No Way José
WASHINGTON, D.C. (SEPTEMBER
7, 2016)
BY BILLY
HOUSE
BLOOMBERG
Speaker Paul Ryan said Wednesday the House will vote on whether to impeach
Internal Revenue Service Commissioner John Koskinen, and he indicated members
won’t be pressured to vote one way or the other.
The entire
House Republican conference is to meet behind closed doors next week to discuss
the issue, but conservatives led by Representative John Fleming of Louisiana
say the process of introducing a “privileged resolution” to force the vote will
begin before that.
Ryan, who has
previously hedged on whether the House should take such action, said on
Wednesday that he won’t stop it. The House hasn’t impeached a cabinet official
since the mid-1870s and has never impeached an executive branch official, such
as Koskinen, who doesn’t hold cabinet rank. Any House action would be largely
symbolic, because the effort is expected to be blocked in the Senate if it
passes the House.
“This is a
privileged resolution. So it will come to the floor,” said Ryan during a news
conference. He said there are members on both sides of the issue. “This is
something where Congress is going to work its will.”
Republicans
remain angry at Koskinen, who they accuse of impeding an investigation into
whether the tax agency improperly targeted conservative non-profits. Their
allegations include failing to prevent the IRS from destroying evidence and
providing false and misleading information to Congress. Koskinen and the
Treasury Department have said the allegations are meritless.
Tapes Erased
In March 2014,
despite congressional subpoenas seeking IRS e-mails, agency employees in West
Virginia magnetically erased 422 backup tapes, eliminating as many as 24,000
e-mails. Subsequent investigations by the Justice Department and the Treasury
Department’s inspector general found that the destruction was accidental.
Regardless,
Koskinen testified to Congress in June 2014 that “since the start of this
investigation, every e-mail has been preserved. Nothing has been destroyed.” He
has said since that his testimony reflected his understanding at the time.
Fleming said
Wednesday that he and other members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus
plan to move forward with their privileged resolution to force an impeachment
vote “early next week,” probably Tuesday. Once it’s introduced, action must be
taken within two days, and Fleming said he doesn’t know if the vote will occur
before the planned House Republican conference.
‘Conscience
Vote’
Fleming said he
and other members are feeling no pressure to back off.
In fact,
Fleming said that in a closed-door meeting of Republicans Wednesday morning,
Ryan described the matter as “more or less a conscience vote. Something that we
all have to decide on our own.”
“My sense of it
was that there would be no persuading, no whipping, the usual thing we do on
bills,” said Fleming, who believes there are enough House votes for impeachment.
“Look, our
constituents back home, Democrat or Republicans, are demanding we do something
about corruption,” he said.
But another
Republican, Representative Richard Hanna of New York, said in an interview that
he believes the impeachment effort is “a waste of time.” Hanna, who is not
seeking re-election, noted that Koskinen came into office two weeks after Lois
Lerner—the central figure in the controversy over the IRS targeting
conservative groups—left the agency.
Making a
Point
“They’re angry
at the IRS and I think they want to make a point,” said Hanna. “But impeaching
him—or holding him responsible—I’m not sure how that solves that.”
Representative
John Conyers of Michigan, the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, is
among those who say that even if the House votes to impeach, the Senate
wouldn’t provide a two-thirds vote to convict him at trial.
In July,
Fleming and Representative Tim Huelskamp of Kansas had sought to force a vote
one day before Congress left for its summer break, but they ran out of time to
see it through.
That resolution
contained four separate articles of impeachment. They included one accusing
Koskinen of “engaging in a pattern of conduct showing he is unfit,” including
false statements to Congress.
The Treasury Department,
which oversees the IRS, called the July impeachment effort baseless and a
distraction, and added that Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew continues to have
full confidence in Koskinen.
TaxProblems? No
matter what your tax problem may be, Selig & Associates can help find a
strategy that works for you. Our
offices are in New York City and we handle each and every case personally.
No comments:
Post a Comment