U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann says the IRS targeting of Tea Party and conservative groups that sought tax-exempt status during the 2012 election cycle is "far worse" than the Watergate scandal of the Nixon presidency.
During a news conference Thursday on Capitol Hill, Bachmann and other Tea Party leaders demanded a thorough investigation of the IRS and the Obama administration's possible role in the controversy surrounding the agency's singling out of groups with the words "Tea Party" or "patriot" in their applications seeking federal tax-exempt status.
"This is far worse than Watergate," said Bachmann, chairwoman of the House Tea Party Caucus. "These are not political enemies. These are direct actions taken against American citizens who sought to exercise their free speech rights."
The IRS said that roughly 75 groups were targeted during an 18-month period that ended in summer 2012. Officials with the Rochester Tea Party Patriots in southern Minnesota said the IRS took more than two years to approve their tax-exempt status.
"Progressive liberal groups in line with the administration were fast-tracked … where the Tea Party groups were told to sit in the corner and on the curb and they were denied or delayed," she said.
The congresswoman said constituents in her district, Minnesota's most conservative, have called for the impeachment of President Obama. She stopped short of supporting the push, saying "we can't rush to conclusions."
On Friday, Republican U.S. Rep. Erik Paulsen and other members of the House Ways and Means Committee, which oversees tax laws, will have the first crack at questioning outgoing Acting IRS Commissioner Steven T. Miller and the agency's chief inspector.
"We are going to begin to peel back the onion to get the facts," Paulsen said in a radio interview this week. "This is the first hearing, but it won't be the last."