Tom Blumer just doesn’t know when to give up on a scandal.
he devoted a Nov. 24 NewsBusters post to being outraged about a Bloomberg View op-ed by Francis Wilkinson proclaiming the IRS controversy over alleged targeting of right-wing groups seeking tax exemptions to be nothingburger it was. Blumer first goes the ad hominem route, denigrating the op-ed’s writer as a “career leftist” who once worked for a “Democratic media firm.” But the evidence he cites comes from an anonymous “longtime Tea Party activist” and a guy so obsessed with the non-scandal that he posted articles about it for “1,353 straight days.” Blumer offers no evidence why his partisans are any more trustworthy than the op-ed writer.
Never mind that the so-called scandal effectively ended four years ago, when the IRS admitted that the groups were targeted — not for their political bias, but because of a flood of applications for tax-exempt status between 2010 and 2012. Blumer rants instead about alleged stonewalling that led several congressional committees to fail to find evidence:
The failure to produce evidence occurred because, as just noted, they made every attempt to either destroy it or withhold it. Of course, Wilkinson never mentioned the IRS’s obstruction and evidence destruction.
Enough evidence to matter is still available, which explains why the IRS scandal’s conspirators are still stonewalling and attempting to enlist the assistance of the courts to keep that evidence under wraps.
Blumer didn’t mention that those congressional committees are controlled by Republicans, and if there was actually something there, they could have easily found something — anything — to destroy the IRS with. But Obama’s not president anymore, and raging against the IRS doesn’t have the same political juice when there’s a Republican in the White House.
Curiously, Blumer didn’t mention the report issued in September by the Treasury Department’s inspector general, which pointed out that liberal-leaning groups were also singled out for more scrutiny and that the IRS had changed its procedures in that area.
In other words, there’s really nothing left to investigate. Yet Blumer wants it to drag on anyway for no apparently reason other than political retaliation and pursuit of a nonexistent conspiracy. Sad, isn’t it?