Baltimore Sun

IRS nominee clears Senate panel despite Dem opposition

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON — The Senate Finance Committee narrowly approved on a party-line vote President Donald Trump’s choice to become the new head of the IRS, with the panel’s Democrats protesting the nomination because of a new IRS policy allowing some groups to hide their donors’ identities.

The 14-13 vote Thursday with majority Republican­s prevailing sent the nomination of Beverly Hills, Calif., tax attorney Charles Rettig to the full Senate. All the Democrats voted against his nomination even though they considered him qualified for the job.

Critics say the new policy will let more dark money, including from foreign interests, flood into the U.S. political system.

Earlier in the day, a session weighing Rettig’s nomination broke into a debate over the policy lifting donor disclosure requiremen­ts for thousands of groups, including business associatio­ns, labor unions and “social welfare” organizati­ons, which have become major players in the nation's politics over the past decade.

Some groups are expected to spend millions of dollars on political ads. Groups that will benefit are sections of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Rifle Associatio­n and a group linked to the billionair­e Koch brothers.

Rettig is qualified for the job, the Democrats say, but they needed to register their concern over the new IRS policy and are demanding to meet with Rettig to discuss it.

“The Trump administra­tion has taken a qualified nominee and dumped him right into the middle of a dark-money political firestorm,” said Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the finance committee’s senior Democrat.

News of the Trump administra­tion policy change came Monday, the same day federal prosecutor­s charged a gun rights activist living in Washington with serving as a covert Russian agent gathering intelligen­ce on U.S. officials and political organizati­ons.

Court papers show that the activist, Maria Butina, included efforts to use contacts with the NRA to develop relationsh­ips with U.S. politician­s during the 2016 campaign.

The revelation­s of alleged Russian efforts to use the NRA as a conduit into political influence, coming soon after President Donald Trump’s summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, stoked the Demo- crats’ furor over the IRS action as part of a string of related events.

Sen. Benjamin Cardin, DMd., called the IRS move “a very partisan action by the Treasury Department,” which oversees the IRS, and said “it jeopardize­s our national security.”

Committee chair Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, had implored the Democrats to reconsider their position and not allow their “irritation­s” with Trump to color their action.

Hatch said the IRS faces the challenge of administer­ing the massive new tax law enacted late last year, and Rettig is expected to work to modernize the agency’s outdated technology to meet the job.

As a tax attorney, Rettig has represente­d thousands of individual­s and companies in civil and criminal tax matters before the IRS and against it in court. His clients have included affluent taxpayers seeking to strike deals with the IRS to turn over informatio­n on offshore bank accounts in exchange for reduced penalties.

During the 2016 campaign, Rettig defended Trump’s decision to break with tradition by refusing to release his personal tax filings. At his confirmati­on hearing last month, Rettig pledged to uphold the political independen­ce of the IRS.

 ?? AARON P. BERNSTEIN/GETTY ?? The Senate panel’s 14-13 vote sends Charles Rettig’s nomination to the full chamber.
AARON P. BERNSTEIN/GETTY The Senate panel’s 14-13 vote sends Charles Rettig’s nomination to the full chamber.

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