Ron Paul's Texas Straight Talk 4/6/15: The IRS and Congress Both Hold Our Liberty in Contempt
The IRS and Congress Both Hold Our Liberty in Contempt
by Ron Paul
This
week the Justice Department announced it would not charge former
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) official Lois Lerner with contempt of
Congress. Some members of Congress requested that Lerner be charged with
contempt after she refused to testify at a congressional hearing
investigating her role in denying or delaying the applications for
tax-exempt status of “tea party” and pro-limited government
organizations.
Cynics might suggest it is not surprising that a
former government official would avoid prosecution for refusing to tell
Congress about how federal employees abused their power to help the
incumbent administration. These cynics have a point, but the problem
goes beyond mere partisanship. Government officials are rarely
prosecuted for even the most blatant violations of our liberties. In
contrast, federal prosecutors routinely pursue criminal charges against
whistleblowers. For example, the only American prosecuted and imprisoned
in relation to the government's use of torture was whistleblower John
Kiriakou!
While some officials like Lois Lerner who find
themselves at the center of a high-profile scandal or partisan dispute
can expect harsh treatment from Congress, this is the expectation, not
the rule. Executive branch officials usually receive deferential
treatment from members of Congress. I recall one hearing on government
surveillance where a representative actually apologized to a government
official because Congress had the gall to ask that official to testify
about the government’s ongoing surveillance of the American people.
In
contrast, private citizens called before Congress are harangued and
even bullied. Congress should stop using the hearing process to
intimidate private citizens and start using it to intimidate those
government officials who are threatening our liberty. For example,
Congress should continue to investigate the IRS’s ongoing attempts to
silence organizations that work to advance free markets and individual
liberty.
My Campaign for Liberty organization has had to battle
an IRS demand that it hand over personal information regarding some of
its top donors. The IRS is either ignoring, or ignorant of, the numerous
precedents protecting the right of organizations like the Campaign for
Liberty to protect their members’ privacy from government officials.
The
IRS is drafting a new regulation that would empower the agency to
revoke an organization's tax-exempt status if that organization sends
out a communication to its members or the general public mentioning a
candidate for office by name sixty days before an election or thirty
days before a primary. By preventing groups from telling their members
where candidates stand on issues like Audit the Fed and repeal of the
PATRIOT Act, this anti-First Amendment regulation benefits those
politicians who wish to hide their beliefs from the voters.
Since
the IRS’s power stems from the tax system, the only way to protect our
liberty from this agency is to eliminate the tax code. Promising to end
the IRS is a popular applause line for politicians wishing to appear as
champions of liberty. This week, John Koskinen, the current IRS
commissar, responded to these cries to end the IRS by pointing out that
shutting down the IRS would deprive Congress of the revenue needed to
fund the welfare-warfare state. Koskinen has a point. Congress cannot
shut down the IRS until it enacts major reductions in all areas of
government spending.
Politicians who vote for warfare abroad and
welfare at home yet claim they want to shut down the IRS should not be
taken seriously. Freeing the people from the IRS’s tyranny is one of the
best reasons to end the welfare-warfare state and return the federal
government to its constitutional limitations.
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