POLK COUNTY, IOWA – Today, Senate Finance
Committee member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) joined his Republican colleagues on
the committee in urging the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration
(TIGTA) to implement a comprehensive oversight plan for the new $80 billion in
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) funding.
The Democrats’ so-called Inflation Reduction Act included this
massive influx of cash with no transparency or accountability measures. With
53.2 percent of the new funding devoted to enforcement, the senators are
requesting answers as to how TIGTA will provide American taxpayers with needed
visibility into what the IRS will do with its massive new multi-year funding
stream.
“The recent boost of nearly $80 billion
in supplemental funding for the IRS is devoted disproportionately to
enforcement, and likewise disproportionately lacks emphasis on oversight and
the need for IRS accountability and transparency to all Americans. We write
also to relate our priorities of taxpayer service, business system
modernization, taxpayer privacy protection, and guarding against continued
unlawful IRS targeting of taxpayers on the basis of factors such as religious
or political beliefs,” the senators
wrote.
While over 50 percent of the $80 billion
is earmarked for enforcement measures, only half of one percent will be granted
to TIGTA for oversight efforts. The senators note this is especially concerning
given ongoing issues with the IRS, including the agency’s history of data
breaches, political targeting and failing to adequately serve taxpayers.
“Congress and the American people rely on
inspectors general to help provide accountability, transparency and bipartisan
inclusion in agencies’ uses of hard-earned taxpayer resources. That will
especially be the case with monitoring and overseeing the outsized partisan
infusion of nearly $80 billion focused on IRS enforcement,” the senators continued. “We ask that
TIGTA provide initial guidance to Congress on its plans to help provide all of
the American people eyes into what will transpire with the massive new IRS
funding.”
Specifically, the senators ask TIGTA to
explain how it will use and prioritize the extra funding it received, assess
high-risk areas that IRS should be focused on for privacy protection and
taxpayer service and explain the most significant deficiencies at IRS that may
allow for waste, fraud and abuse in tax administration.
Full text of the letter is available
HERE.
-30-