistorical, and those who think nothing can be done, or nothing serious should
be done, are suffering from Cynicism Poisoning.
The House wants to proceed with hearings and an
investigation itself, and understandably. One reason is pride. "We are the ones
who got the IRS to do the audit," a congressman said the other night. Another is
momentum: An independent counsel would take time and take some air out of the
story. But Congress is operating within a lot of political swirls. The IRS
certainly doesn't seem to fear them—haven't its leaders made that clear in their
testimony so far? Congress itself is not highly regarded by the public. Didn't I
say that politely?
Some members have been scared into thinking that tough
hearings will constitute "overreach." But when you spend all your time fearing
overreach, you can forget to reach at all. A defensive crouch isn't a good
posture from which to launch a probe. And some members fear that if they pursue
and give time to something that is not an economic issue, it will be used
against them. But stopping the revenue-gathering arm of the federal government
from operating as a hopelessly politicized and aggressive entity is an
economic issue. It has to do with basic American faith in, and compliance with,
half of the spending/taxing apparatus of the federal government. How could that
not be an economic issue?
There will be more hearings next week, and fair enough.
But down the road an independent counsel is going to be needed because the House
does not have all the prosecutorial powers an independent counsel would—the
powers to empanel a grand jury, grant immunity to potential witnesses, find
evidence of criminal wrongdoing, indict.
Another reason to want an independent counsel: There are
obviously many good, fair-minded workers in the IRS, people of sterling
character. They deserve to be asked about what they were forced to put up with,
what they felt they had to bite their tongues about.
There may even be a few stories about people who stood
up and said: "You know you're targeting Americans because they hold political
views you don't like, right? You know that's wrong, right? And I'm not going to
do it."
It would be worth an investigation that breaks open the
IRS to find that person, and that moment. You have no idea how much better it
would make us feel, how inspiring and comforting, too.
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