The IRS is facing criticism after news broke that a Cincinnati branch targeted Tea Party-related groups with unequal scrutiny–but according to MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell, the real scandal happened long ago.
Section 501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code defines tax-exempt social welfare groups like this:
------ Civic leagues or organizations not organized for profit but operated exclusively for the promotion of social welfare. ------
In 1959, under the administration of Dwight Eisenhower, the meaning of this section was changed dramatically when the IRS decided the word “exclusively” could, in effect, be read as “primarily.”
“For 54 years, the IRS has gotten away with the crime of changing the word ‘exclusively’ to ‘primarily,” said Lawrence O’Donnell on The Last Word Monday. “The IRS took a hard, clear word like ‘exclusively’ and changed it into a soft word ’primarily’ and then left it to the IRS agents to determine if your organization was primarily concerned with the promotion of social welfare.”
As Klein says, the IRS “must act in ways above reproach.” O’Donnell agrees with a balanced approach, but “if in 2010, there was a flood of Tea Party applications for tax exempt status and many fewer applications for tax exempt status from liberal political groups, then it only makes mathematical sense that more questions would be directed at Tea Party applications.”
O’Donnell argues that the “test” Klein speaks of is made harder to enforce precisely because of the squishiness of the language. It was that change from “exclusively” to “primarily,” he argues, that “allowed political organizations to buy political advertising in support of candidates or as an attack on candidates and do so under a tax-exempt provision in the law that was never intended for them to hide behind.”
.. why don't they just go back to what the tax law states? .. from now .. too hard? .. if the tax law still states "exclusively", (assuming it does) how could they get away with what seems to me an illegal change .. exclusively means solely/alone/purely/entirely .. nothing to do with "primarily" .. has O’Donnell's point been discussed at all? .. or is that both sides of pollie's-got-a-cracker are happy with a ridiculously false interpretation of a tax law .. a boat without oars on this one .. lol .. confused ..
It was Plato who said, “He, O men, is the wisest, who like Socrates, knows that his wisdom is in truth worth nothing”