By Tom Shoop | Friday, October 29, 2004 | 11:00 AM
It isn't really all that likely that the IRS is engaging in a politically motivated attack on the NAACP by launching an investigation into the group's tax-exempt status. But this is one of those cases where the timing of its actions is guaranteed to raise questions. On Oct. 8, agency officials sent the NAACP a letter seeking more information about its activities, because the group's chairman, Julian Bond, had "condemned the administration policies of George W. Bush on education, the economy and the war in Iraq," at the NAACP's annual convention in July. (Tax-exempt organizations aren't supposed to engage in political activities.)
IRS Commissioner Mark Everson noted that "the IRS follows strict procedures involving selection of tax-exempt organizations for audit and resolution of any complaints about such groups. Career civil servants, not political appointees, make these decisions in a fair and impartial manner." Those career civil servants might have thought a little harder about the consequences of sending a letter raising such hot-button political issues less than a month before the election.
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Government Executive Editor Tom Shoop takes a look at news and events affecting the federal bureaucracy, from the perspective of a longtime observer of government.
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