By Peter Morici In the IRS targeting scandal and others, Washington and the media are obsessed with the question: What did the president know and when did he know it? That misses the point—Mr. Obama's presidency is much more damaging to the nation than the mistakes of subordinates now coming to light. Most recently, we learn President Obama met with anti-Tea Party IRS Union President Colleen Kelley just before the tax agency began targeting conservative groups. Is that the smoking gun? Was the president in on the plan to harass opponents of big government? Through labor-management forums, the union has a lot to say about how the IRS is run, but I doubt a transcript of the meeting, if we could get one, would prove the two presidents directly conspired to use IRS powers to target conservative groups. Instead, it would likely show they were in concert on the need to defeat the GOP in 2012, and countering the Tea Party's influence was important. However, the union solicits contributions from members to campaign against the Tea Party, and AFI-CIO affiliated unions educate their members that Republicans and conservatives groups are the enemies of progress. In that kind of an environment is it any surprise that card carrying union members at the IRS thought it was just fine to target advocates of limited government? Hardly! That's union politics. But the president doesn't have to encourage it beyond what his responsibilities as chief executive require, yet he does. In 2009, the president signed an executive order to allow the union to have pre-decisional involvement in all IRS workplace matters. Now the president acts with such great surprise that workers paying dues and making political contributions to an organization that targets the Tea Party and conservative groups are harassing the same in their work. The president is not uninformed or incompetent—he is cynical and corrupt. We did not know that he was so lacking in moral fiber and self restraint when we elected him, because as a senator both in Illinois and Washington, he spent most of his time running for higher office—we never observed him exercising discretion and dealing with tough choices as a legislator or executive. Having chosen him in haste, the nation can repent at its leisure. He won't be impeached and convicted, but he will continue to abuse his powers. He didn't have to tell Attorney General Holder to pursue sweeping subpoenas of the Associated Press or name a Fox correspondent a conspirator in investigations of leaks—actions that will intimidate a free press. Or for the Secretary for Health and Human Services to shake down private executives for "donations" to nonprofits led by former Obama Administration officials. Or for the Secretary of State to cover up the ineptitude that led to the death of a U.S. ambassador and several diplomats at the hands of terrorists in Libya. It's just how they do business in Chicago, and now sadly in the nation's capital. All with a wink, a smile and a denial from the President of the United States. Peter Morici is an economist and professor at the Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, and a widely published columnist.
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