A new poll found that Americans by a large margin believe that Congress
is not overreacting to the burgeoning scandals plaguing the Obama
administration.
A CNN/ORC poll found that 54 percent of Americans don't believe that
Congress is overreacting to the IRS scrutiny of conservative groups,
while 42 percent said that it is. By an even larger margin, 59 percent
to 37 percent, respondents said Congress is making the right moves on
the administration's actions regarding the Benghazi terror attack.
The poll came as White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer made the round
of Sunday talk shows, defending President Barack Obama against charges
that he was unaware of the IRS scandal until hearing press reports.
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"Here's the cardinal rule … for all White Houses," Pfeiffer said. "You
do not interfere in an independent investigation, and you do not do
anything to give off the appearance of interference in an independent
investigation."
Pfeiffer said Obama learned about the IRS scandal on May 10, the same
day as the public, even though Treasury Secretary Jack Lew and Rep.
Darrell Issa, a California Republican, were aware of the probe earlier
and alert the White House about it while the investigation was ongoing.
The White House might not have ordered Internal Revenue agents to target
conservative groups, but a "culture of intimidation throughout the
administration" made them think it was acceptable, says Senate Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell.
The Department of Health and Human Services, the Federal Communications
Commission, and the Securities and Exchange Commission all have targeted
groups with a right-wing bent, McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said
Sunday on "Meet the Press."
"What we're talking about here is an attitude that the government knows
best," McConnell said. "The 'nanny state' is here to tell us all what to
do, and if you start criticizing, you get targeted."
The IRS admitted that agents singled out groups with "tea party,"
"patriot," and other key conservative words in their names for
additional scrutiny over the past two years when they applied for
501(c)(4) status. The status allows organizations to no pay taxes, keep
their donor lists private, and engage in political activity as long as
it is not the group's main focus.
A video of McConnell on C-SPAN on June 11, 1987, showed him critical of
such groups, fearing that liberal organizations could use the status to
hide donors who were contributing to political causes. Now, it is clear
that the federal government is trying to target people on donor lists to
shut them up, McConnell said.
"I was wrong 25 years ago; I've been right for the last two decades,"
McConnell said. "The government should not be trying to intimidate
citizens who criticize the government from exercising their First
Amendment rights."
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Pfeiffer found some welcome news while on CNN's "State of the Union,"
which reported Obama's job approval at 53 percent. The numbers were up 2
percent from early April, and up 6 points from their low of 47 percent
in mid-March.
"I think the American people have great faith in the president," Pfeiffer said.
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