Understanding the I.R.S. “Scandal”

Journalists without a political ax to grind have been trying to explain what actually happened at the Cincinnati I.R.S. office. After reading some of these articles and looking at the official report issued by the Treasury Department’s Inspector General (see the links below), it’s reasonable to conclude that the so-called “scandal” amounts to some relatively over-worked, relatively low-level bureaucrats (aka accountants) trying to do their job (what Congress told them to do) but not quite following the rules (which are hard to understand).

Every application to be considered a tax-exempt “social welfare” organization under Federal tax code section 501(c)(4) is reviewed by the I.R.S. There are a few thousand such applications every year. One of the benefits of being granted this tax-exempt status is that an organization’s donors don’t need to be made public.

Some of these applications receive extra attention, often because they are suspected of being political groups masquerading as social welfare groups. A 501(c)(4) organization is allowed to engage in more political activity than a 501(c)(3) group like the Red Cross, but isn’t supposed to be “primarily engaged” in political activity (note the vagueness of the phrase “primarily engaged”).

In trying to figure out which 501(c)(4) applications needed extra attention, I.R.S. employees in Cincinnati devised some criteria to “be on the lookout for” (i.e. to help determine whether the group would be “primarily engaged” in politics or not).

Since the number of applications was steadily increasing, and there were lots of applications coming from groups associating themselves with the Tea Party and Glenn Beck, the criteria included references to “Tea Party”, “Patriots” and “9/12 Project” (a group created by Beck). The criteria for further review also included references to government spending, debt and taxes; educating the public by advocacy or lobbying to “make America a better place to live”; and statements “criticizing how the country is being run”.

So the immediate question is whether using these criteria would tend to identify groups whose main purpose was “political” rather than “social welfare”. Common sense suggests that the answer is “Yes”.

Roughly 1/3 of the applications that received extra attention included the terms “Tea Party”, “Patriots” or “9/12 Project”. The extra reviews took a long time and sometimes featured burdensome questions from the I.R.S., but the principal issue, according to the Inspector General’s report, was that:

“The IRS used inappropriate criteria that identified for review Tea Party and other organizations applying for tax-exempt status based upon their names or policy positions instead of indications of potential political campaign intervention.”

One might argue that referring to yourself as a Tea Party or Project 9/12 group or claiming that your main purpose is to fight government spending is a good indication that you might be spending most of your time trying to affect political campaigns, especially in an election year. But, according to the Inspector General’s report, this wasn’t the correct way to identify such groups.

I’m not sure how the I.R.S. accountants are supposed to  predict which 501(c)(4) groups will primarily engage in improper political activity. At any rate, all of the applications getting this questionable special attention were ultimately approved or are still being evaluated.

This is the “scandal” that some foolish and/or unscrupulous politicians and journalists are making such a big deal about. The especially noxious Peggy Noonan recently claimed that this, along with some right-wing contributors being audited, is the biggest scandal since Watergate (the I.R.S. audits between 1 and 2 million individual tax returns every year, so it isn’t surprising that some of the taxpayers involved are right-wing contributors).

What should be a scandal receiving Congressional and media attention is that several 501(c)(4) groups, such as Karl Rove’s American Crossroads, spend millions of dollars intervening in political campaigns, but (apparently because they can afford talented lawyers) don’t pay taxes and don’t have to say who their donors are. 

It’s politics as usual in the Greatest Country in the World.

________________________________________________________________

Those links I promised:

The differences between 501(c)(3), 501(c)(4) and political organizations:

http://www.mffh.org/mm/files/AFJ_Comparison-of-501C3S-501C4S.pdf 

The Inspector General report:

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/05/15/us/politics/15irs-inspector-report.html

What went on in Cincinnati:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/19/us/politics/at-irs-unprepared-office-seemed-unclear-about-the-rules.html?hp

Some context and commentary from the Columbia Journalism Review:

http://www.cjr.org/united_states_project/the_other_irs_scandal.php?page=all

London 1927: a Respite from Scandals, Real and Fake

Here’s a brief color film showing London in 1927. It’s part of the British Film Institute’s collection. Someone added New Age-ish music. 

It’s a sure-fire distraction from fake scandals (Benghazi, the IRS) and real ones (spying on the Associated Press, cutting government spending during a recession).

http://www.openculture.com/2013/05/1927_london_shown_in_moving_color.html

Money Is Wasted On the Rich

At an art auction on Tuesday night, an anonymous buyer bid $43,800,000.00 (that’s 43.8 million dollars) for this painting (the blue thing with the white stripe, not the gentlemen in suits).

We could draw lots of conclusions from this latest Gilded Age moment. At a minimum, we ought to have a progressive sales tax, one that applies higher rates to more expensive purchases. For this particular purchase, I’d recommend a tax of at least 100%.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/15/arts/design/record-auction-price-for-barnett-newman-at-sothebys.html?hp

The Old World and the New, 1492 – 1650 by J. H. Elliott

The English historian J. H. Elliott is an expert on the history of Spain. His subject in this short book is the effect of the discovery of the New World on Europe, especially the Spanish. Yet he is hesitant to identify causal relationships, tending to identify historical correlations instead, e.g. between the amount of gold and silver taken from the Western Hemisphere to Spain and rising prices in Europe.

The book begins with Columbus discovering North America and ends with the collapse of the Spanish Empire. Between those events, the Spanish viewed the New World as a source of gold and silver and as an opportunity to spread civilization, especially Catholicism. There were  intellectual consequences, but most of the impact was economic and political. Harvesting 180 tons of gold and 16,000 tons of silver (plus any that wasn’t officially reported) helped Spain become the most powerful nation in the world.

This development wasn’t lost on the other European powers. In Elliott’s words: “Overseas possessions came to be seen as essential adjuncts of Europe, enhancing the military and economic power of its rival nation-states”.

Considering that Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in America, was founded in 1607, and the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth in 1620, it isn’t surprising that the English play a small role in this story. What surprised me was how much history was being made in the New World by the Spanish, Portuguese, French and Dutch before the English began to colonize North America.

Not everyone in Europe thought the discovery of the New World was a blessing. There were Spaniards who criticized the treatment of Spain’s new subjects and believed Spain would be better off economically and morally without importing all that precious metal.

The French essayist Montaigne also had something to say: “So many goodly cities ransacked and razed; so many nations destroyed and made desolate; so many infinite millions of harmless people of all sexes, states and ages, massacred, ravaged and put to the sword; and the richest, the fairest and the best part of the world turned topsy-turvy, ruined and defaced for the traffic of pearls and pepper”.

Good News If You’re a Tree

The amount of carbon dixode in the atmosphere has now passed 400 parts per million for a whole day, as measured at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii. There hasn’t been this much CO2 in the air for 3 million years, before humans evolved. The level of CO2 fluctuates as plants absorb it and release oxygen, but the trend line indicates that we are generating the stuff so quickly, the plants aren’t going to keep up. 

Nobody knows for certain what the effects will be, but the scientists who study climate change are deeply concerned: “It feels like an inevitable march toward disaster” and “the time to do something was yesterday”.

One of the idiots in Congress is quoted as saying we shouldn’t worry, since CO2 only makes up 0.04 percent of the atmosphere. Unfortunately, that’s not how chemistry works. Research shows that current levels of CO2 are very effective at trapping heat near the earth’s surface. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/11/science/earth/carbon-dioxide-level-passes-long-feared-milestone.html