President Obama said Internal Revenue Service targeting of conservative groups
had "no place" in government.
"This is pretty straightforward," Obama said Monday during a joint news
conference with British Prime Minister David Cameron. "If in fact IRS personnel
engaged in the kinds of practices that's been reported on, and intentionally
targeting conservative [groups], that's outrageous and there's no place for it."
"They have to be held fully accountable," he said.
The American public must have "absolute confidence" that laws are being
administered in a non-partisan way.
"We don't want the IRS being perceived as biased or anything less than neutral
in how they operate," he said.
He said he did not want to comment on any specific finding because the inspector
general was conducting an investigation.
"But if you've got an IRS operating in anything less than a neutral,
non-partisan manner, then it is outrageous ... and people have to be held
accountable ... ."
U.S. Internal Revenue Service inquiry of conservative groups included those
lobbying to "make America a better place to live," new details emerging about
the IRS investigation indicated. That lever goes beyond what the IRS admitted
Friday, which was that it targeted groups with "Tea Party" or "patriot" in their
names, several media outlets reported Monday, based on draft findings from
disclosures to congressional investigators by the Treasury Department's
inspector general for tax administration.
The audit follows complaints last year by numerous Tea Party and other
conservative groups they had been singled out and subjected to extreme and
improper questioning. Many groups say they were asked for donor lists and other
sensitive information.
Lois Lerner, head of the IRS tax-exempt-organizations division, said Friday the
agency was "apologetic" for "absolutely inappropriate" actions by lower-level
workers.
Obama said he learned about the matter Friday.
The full report by Treasury Department's inspector general for tax
administration is to be released this week.
At various points over the past two years, the Cincinnati IRS office, which is
in charge of evaluating applications for tax-exempt status, focused on groups
making statements that "criticize how the country is being run" and those
involved in educating Americans "on the Constitution and Bill of Rights," the
draft report cited by The Washington Post indicated.
By June 2011 some IRS specialists were probing applications of groups focusing
on "government spending, government debt or taxes [and] education of the public
by advocacy/lobbying to 'make America a better place to live,'" the report cited
by the Journal indicated.
The inspector general's investigation also found the head of the IRS
tax-exempt-organizations division knew as early as June 2011 conservative groups
were being inappropriately targeted -- several months before Douglas Shulman,
IRS commissioner at the time, denied to a congressional committee the agency was
targeting conservative groups, the newspapers said.
The findings don't make clear who came up with the idea to give extra scrutiny
to certain conservative groups, The Wall Street Journal said.
But a government official told the Journal the final report will say IRS
officials told investigators no one outside the IRS was involved in developing
the profiling criteria.
The audit follows complaints last year by numerous Tea Party and other
conservative groups they had been singled out and subjected to extreme and
improper questioning.
Many groups say they were asked for donor lists and other sensitive information.
Lerner was briefed on the effort in June 2011, the newspapers said. On Friday
she said she learned of the profiling effort from news reports.
The New York Times said the audit indicates Lerner seemed to work hard to switch
the focus from conservatives to all types of political advocacy groups.



