DOUGLAS BLAIR
Tens of thousands of new IRS agents will target middle-class, conservative Christians for new rounds of audits just like they did during the Obama years thanks to President Joe Biden's new Inflation Reduction Act.
Jenny Beth Martin, a founder of Tea Party Patriots, warns that the skyrocketing number of Internal Revenue Service agents under the Biden administration could herald the return of a politicized tax agency targeting conservatives.
"I said back then, if they're not held accountable, other bureaucrats will think that they are able to abuse the law in an even more egregious manner and get away with it," Martin, a Florida resident, said in a phone interview with The Daily Signal.
"What concerns me is what we're hearing right now with these 87,000 new IRS agents, they have such enormous power, they can garnish wages, they can levy bank accounts, they can put liens on your property," Martin said.
In 2013, conservatives accused the Internal Revenue Service of unfairly targeting their organizations as they sought IRS approval for tax-exempt status.
The agency admitted it had selected specific groups applying for tax-exempt status--either 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(4)--for additional and intense scrutiny based only on their names and political affiliations.
Most of the time, the IRS targeted conservative groups, looking for words in their names such as "freedom," "liberty," and "patriots."
Conservative organizations were forced to endure years of waiting to receive information from the IRS regarding their applications.
"I believe that we applied in 2010 and then that we did not hear back until about 2012," Martin, 52, recalled. "So it took almost two years, which is odd because normally you get an approval very quickly."
And when conservative groups did hear back, she said, they were subjected to onerous questioning that went far beyond what was necessary to determine whether they qualified as tax-exempt organizations.
"They wanted to know what was said at our events. They wanted to have access to the back end of our website so they could read stuff on our website," Martin said of the IRS questions. "So they were asking for things that were outside of what they should have been asking for."
One high profile rejection case showed the IRS initially denied a Christian organization their tax-exempt status, because they mentioned biblical teachings on their application.
One IRS agent anonymously, illegally leaked the donor list for the National Organization for Marriage to the media. NOM supported a successful series of votes to protect marriage in state constitutions nationwide. The IRS claimed an unnamed employee forgot to remove the donors' names when forwarding a copy of NOM's 990 form to a reporter, who then forwarded the list to the Human Rights Campaign, an LGBT pressure group that led the effort against protecting marriage.
Eventually, the allegations that the IRS was targeting conservatives got so bad that Congress stepped in.
The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee called then-IRS Commissioner Douglas H. Shulman to testify about the allegations in 2012. Shulman testified that the IRS was not targeting conservative groups, then resigned later that year.
Also in Republican lawmakers' crosshairs: Lois Lerner, then director of the IRS' Exempt Organizations Unit, which approved or rejected applications for tax-exempt status.
Lerner appeared before the House committee May 22, 2013, and testified briefly that she had "not broken any laws" or "violated any IRS rules or regulations." She then cited her Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate herself and refused to testify further.
As the committee pursued the matter, lawmakers called Martin to testify about how her group had been targeted by the IRS.
The IRS chose that time to approve the tax-exempt status for Tea Party Patriots.
"It still took another over a year before they finally approved our status," Martin said. "But they called our attorneys, telling us it was approved the day before I was testifying before Congress about it."
All in all, it took her organization two and half years to get that IRS final approval.
Although her group eventually got its tax exemption and Lerner resigned from the IRS, Martin told The Daily Signal that the government employees responsible for dragging their feet in scrutinizing conservative groups never received any punishment.
"The people at the IRS who broke laws were never held accountable," she said.
To Martin, her prediction that the government would act to censor conservatives could be coming true, and it would have chilling consequences specifically for free speech.
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