The best case against the NSA is the IRS
By George Will
As soon as the Constitution
permitted him to run for Congress, Al Salvi did. In 1986, just 26 and
fresh from the University of Illinois law school, he sank $1,000 of his
own money, which was most of his money, into his campaign to unseat an
incumbent Democratic congressman. Salvi studied for the bar exam during
meals at campaign dinners.
He lost his campaign. Today, however, he should be invited to
Congress to testify about what happened 10 years later, when he was a
prosperous lawyer and won the Republican Senate nomination to run
against a Democratic congressman named Dick Durbin
In the fall
of 1996, at the campaign’s climax, Democrats filed with the Federal
Election Commission charges against Salvi’s campaign alleging campaign
finance violations. These charges dominated the campaign’s closing days.
Salvi spoke by telephone with the head of the FEC’s Enforcement
Division, who he remembers saying: “Promise me you will never run for
office again, and we’ll drop this case.” He was speaking to Lois Lerner.
After losing to Durbin, Salvi
spent four years and $100,000 fighting the FEC, on whose behalf FBI
agents visited his elderly mother demanding to know, concerning her
$2,000 contribution to her son’s campaign, where she got “that kind of
money.” When the second of two federal courts held that the charges
against Salvi were spurious, the lawyer arguing for the FEC was Lois Lerner
More
recently, she has been head of the IRS Exempt Organizations Division,
which has used its powers of delay, harassment and extortion to suppress
political participation. For example, it has told an Iowa right-to-life
group that it would get tax-exempt status if it would promise not to
picket Planned Parenthood clinics.
Last week, in a televised House
Ways and Means Committee hearing, Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Ill.), Salvi’s
former law partner, told the riveting story of the partisan enforcement
of campaign laws to suppress political competition by distracting Salvi
and entangling him in bureaucratic snares. The next day, the number of
inches of newsprint in The Post and the New York Times devoted to
Roskam’s revelation was the number of minutes that had been devoted to
it on the three broadcast networks’ evening news programs the night
before: Zero.
House Republicans should use their committee chairmanships to let
Lerner exercise her right to confront Salvi and her many other accusers.
If she were invited back to Congress to respond concerning Salvi, would
she again refuse to testify by invoking her Fifth Amendment protection
against self-incrimination?
There is one way to find out.
Durbin, the second-ranking
Senate Democrat, defeated Salvi by 15 points. He probably would have won
without the assistance of Lerner and the campaign “reforms” that have
produced the FEC’s mare’s-nest of regulations and speech police that
lend themselves to abuses like those Salvi experienced. In 2010, Durbin,
who will seek a fourth term next year, wrote a letter urging Lerner’s IRS division to pay special attention to a political advocacy group supporting conservatives.
Lerner,
it is prudent to assume, is one among thousands like her who infest the
regulatory state. She is not just a bureaucratic bully and a slithering
partisan. Now she also is a national security problem because she is
contributing to a comprehensive distrust of government
The case for the National Security Agency’s gathering of metadata is:
America is threatened not by a nation but by a network, dispersed and
largely invisible until made visible by connecting dots. The network
cannot help but leave, as we all do daily, a digital trail of cellphone,
credit card and Internet uses. The dots are in such data; algorithms
connect them. The technological gathering of 300 billion bits of data is
less menacing than the gathering of 300 by bureaucrats. Mass gatherings
by the executive branch twice receive judicial scrutiny, once
concerning phone and Internet usages, another concerning the content of
messages
The case against the NSA is: Lois Lerner and others of her ilk.
Government
requires trust. Government by progressives, however, demands such
inordinate amounts of trust that the demand itself should provoke
distrust. Progressivism can be distilled into two words: “Trust us.”
The
antecedent of the pronoun is: The wise, disinterested experts through
whom the vast powers of the regulatory state’s executive branch will
deliver progress for our own good, as the executive branch understands
this, whether we understand it or not. Lois Lerner is the scowling face
of this state, which has earned Americans’ distrust.
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