WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives voted to hold former IRS official Lois Lerner in contempt of Congress Wednesday for refusing to testify about her role in the targeting of Tea Party groups.
The vote was 231-187, with six Democrats joining Republicans in favor of contempt.
The House also voted to call for a special prosecutor to investigate the affair, 250-168. At the same time, the House Rules Committee prepared for a vote Thursday to establish a Select Committee on Benghazi — ensuring that investigations of the Obama administration would dominate the House’s workweek.
Lerner has twice refused to answer questions to the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee about her role in the IRS’s targeting of Tea Party groups. She repeatedly invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Republicans say she waived that right when she claimed her innocence and answered a question.
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the chairman of that committee, said a judge should settle the question.
“I regret that we have to be here today. If it is within my power, if at any time l comes forward to answer our questions, I’m fully prepared to hear what she has to say, and I will ask that the criminal charges against her be dropped,” Issa said. “It may not be within my power after today.”
Democrats said the Republican-led committee “botched” the contempt proceedings and tried unsuccessfully to send the contempt resolution back to committee.
“I am not defending Ms. Lerner. I wanted to hear from her,” said Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md. “I have questions about why she was unaware of the inappropriate criteria for more than a year after they were created. I want to know why she did not mention the inappropriate criteria in her letters to Congress. But I cannot vote to violate an individual’s Fifth Amendment rights just because I want to hear what she has to say.”
Lerner’s attorney said she did not waive her rights.
“Today’s vote has nothing to do with the facts or the law. Its only purpose is to keep the baseless IRS ‘conspiracy’ alive through the mid-term elections,” said William W. Taylor III. “It is unfortunate that the majority party in the House has put politics before a citizen’s constitutional rights.”
What happens next? Unlike a bill, a contempt resolution does not have to pass the Senate or be signed by the president. Under the law, the resolution is automatically referred to the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, who must present it to a grand jury. Refusing to comply with a congressional subpoena is a class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to a $100,000 fine and up to a year in jail.
The House of Representatives could also go to court to get a judge to order Lerner to testify. Or, it could send its sergeant-at-arms to arrest Lerner and bring her to the floor of the House for a trial, but Congress hasn’t used that “inherent contempt” power since 1934.
The vote comes almost one year after Lerner first admitted that the IRS held up applications for tax exemptions based on nothing more than the group having the words “Tea Party” or “Patriots” in their names. Answering a planted question at an American Bar Association conference, she apologized, saying, “that was wrong, that was absolutely incorrect, insensitive and inappropriate.”
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Christians are under siege in the Middle East, and the Obama administration is not doing enough to stop religious persecution by its allies, according to a new report from a bipartisan federal commission.
Outside of the Middle East, the commission cited secretive communist dictatorship North Korea as a major violator of religious freedom.
Sudan, where most of the population is Muslim, was designated because of its ruthless crackdown on converts.
The Obama administration fueled its push for energy regulations with a massive new report Tuesday linking climate change to extreme weather across the country and warning of more “climate disruption” if the nation doesn’t change its ways.




WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday upheld the centuries-old tradition of offering prayers at government meetings.
Don’t believe the hype: marijuana legalization poses too many risks to public health and public safety. Based on almost two decades of research, community-based work, and policy practice across three presidential administrations, my new book “Reefer Sanity” discusses some widely held myths about marijuana:
A top Republican on the House intelligence committee slammed his Democratic colleague Sunday for suggesting fellow Democrats boycott the newly announced committee tasked with probing the Benghazi attacks.
The congressman said Democrats should not give the select committee more “credibility” by joining, dismissing new evidence that Republicans have called a “smoking gun” showing the White House politicized the tragedy.
Condoleezza Rice announced Saturday that she will not be delivering the commencement address at Rutgers University’s graduation ceremony this month, saying the invitation has become a “distraction.”
House Republicans moved on two fronts Friday to dig for answers on Benghazi, with Speaker John Boehner announcing a special committee to investigate and a key panel subpoenaing Secretary of State John Kerry to testify.
Russian separatists down 2 choppers, fighting spreads to Odessa as Ukraine teeters
Former White House spokesman Tommy Vietor, in a tense interview with Fox News’ Bret Baier, downplayed the revived controversy over the Benghazi talking points, saying he does not remember his own role in the editing process because: “Dude, this was like two years ago.”
A top military intelligence official in Africa at the time of the Benghazi attacks testified Thursday that U.S. personnel “should have tried” to help Americans under fire on Sept. 11, 2012, in an unprecedented public statement from a leading military officer.
The NBA threw the book at LA Clippers owner Donald Sterling, banning him for life, fining him $2.5 million and raising the possibility of a forced sale of the team over racist remarks he made to an ex-girlfriend that surfaced on a tape recording.
On Sunday, TMZ posted audio of a man purported to be Sterling telling his girlfriend that he didn’t want her bringing black people to “my games.”


POLL: 2014 LOOKS WORSE FOR DEMS THAN 2010
Dr. Ben Carson slammed the culture of political correctness and partisan labels at a WPEC-TV town hall panel held Thursday at the station’s studio in West Palm Beach, Florida, arguing that it has stifled free expression in America—namely religious freedom.
The panel featured religious leaders and a representative of an atheist organization speaking about religious freedom in society, including prayer in schools and the roots of morality.
NEW YORK — Rep. Michael G. Grimm (R-N.Y.) surrendered Monday morning to federal authorities in New York as he faces multiple charges connected to a restaurant business he operated before entering Congress in 2011, according to sources familiar with the long-running probe into the lawmaker’s finances.
Americans have always enjoyed the privilege of living abroad without losing citizenship. Think Hemingway and Fitzgerald decamping to write in Europe after World War I, or Gen. MacArthur spending decades in Asia around World War II. Expatriates remain Americans, and have generally been welcomed back to our shores with open arms.
The U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan confirmed Thursday that three American doctors — including a father and son — were killed by an Afghan security guard who opened fire at a Kabul hospital.
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