Currently viewing the tag: "Blogposts"

 


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Apple CEO Tim Cook testifies at Senate hearing over tax practices – live” was written by Jim Newell in Washington, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 21st May 2013 18.00 UTC

Summary

Now that the panel with Apple executives is over, we’re going to wrap up after a long morning dissecting corporate tax minimization maneuvers.

There was some controversy heading into this, as voiced by Rand Paul in the first part of today’s hearings: why “drag” a company so successful as Apple before the investigations subcommittee to question its tax strategies, which all accept as legal? Hasn’t Apple done enough?

Senator Carl Levin, chair of the subcommittee, is retiring at the end of his term. That may explain why he was willing to tread a fair line, but one which nevertheless might invite some backlash. His goal was to use Apple – a company so prominent that it compels livebloggers to watch hours of early subcommittee hearings about it – to show the strategies that the largest U.S.-headquartered multinational corporations can use to exploit a loophole-ridden corporate tax code to the point where somehow, they’re barely paying any taxes.

All of the senators agreed that the corporate tax code is in desperate need of fixing.

But some of the senators, notably Paul and Ron Johnson, noticed few to no problems here: fewer taxes on corporations if beneficial to economic growth, “everyone” has an ownership stake in Apple one way or another. Apple deserves an apology.

By the end of the second panel with Apple executives, it looked as though the committee had lost its focus and just wanted to bounce some ideas off of Cook: what would be a good corporate tax rate? What do you think about Simpson-Bowles? What can we do to help protect our intellectual property owners in foreign markets?

Control worked back to Levin by the end, who closed things with a charge. Basically, he just wanted Apple to admit that it, like other MNCs, set up subsidiaries overseas and transferred assets there there to avoid paying taxes in the United States. That’s all. And what he got in return was legalese.

Thank you for joining us.

The second panel is over.

As the “bullying” hearing shifts pretty quickly into rich folks on both sides on the questioning complaining about how long it takes to do their taxes, Senator Levin tries refocus things. If Apple says it can’t bring its profits home from the Irish subsidiaries, why can it bring them back from South America? Bullock, the tax chief, says it’s because of the different cost-sharing agreements.

The question is whether transfer of intellectual property (the “crown jewels”) is really an “arms-length agreement” between two separate parties. Are the parties really “separate,” if Apple owns and controls the foreign parties?

Levin is asking Cook why he says he “can’t” bring those $100 billion properties home? Apple can, but of course it would require more tax payments, which is the whole point of these things.

Cook seems to like it better when Republican senators are complimenting him on dodging taxes.

The Apple suits keep trying to move everything back to the original agreement made in Ireland in 1980, calling everything since then a natural continuation of it. Levin wants to ask about the specific agreement, made between Apple employees in 2008, that “shifted” the “crown jewels” overseas.

“Don’t kid us” about the implications this makes on U.S. revenues, Levin says.

This is a great line of questioning from Levin, and the first time all day that Cook and co. look uncomfortable.

Updated

While Senator Rob Portman asks Apple’s tax chief how much tax compliance costs the company in administrative costs (“A lot”), let’s watch McCain ask about why he has to update his apps all the time.

Senator Kelly Ayotte asks Cook what a good corporate tax rate would be. (Remember when people thought this hearing would be a crucifixion of Apple, instead of asking them for advice?) Cook suggests mid-20s, according to studies he’s seen.

Updated

Senator Ron Johnson again is asking about who owns Apple – it’s largely mutual funds, pension funds, etc. He’s getting around to the same point he made earlier, that “everyone” benefits from Apple not paying taxes. This does assume that “everyone” has a sizable investment portfolio, or at least one that’s more beneficial than expanded public services would be.

Updated

The second panel is restarting after a break. Senator McCaskill is up. She asks about the relationship with the Irish government.

Cook explains, again, that this arrangement was set up in 1980, and since then the company has built up a valuable operation there. McCaskill, like Levin earlier, wants to talk about now. How does the U.S. keep other countries from ”undercutting us” like Ireland did in the 80s? Cook offers the usual corporate tax code simplification/base-broadening talk.

McCaskill asks about how Apple applies a cost-benefit analysis in deciding if it should relocate to another country. Cook goes on an adorable patriotic tangent about how much he loves America. “We are an American company!” Hmm.

Updated

The second panel ends (for now) with McCain asking “why the hell” he keeps having to update all his apps. 

Updated

Cook: “I don’t see it as unfair. I’m not an unfair person.”

Cook: “I personally don’t understand the difference between a tax presence and a tax residence.” (He probably does, is the thing.)

McCain: Why does AOI exist? 4,000 employees is impressive, but not compared to the size of Apple’s workforce.

Cook: Well, in the 1980s, Apple was looking for a place to distribute its products abroad…

McCain: But what about today?

Cook says that the company’s long relationship with the Irish government has allowed it to develop employees overseas with great experience and knowledge of what they do there. (Perhaps realizing that this sounds laughably silly, he reiterates that AOI is just a holding company, doesn’t matter.)

Senator McCain asks Tim Cook if he feel he has been bullied. Cook is delighted to be here.

You don’t feel you had to be “dragged here?”

“I didn’t get dragged here, sir,” Cook responds, giggling.

Updated

Levin asks about if the subsidiaries own Apple’s intellectual property. “They do in part,” Bullock answers.

But do AOI and AOE file tax returns?

In the United States, they do not. But Apple Inc. does!

“We’ve already been through that,” Levin says.

And Levin’s time is up.

Watching Bullock is tense. Regarding the subsidiary AOI, he says: “It… does… not… have a… tax residence… which doesn’t mean it doesn’t pay taxes!” He could use a drink of water.

Updated

Senator Levin is ready for questions. He asks Apple tax chief Phillip Bullock where the Irish subsidiaries are “functionally” controlled. After a long pause and some strange faces, Bullock believes that the central management control is in the United States.

Cook doesn’t know the “legal definition” of where companies are centrally managed and controlled but “practically” agrees that the subsidiaries are.

Bullock doesn’t believe that “centrally managed and controlled” is an actual term in U.S. tax law.

What a chest-thumpingly patriotic speech from all-smiles Tim Cook. Now it’s time for the CFO, Peter Oppenheimer, to get into the weeds of the subsidiaries.

Oppenheimer talks of a time not long ago, when it was possible there would be a “world without Apple.” He talks about the streamlining of international operations that helped turn the company around. (There were some inventions along the way, if we recall.)

Updated

Cook: “We estimate that the App Store has developed over 300,000 jobs in the U.S … None of that activity was there five years ago.”

We keep the “design and development” of Apple products in the United States.

Perhaps coincidentally, perhaps not, he responds to McCain, noting that Apple does comply with “the spirit of the law.”

He adds that U.S. tax law has not kept up with “the digital age.” Good for him, no?

Updated

Tim Cook’s panel begins

The first panel of tax experts is dismissed, the second is brought in. Apple CEO Tim Cook is delivering his statement.

Apple is proud to be an American company he says, exuberantly. He is now delivering corporate pablum about the excitement of innovation and so on.

The grinning man second from the right. Check out that grin.

Our Dan Roberts, in the room, adds: “Apple team (lots of pinstripes and ties for the Valley) nodding along and smiling as Rand Paul says they would be neglecting their duty to shareholders if they didn’t seek ways to minimise their tax exposure.”

Updated

Senator Claire McCaskill has no questions, but just wants to say that she loves Apple. “I love Apple. I love Apple!”

McCain, who does *not* get along with Rand Paul, expresses that he finds it “offensive” for Levin to be accused of trying to “bully” a company. Cue the gossip press.

Poor old Mr. Apple, just trying to mind his own business.

Rand Paul is up again. This should be fun. (Fun?)

He asks Professor Harvey if he makes use of any tax deductions.

“Obviously I do,” Harvey says, grinning.

Paul asks if he thinks he’s a bad person for doing that. Harvey does not. Well, there’s that.

Paul On tax reform: “Just do it.” Stop talking about “evil Apple.” Stop vilifying them – they should be getting an “award” today.

“I’m very frustrated by these proceedings… They’re just doing what every company does.” Bring me a company that tries to maximize their tax burden, he says.

This does simplify the issues under discussion a bit.

Updated

Responding to McCain, Shay strongly reiterates that the real problem is on the “imbalance” between the level of Apple R&D done in the United States and the tax revenue the government collects from it.

McCain says Apple has violated “the spirit of the law” if not the “letter of the law.” He agrees that much of the problem lies with Congress, however, and calls for comprehensive corporate tax reform.

McCain asks about how successfully a repatriation deal, for companies to bring home earnings under a lower rate, could be done. Harvey sees such a tax holiday as a bad idea, as the last time it was done in 2004, companies used it to distribute dividends and pay down debt – not expand domestically. Shay concurs, calling such holidays a temporary “windfall” for companies that does little long-term help.

Updated

Senator Tom Carper is asking questions. Carper hails from Delaware, America’s own tiny tax haven on-the-shore.

Carper is using this as an occasion to ask about the tax recommendations in the Simpson-Bowles deficit reduction plan. Shay says the plan’s broad recommendation to eliminate all tax expenditures as part of tax reform is a pretty, well… undeveloped suggestion?

This is “difficult stuff,” and doing tax reform in “broad brush strokes” is not a good idea. In the meantime, there are smaller steps against income-shifting that the government can take to reclaim tax revenue.

Updated

Harvey says it would be a good question for Congress to ask, “how should technology income be allocated?” as a means of focusing the issue.

Senator Ron Johnson is asking who benefits from Apple’s arrangement. Who are the shareholders? Harvey, trying to say this without being a jerk: “The people who own shares of the company.”

What Johnson’s trying to get around to is that many of Apple’s shareholders are American so everything is fine.

Johnson suggests only taxing income on a pass-through basis, eliminating the corporate tax.

Updated

Levin is asking about ASI (one of the subsidiaries) being located in a foreign jurisdiction but effectively being controlled by Cupertino’s headquarters. Does that make sense? (He is trying to get the bow-tied professor all outraged, which doesn’t appear likely.)

Shay says we need to rethink our rules on the “cross-border context” to get in the minds of MNCs.

It gets even more elegantly vague:

Shay says he doesn’t see this as an “Apple-bashing day,” more just an opportunity to “see where we are.” How the development of the corporate tax code got to the point where we are today, where Apple can legally set up such a structure.

Updated

It’s time for a few questions.

Harvard Law tax professor Stephen Shay is now speaking. He says Apple subsidiaries’ lack of tax residence produces what tax planners call “ocean income.”

Here are some recommendations from his submitted testimony:

In the context of current law, changes may be made that would limit the scope for profit shifting. Most promising is a “minimum tax” imposed on the U.S. shareholder of a controlled foreign corporation in respect of low-tax foreign income earned by the controlled foreign corporation. In design, it actually would be a deemed distribution, as under current Subpart F, but the remaining U.S. tax would be collected when the earnings are distributed or the stock is sold. This approach would effectively take away the advantage of tax havens.

This should be accompanied by taking away the advantage of tax havens for foreign companies that invest in the United States. The United States should protect its source tax base by measures that may include imposing withholding tax on and/or restricting deductions for deductible payments of income paid to or treated as beneficially owned by related persons not “effectively taxed” on the income. In doing this, the United States would take away a substantial advantage that foreign-owned companies have in structuring investments in the United States.

Adopting a balanced approach is necessary to assure a level playing field. I have described elsewhere an approach that if taken by the United States would provide an incentive for other countries to adopt complementary rules. Moreover, the United States should strongly support and lead efforts at the OECD to combat base erosion and profit shifting. I acknowledge that the ideas described above need development into specific proposals, but this may be done in a reasonable time frame and will have value in relation to the principal international tax reform proposals.

Updated

Tax professor Richard Harvey is now giving his statement.

“This is going to be a little bit of an Apple-bashing day,” he suspects, but he notes that what Apple has done is within the bounds of international tax law – which “raises its own issues.”

He says he nearly “fell off my chair” when he heard Apple say it doesn’t use tax gimmicks. Although it should be up to the committee, not him, to decide whether they should be labeled gimmicks. What he’s most interested is in why Apple does this and how the system can be changed.

He relates “check-the-box” regulations to his children’s interest in magic, where companies can max taxable earnings go “poof.” From his submitted testimony:

Although shifting income out of the US and locating it in a tax haven like Ireland are key steps in Apple’s international tax planning, Apple must also avoid the so-called “Subpart F” rules. These rules were originally designed to tax passive income earned by foreign subsidiaries of US MNCs and therefore discourage the shifting of income out of the US. However, the rules have been substantially “gutted” through adoption of (i) the check-the-box regulations, (ii) the CFC look-through rule, (iii) the contract manufacturing exemption, and to a lesser extent (iv) the same-country exception.

He recommends:

• Tightening “Subpart F” rules.

• Increase required transparency for MNCs to get a “true picture” of their tax-planning.

He has other ideas about either (a) drastically overhauling U.S. corporate tax low to lower the nominal rate or (b) achieving global “consensus” on handling MNCs. But he doesn’t see either of those as realistic anytime soon.

Updated

Levin is ticked at Paul’s statement, and getting rather angry.

Senator Rand Paul is up, and he is angry… at his fellow senators. He is “offended” by this hearing “to bully one of America’s greatest success stories. “If anyone should be on trial here, it is Congress.”

The committee “should apologize to Apple.”

He says it’s the government’s fault for creating such a “byzantine” corporate tax system.

Updated

You can read all of the witnesses’ prepared testimonies here.

Senator John McCain is up now.

McCain labels Apple the country’s biggest tax avoider. (It’s a very large company, so.) Most of Apple’s profits, he says, are held by the Irish subsidiaries.

McCain: Apple’s tax strategy has given “new meaning” to its old slogan, “Think Different.”

He notes that 95% of Apple’s R&D takes place in the United States.

Updated

The hearing is beginning. Chairman Carl Levin is giving his opening statement.

He’s discussing the decline of corporate tax revenue as a share of total revenue the government brings in each year due to the use of offshore tax havens.

“Despite the immense impact of these offshore tax havens” on the federal deficit, “few Americans” see their impact. The point of the hearings is to show “the damage it does to our fiscal and economic health.”

“Apple is a success story… I carry an iPhone in my pocket,” he says. “What may not be known” is its complex use of tax havens. “More and more intellectual property is the dominant source of value in the economy. It is also highly mobile.”

“Apple’s tax avoidance strategy comes in two parts.” First, offshoring intellectual property. Second, making sure that once this is offshore, it remains free from U.S. taxes.

He is now outlining the subsidiary arrangements described by investigators yesterday. Apple subsidiaries exploit the difference between U.S. and Irish law to designate itself a tax resident “nowhere.” Levin argues that since the Irish subsidiaries are “functionally” controlled by stateside headquarters, they should be subject to U.S. tax law.

Apple’s primary method of offshoring intellectual property is through cost-sharing agreements. “I use the term ‘cost-sharing’ with some skepticism,” he says. All of the money being shared belongs to apple, and all of the signatories were Apple employees. “The intellectual property… was generated in the United States,” but the profits go to Ireland.

He now mentions Apple’s “quiet” arrangement with Ireland to pay “almost no income tax.”

The difference between ASI’s costs and earnings, he explains, was close to $70 billion, money that U.S. taxpayers see no chunk of.

Looking ahead to Apple’s prepared testimony, Levin notes: “Apple executives want to focus on the taxes it has paid, but the real issue is the billions that Apple has not paid.”

Updated

It should be a lively subcommittee hearing room, from early indications.

Good morning, this is Jim Newell in Washington. We’re here for this morning’s exciting new Apple public unveiling! Except no iPhones or iPads or dingdongs or anything will be unveiled, sadly. It will be Apple CEO Tim Cook appearing at a hearing before the Senate permanent subcommittee on investigations, about the company’s very special tax practices.

Congressional investigators released findings on Monday showing that Apple uses a “highly questionable” tax minimization strategy of impressive complexity. Several subsidiaries set up by the company, according to investigators, have few or no employees. Located in Ireland, these subsidiaries allowed the company to exist effectively “nowhere” in certain cases.

As the Guardian’s Dominic Rushe wrote yesterday:

During its investigations, the subcommittee found that Apple considers three key subsidiaries, all based in Ireland, to have no tax jurisdiction at all. One of those Irish affiliates, Apple Sales International (ASI), reported sales income of $74bn over four years but paid hardly any tax. In 2011 ASI had pre-tax earnings of $22bn but paid just $10m in tax, a rate of 0.05%.

Apple denies many of the subcommittee’s sweeping allegations, and its strategy heading into this morning’s hearing appears to be one of an ally to those questioning the insanity of the corporate tax code. The company’s prepared testimony says that Apple “welcomes an objective examination of the US corporate tax system, which has not kept pace with the advent of the digital age and the rapidly changing global economy.”

One might expect, however, that senators will badger Cook and other Apple executives, for the cameras.

The hearing begins at 9.30am.

Updated

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

 


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Outgoing IRS chief told: tax system is ‘rotten to the core’ – live blog” was written by Jim Newell, for guardian.co.uk on Friday 17th May 2013 16.03 UTC

Congressman Aaron Schock – who is relatively young, to be fair – says “The IRS’s steller reputation of being above partisan politics has been shattered.” Well, for starters…

Congressman Danny Davis: ”I am not convinced that this is a great, big political conspiracy.” Ohh??

Here’s the heart of the problem and what is not likely to be constructively resolved while everyone focuses on babbling about how President Obama is the New Nixon:

It gets into stickier territory when, in the process of trying to parse it out, the IRS feels it needs to look at donor lists to groups in questions. Miller says there needs to be a powerful rationale for requesting such lists, but again: all of these guidelines are very hazy.

Miller is already getting criticized by conservative commentators for saying earlier that the IRS needs a “bigger budget” to help fix the problems its dealing with. And perhaps that was tone-deaf for today’s hearing.

But as congressman Earl Blumenauer is saying now, what sense does it make for Congress to keep making the tax code more and more complex without giving the IRS additional resources?

It makes perfect political sense. Which means it’s pretty irrational.

Republicans have not been willing to accept this as satisfactory:

Congressman Tom Price is up and appears to have his grandstanding pants today. He describes the government asking people what books they read as “chilling,” then pauses for a while, presumably for us to figure out where he’s going with this.

Price is now working the GOP’s tenuous IRS scandal/Obamacare angle du jour: That Sarah Hall Ingram, who served as head of the IRS’ tax-empt division from 2009-2012, now heading the IRS’… Affordable Care Act compliance division! 

Updated

George says “yes” to a question about whether it would be helpful to have a “tightening” of rules for 501(c)(4) “social welfare” applications. He believes the IRS can do this without additional legislation being passed.

Miller, again, is asked about whether he, or an underling at the IRS, spoke to anyone in the administration from 2010 onward about the sharing of confidential taxpayer information, in violation of the law.

“I have no knowledge of that,” he answers.

“Did you ever speak to anyone in Treasury, not within the IRS, about the sharing of confidential taxpayer information,” congressman Jim Gerlach presses.

Miller evades.

“I can say categorically that I never shared information,” Miller says, adding that he “doesn’t know” if he talked to anyone in the administration about the sharing of information.

It got a bit circular, there.

Inspector general George, in response to a question, reiterates that activity was “inappropriate,” not “illegal.”

Miller is being quizzed about whether he has notes on talking to IRS employees. “Sir, please,” he eventually says.

We’re back. Democratic congressman Lloyd Doggett is up, and chastises chair Dave Camp’s earlier comments about the tax system being “rotten,” noting that Republicans are already trying to use this controversy to take down the new health care law over its tax provisions.

Updated

Briefly, here’s how things have been going: Republicans are mainly trying to nail Miller on why the IRS “targeted” conservative groups and to find a link to the White House; Democrats have been more concerned with the pressures that the flood of 501(c)(4) applications have brought to the IRS. Both, however, acknowledge that the IRS had been handling applications irresponsibly in the highlighted cases.

One special congressman asked if “this is still America,” also, too.

Fifteen minute recess! Everyone go have a nice snack.

Congressman Dave Reichert, with the latest lecture-from-dad type question: Does this committee have the right to know the truth. “This is the United States Congress which you’re accountable to… do you not believe it’s your job to provide us with the information you knew?”

He adds that “I was a cop for 33 years,” for some reason.

Miller is asked to explain the difference between 501(c)(4) non-profits and section 527 political organizations. It’s “difficult,” he says, but they try to look at the level of political expenditures.

Updated

Dare we suggest that we’re at the point where lines of questioning are getting repetitive? Democrat Xavier Becerra is, again, talking about the vagueness of guidelines on 501(c)(4) organizations. Which is a big problem! The hearing should be focused on that, maybe.

Updated

Congressman Robert Neal notes that Merriam-Webster’s word of the day is “litmus test” and – after saying that Merriam-Webster is located in his district (hoorah!) – inquires about whether a corrupt “litmus test” was used to single out conservative tax-emption applications.

He, like many of the Democrats today, goes on to discuss the post-Citizens United “rush” of money into 501(c)(4) groups, under the banner of social welfare, but really for political causes. “There wasn’t this rush to join Sisters of Mercy,” he notes wryly.

Updated

And now there’s Republican Devin Nunes, making the latest attempt to show that this is all Obama’s fault and the administration is evil and loves targeting conservative groups, for bloodsport.

Updated

Congressman Jim McDermott notes that the folks in the Cincinnatti IRS office just “screwed up,” and deserve punishment, but it’s really the vagueness of the 501(c)(4) criteria and amount of information coming through the IRS that leads to such problems.

He stands up for the “thousands and thousands” of “hardworking” employees at the IRS who show up everyday to work at one of the most “hated” organizations. Miller appreciates that.

Vice Presi… err… Congressman Paul Ryan is now up, and grilling Miller on why he hadn’t disclosed “targeting” that he was briefed on to Congress earlier. How can Miller say that “he did not mislead this committee?”

He is trying to explain that the “targeting” list of terms was used to weed out 501(c)(4) applications that appeared to be from “political” groups (as opposed to what are supposedly “social welfare” causes), not just conservative groups. It just so happened that many of them were conservative groups.

Updated

(Referring to the flood of money that’s come into 501(c)(4)s since the Supreme Court case Citizens Union… United… Whatever.)

Updated

Congressman Charlie Rangel, who not that long ago faced all sorts of scandals relating to his tax returns and financial disclosures, is lecturing Miller now.

Miller: “Again, I’m going to take exception to the notion of ‘targeting,’ because it’s a loaded term.” His parsing is not impressing Mr. Brady, the fellow who wanted to know if this country is still America.

Congressman Kevin Brady: “Is this still America?” WELL? IS IT, MILLER?

Both Democratic questioners so far have pointed out that former IRS commissioner Shulman, under whom this started, was appointed by President George W. Bush.

Crowley, a romantic, asks Republicans to focus on getting the facts before making wild political accusations. So adorable.

Updated

It’s gotcha video time!

The clip was like two seconds long. Miller stumbles over his words a bit saying Shulman was “incorrect, but not untruthful.” He notes that “targeting” is a “pejorative” term – in other words, it was not malicious, but certain screens for likely abuse were put in place.

Here’s what our Ewen MacAskill is seeing early on:

Miller so far seems a likeable and credible witness, the best kind of public servant, down to earth, not nerdy, the kind of guy who looks as if he is looking forward to joining his mates at the bar tonight. So he is going to make it hard for hostile Republicans.

Miller has done the right things so far. He has apologised, said the mistakes were foolish and were not partisanship.

What makes it really hard for the Republicans is that Miller has already been sacked so it is hard to touch him. All they can do is try to establish a link between the rogue employees in Cincinnati and the Obama administration and Miller has already said there is none, that he had not reported the incident up the chain.

Camp’s questions indicated that he’s trying to make this as expansive as possible – by looking at not just at small Tea Party groups’ applications at the Cincinnatti IRS office, but also those of big-name 501(c)(4) groups like the National Organization for Marriage and ones started by the Koch Brothers that received additional scrutiny.

Camp closes with a coy little kindergarten lecture: What is it called when you’re asked to disclose the truth and you don’t disclose the truth? (Ooh ooh, We think the answer Camp wants is “lying”!) Miller responds that he always tells the truth.

Camp asks Miller if he was aware that the White House explained a private group’s tax structure to reporters on a conference call in 2010. He thinks he read it “in the newspaper.” He does “not recall” if he made any efforts to pass on this alleged violation of tax law to the IG.

Updated

Miller is beginning his opening statement. He claims that the organization did not have enough notice (two days) to prepare full written testimony. He gives a brief statement, apologizing, and saying that the findings in the IG report are “consistent” with what happened. He notes, however, that the problems were nothing more than “mistakes.”

George, the inspector general, is giving his opening statement, largely reiterating the finds of his report.

Congressman Sandy Levin, the Democratic ranking member on the committee, is just as righteous in his fury – a relatively rare bipartisan occurrence that doesn’t speak well for Steven Miller’s morning. He emphasizes that the IRS’ head of the tax exemption division, Lois Lerner, “should be relieved of her duties.”

He does, however, warn the GOP not to make this a kickoff to its 2014 campaign season. Advice that will surely be heeded!…??

Dave Camp, chair of the committee, in his opening statement: “This is not a personnel problem. This is a problem of the IRS being too large, too powerful, too intrusive and too abusive.” He calls the tax system “rotten at the core.”

Meanwhile, this is true:

Good morning, this is Jim Newell in Washington. We’re here to cover what will presumably be the most unpleasant day of acting IRS commissioner Steven Miller‘s soon-to-be-over career.

Miller, who was fired on Wednesday, officially stays on duty until next Wednesday. And today he will join J Russell George, the Treasury inspector general for tax administration, as a witness in a hearing before the House Ways and Means committee on the IRS’s “practice of discriminating” against organizations for political purposes.

It will be the first hearing with Miller as a witness since news broke two weeks ago that applications from groups seeking tax-exempt status, frequently those with names including terms like “Tea Party,” were singled out by the IRS for extra scrutiny starting in early 2010. Three years later, some have still not been processed.

George’s IG report, released on Tuesday, found that “inappropriate criteria were used to identify tax-exempt applications for review,” and made a series of recommendations for the IRS to take going forward. Its released prompted the administration to relieve Miller of his (acting duties).

Miller will have a lawyer at today’s hearing. He does face the threat of self-incrimination if he chooses to speak. And with lawmakers on both sides, but especially Republicans who’ve been concerned about the IRS’ alleged practice of selective enforcement in the past, looking to jam him, it will be a tense morning.

The hearing is scheduled to begin at 9am.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

 


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Obama: I ‘did not know anything’ about probe of IRS misconduct – live” was written by Tom McCarthy in New York, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 16th May 2013 17.15 UTC

A question from a Turkish reporter about chemical weapons in Syria. Has Assad crossed the red line in Syria?

Erdogan first: “On chemical weapons… all that information is shared by our administrations… We share information. We will continue to work in this way.”

Obama: We are “constantly sharing information. We have seen evidence of the use of chemical weapons inside of Syria. It is important to us to make sure that we’re able to get more specific information. .. But separate from chemical weapons… we know that tens of thousands are being killed.”

The president says the US will continue its humanitarian support, its support for the opposition and “try to mobilize the entire international community” to pressure Assad.

As for the red line, “What I have said is that the use of chemical weapons are something that the civilized world has recognized should be out of bounds. And as we gather more evidence… my intention is to make sure we’re representing what we know to the international community.”

He then seems to leave it to the international community “to put what pressure they can” on Assad.

“This is also an international problem. It’s very much my hope to continue to work with all the various parties involved, including Turkey, to find a solution.

Then he dismisses the possibilities for unilateral US actions:

“I don’t think anyone in the region, including the prime minister, thinks that US unilateral actions by themselves would bring about a resolution.”

Erdogan is asked whether he still plans to visit Gaza.

He says yes, in June, and that he also will visit the West Bank. “I place a lot of significance on this visit in terms of peace in the Middle East,” he says.

First question: Did anyone in the White House know about the investigation of misconduct at the IRS before the news reports? Shouldn’t the president have known before he heard it on the news?

“I spoke to this yesterday,” Obama says. “My main concern is fixing a problem. We began that process by accepting the resignation of the acting director. We will be putting in new leadership… that we gather all the facts, that we hold accountable those who have taken these outrageous actions.”

He calls the episode “unacceptable.”

It’s really raining now. Obama asks for Marines with umbrellas. They duly appear.

“You guys I’m sorry about,” Obama tells the press.

“I certainly did not know anything about the IG report before [it] had been leaked through the press,” Obama says.

Erdogan says he’s going to cut his remarks short “but not to flee from the rain!”

Obama asks him if he wants an umbrella. Erdogan declines.

Erdogan thanks the president for hosting him. He offers condolences for the Boston marathon bombings. He calls for a strengthened bilateral trade agreement.

On Syria, “we have views that overlap,” Erdogan says. “Ending this bloody process in Syria and meeting the legitimate demands of the people by establishing a new government are two areas where we are in full agreement… We also agree that we have to prevent Syria from becoming a place for terrorist organizations.”

Erdogan says that chemical weapons must not be used in Syria.

“I want to make one other point. There’s been intense discussion… around the attacks in Benghazi,” the president says.

“I am intent on making sure… we prevent another tragedy like this. At my direction, we’ve been taking a series of steps that were recommended by the review board after the incident.”

He says they’re reviewing security; improving training; increasing intelligence and early-warning capabilities at diplomatic outposts.

“We’re not going to be able to do this alone. We need congressional partners.”

Obama says he’s calling on Congress to fund the state budget to provide for better security.

Obama then offers his condolences for “the outrageous bombings that took place in Reyhanli. As always the US stands with you as your country fight against terrorism,” he says.

Obama praises what he calls Erdogan’s successful fight against PKK violence.

Obama turns to Syria, saying Turkey has shown “extraordinary generosity” in hosting refugees. The US will remain a major donor of humanitarian aid to refugees to help “shoulder this burden,” he says.

“We’re going to keep increasing pressure on the Assad regime and working with the Syrian opposition.

“We both agree that Assad needs to go,’ Obama says. Assad needs to transfer power to a transitional body, the president says.

Obama announces a new “high-level committee” to foster trade with Turkey, which he says is a crucial complement to EU trade.

As NATO allies, we’re reinforcing our commitment to our shared security, Obama says.

This visit reflects the importance that the United States places on its relationship with our ally, Turkey,” Obama says.

He says they’ve discussed Afghanistan, “where our troops serve together,” the G20, and Iran “where we agree it is critical that that country not obtain a nuclear weapon.”

Obama praises what he says are Erdogan’s efforts to secure peace with Israel.

The president appears with Erdogan.

Today’s press conference is to be held in the Rose Garden which, like all the best gardens, is outdoors.

Unfortunately for the assembled members of the media, it has begun to rain. The NPR correspondent spies deputy national security advisor Ben Rhodes:

Updated

While we wait for the president, who is a half-hour “late,” you might want to delve into the internal White House emails tracing the evolution of talking points on Benghazi.

Yahoo’s Chris Wilson has created a great interactive tool that organizes the emails in a virtual inbox for easy navigation:

It won’t quite fit in our blog column – use the original version here.

(h/t: @Chris_Moody)

Updated

President Obama will use today’s news conference to call for full funding for the state department and new security measures at US diplomatic outposts, the New York Times reports:

Among other steps, Mr. Obama will ask for Congressional support to increase the number of Marine guards posted at embassies and for Congress to act in areas that could help fulfill recommendations detailed in an independent investigation of the Benghazi attack.

Read the full piece here.

Welcome to our live blog coverage of President Obama’s joint news conference with visiting Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Obama promised Wednesday to take questions from the media today about misconduct at the IRS and other controversies buffeting his boat, including the secret seizure of AP phone records and the Benghazi affair.

It’s the second time this week the president has used a foreign leader as a shield against a media eager to hear his reflections on how badly everything seems to be going for him. On Monday the president took one long, if multi-part, question from an American journalist after a joint conference with UK prime minister David Cameron.

Obama and Erdogan are expected to discuss the Syrian war, which the US is resisting involvement in and which threatens increasingly to spill over into Turkey. On Wednesday Turkey announced the arrest of four suspects in a car bombing attack that killed 51 in a Turkish town near the border last weekend.

Updated

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

 


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “US budget deficit’s fall should make European ‘austerians’ think again” was written by Phillip Inman, Economics correspondent, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 15th May 2013 16.31 UTC

If only the “austerians” had listened. According to the latest forecasts, the US budget deficit will shrink to 4% of GDP this year.

The slide from 2009′s 10.1% budget shortfall is one in the eye for the Tea party and any other advocate of “contractionary expansion”.

Worse for the fans of austerity, forecasts published by the US congressional budget office expect the deficit to fall to 2.1% of GDP by 2015 as tax revenues soar.

By comparison, the UK’s official forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), expects a budget deficit on a Maastricht treaty basis of 7.6% this year. Not until 2017 will it fall below the Maastricht maximum of 3%.

The Obama administration was regularly battered by critics who said the deficit would balloon without massive budget cuts. The president resisted much of the rhetoric and put in place a stimulus plan. It was weaker than economists such as Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz wanted, mainly because constitutionally required cuts in local state spending went ahead regardless. But it was still a stimulus plan and by last year it was helping millions of workers find jobs and this year is making serious inroads into the deficit.

Trevor Greetham, a director at Fidelity Worldwide Investment, congratulated the president on his strategy.

“The anti-austerity camp will get a boost today,” he said. “It is increasingly clear that the Obama administration was right to put off fiscal tightening and focus reforms in the medium to long term. America is growing its way out of debt. The deficit is shrinking because tax revenues are coming in better than expected and a rise in house prices has seen the two government-sponsored lenders, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, repay some bn (£60bn) to the Treasury.

“The good US fiscal performance stands in stark contrast to the UK, where front-loaded spending cuts and tax rises have hurt the economy and caused a shortfall in government revenues. The OBR expects the deficit to shrink to a manageable level by 2017 but this forecast, like all of the previous ones, relies on sustained economic expansion of 2-3% a year. It is hard to believe this level of growth will be achieved especially as next month will see another year of cuts tacked on the end of what has become a rolling five-year austerity plan.”

Greetham is one of the few City investors to say loudly and consistently that austerity was the wrong medicine. In 2011 he contradicted George Osborne’s message that the UK was like Greece. He said then it was more like the US and should adopt the same remedy.

And Japan is moving in the same direction. Even now Tokyo is looking to boost government spending by 2% to 3% as it seeks to generate growth and reduce its almost perpetual 10% annual deficits. Alongside this plan is the expansion of the money supply by the Bank of Japan, which together with the spending boost will be the ultimate test of the Keynesian answer to a slump.

Yet many will argue the Obama administration has done enough to show that Keynesianism works and it is only ideology that has hindered growth in the UK and Europe, not the availability of an oven-ready solution.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

 


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Eric Holder testifies before House over IRS and AP scandals – live” was written by Tom McCarthy in New York, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 15th May 2013 16.35 UTC

IRS discrimination scandal

In a news conference Tuesday, Holder announced that the department of justice is investigating whether IRS employees broke the law when they singled out conservative groups for extra scrutiny in reviewing requests for nonprofit status.

The activity came to light just before a report by the IRS inspector general was released on Tuesday night. The report found that applications by groups with certain names – Tea Party, Patriots or 9/12 (the date of a 2009 Glenn Beck-led Tea Party march on Washington) – for tax exempt status were singled out and frequently subjected to delay, with some still not processed three years after the initial request. The activity lasted for 18 months starting in early 2010, as the number of such requests surged, the report said.

“Those actions were, I think as everyone can agree, if not criminal, they were certainly outrageous and unacceptable,” Holder said in a news conference Tuesday. “But we are examining the facts to see if there were criminal violations.”

The scandal has huge momentum on the Hill, and Holder is likely to face questions about the scope of his investigation today. The House has announced separate hearings on the report for next week.

Republicans are calling for heads to roll. “My question isn’t about who’s going to resign — my question is who is going to jail over this scandal?” House speaker John Boehner said at a news conference Wednesday morning.

President Obama called the report’s findings “intolerable and inexcusable” and pledged to hold the IRS employees in question accountable.

Hello and welcome to our live blog coverage of attorney general Eric Holder’s testimony before the House judiciary committee. It promises to be a lively appearance, with the Republicans who control the committee having their pick of scandals to use to attack the cabinet member they love to hate most (sorry, Hillary Clinton; the House never voted to hold you in contempt).

The Obama administration has had a bad month. The Benghazi scandal flared up again. The IRS stands accused of bullying conservative groups. And the Justice Department stands accused of bullying journalists and potential whistleblowers. The attorney general has the pleasure of being directly involved in two out of three of these hot messes. Today is the first opportunity the opposition party will have had to confront him about them.

Holder’s testimony before the committee won’t be limited, however, to talk of the Obama administration’s apparent disregard for niceties like the first amendment. Committee chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Virginia, has made it clear that he wants Holder to answer for a menu of other alleged sins. These include the alleged failure of the FBI to share information with Boston police that might have prevented the Boston Marathon bombings; alleged wasteful spending inside the Justice Department, including a $10,000 pizza party; and alleged, politically motivated neglect of cases associated with conservative causes.

The scandals touching on the IRS and alleged intimidation of journalists and whistleblowers are still unfolding actively, and we’ll take a closer look at them before Holder begins his testimony, scheduled for 1pm ET. 

Updated

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

Welcome to the Holtville Tribune

 

Welcome to the HOLTVILLE TRIBUNE E-Edition for the latest news go to http://holtvilletribune.com/holtville-tribune-online/

 

Welcome to Holtville Tribune Online

For your local valley and national news click here

Holtvilletribune.com +smartphone apps

Holtvilletribune.com +smartphone apps

Holtvilletribune.com +smartphone apps

  • Unlimited access to holtvilletribune.com from any device.
  • Unlimited access to the Holtville Tribune app for your BlackBerry®, iPhone®, Windows® Phone 7 and Android™-powered phones.
  • Unlimited access to our new Election 2012 app for iPhone.
  • click here
UA-28480107-1 [s2Member-Security-Badge v="1" /] [s2Member-Security-Badge v="1" /]
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube