US President Barack Obama speaks about the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, May 15, 2013.
In Summary
- Obama says evidence of abuses in the tax agency, revealed by a report by a government watchdog released on Tuesday, were "inexcusable."
- Top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell signalled that the controversy was far from over as his party tries to use it to slow Obama's political momentum at the beginning of his second term
- The watchdog report by a Treasury Department inspector general published on Tuesday found that some Internal Revenue Service staff singled out grass roots groups opposed to Obama
WASHINGTON
An angry President Barack Obama sacked the acting
head of the US Internal Revenue Service on Wednesday over a fast moving
scandal sparked when officials unfairly targeted conservative groups.
Obama said Treasury Secretary Jack Lew had asked
for and received the resignation of tax agency chief Steven Miller and
promised a new system of checks and safeguards to make sure the episode
was not repeated.
"Given the controversy surrounding this audit,
it's important to institute new leadership that can help restore
confidence going forward," Obama said.
The president, who has dismissed Republican
attempts to link him to the scandal at the independent IRS agency, also
pledged to work directly with Congress as it carries out its oversight
duties in the matter.
Obama said that evidence of abuses in the tax
agency, revealed by a report by a government watchdog released on
Tuesday, were "inexcusable."
"Americans have a right to be angry about it, and I
am angry about it. Obama said at the White House, after meeting top
Treasury Department officials.
"I will not tolerate this kind of behaviour in any agency, but especially in the IRS," he said.
Scandal erupted when it emerged that officials
studying tax exempt status applications singled out groups with names
including phrases like "Tea Party" or "Patriots," which could thus be
expected to be fiercely opposed to Obama.
Republican congressman Darrell Issa told CNN that
Obama had taken a "good first step" and promised a robust congressional
probe into the scandal.
"The president will find very willing partners on Capitol Hill," he said.
"I think in this case, we very much take him at
his word that he wants to be open and transparent, in fixing the system
and putting new controls in place."
But top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell
signalled that the controversy was far from over as his party tries to
use it to slow Obama's political momentum at the beginning of his second
term.
"These allegations are serious -- that there was
an effort to bring the power of the federal government to bear on those
the administration disagreed with, in the middle of a heated national
election," McConnell said.
"We are determined to get answers, and to ensure
that this type of intimidation never happens again at the IRS or any
other agency."
Earlier, Attorney General Eric Holder meanwhile
promised a nationwide probe into the claims as he endured a grilling
from angry Republican lawmakers on the IRS flap at a hearing in the
House of Representatives.
"The facts will take us wherever they take us,"
Holder said, promising the probe would spread nationwide, beyond the
Ohio city of Cincinnati, where the violations are alleged to have taken
place.
Holder said that he did not know whether the
alleged misbehaviour at the IRS was a low-level affair or if more senior
officials were implicated.
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