Strassel: Obama's Enemies List—Part II
First an Obama campaign website called out
Romney donor Frank Vandersloot. Next the IRS moved to audit him—and so
did the Labor Department.
This
column has already told the story of Frank VanderSloot, an Idaho
businessman who last year contributed to a group supporting Mitt Romney.
An Obama campaign website in April sent a message to those who'd donate
to the president's opponent. It called out Mr. VanderSloot and seven
other private donors by name and occupation and slurred them as having
"less-than-reputable" records.
Mr. VanderSloot has since been learning
what it means to be on a presidential enemies list. Just 12 days after
the attack, the Idahoan found an investigator digging to unearth his
divorce records. This bloodhound—a recent employee of Senate
Democrats—worked for a for-hire opposition research firm.
Now Mr. VanderSloot has been targeted by the federal government. In a
letter dated June 21, he was informed that his tax records had been
"selected for examination" by the Internal Revenue Service. The audit
also encompasses Mr. VanderSloot's wife, and not one, but two years of
past filings (2008 and 2009).
Mr. VanderSloot, who is 63 and has been working since his teens, says
neither he nor his accountants recall his being subject to a federal
tax audit before. He was once required to send documents on a line item
inquiry into his charitable donations, which resulted in no changes to
his taxes. But nothing more—that is until now, shortly after he wrote a
big check to a Romney-supporting Super PAC.
Zhang Jun/Xinhua/ZUMAPRESS.com
Two weeks after receiving the IRS
letter, Mr. VanderSloot received another—this one from the Department of
Labor. He was informed it would be doing an audit of workers he employs
on his Idaho-based cattle ranch under the federal visa program for
temporary agriculture workers.
The H-2A program allows tens of thousands of temporary workers in the
U.S.; Mr. VanderSloot employs precisely three. All are from Mexico and
have worked on the VanderSloot ranch—which employs about 20 people—for
five years. Two are brothers. Mr. VanderSloot has never been audited for
this, though two years ago his workers' ranch homes were inspected.
(The ranch was fined $8,400, mainly for too many "flies" and for "grease
build-up" on the stove. God forbid a cattle ranch home has flies.)
This letter requests an array of
documents to ascertain whether Mr. VanderSloot's "foreign workers are
provided the full scope of protections" under the visa program:
information on the hours they've worked each day and their rate of pay,
an explanation of their deductions, copies of contracts. And on and on.
Perhaps all this is coincidence. Perhaps something in Mr.
VanderSloot's finances or on his ranch raised a flag. Americans want to
believe the federal government performs its duties without fear or
favor.
Only in this case, Americans can have no
such confidence. Did Mr. Obama pick up the phone and order the screws
put to Mr. VanderSloot? Or—more likely—did a pro-Obama appointee or
political hire or career staffer see that the boss had an issue with
this donor, and decide to do the president an unasked-for election
favor? Or did he or she simply think this was a duty, given that the
president had declared Mr. VanderSloot and fellow donors "less than
reputable"?
Mr. VanderSloot says he "expected the
public beatings" from the left after the naming, but he "also wondered
whether government agencies, anxious to please their boss, would take
notice of the target he had apparently placed on me. Now that I'm being
singled out for audits, I can't help but wonder whether there is a
connection."
As for other Romney donors: "It is un-American and irresponsible for a
president to target individual, law-abiding citizens for political
retribution, and it is inconceivable that any U.S. agency would stoop to
do the bidding for this campaign's silliness," says Louis Bacon, an
investor and conservationist who also made the Obama list.
We don't know what happened, and that's the problem. Entrusted with
extraordinary powers, Mr. Obama has the duty to protect and defend all
Americans—regardless of political ideology. By having his campaign
target a private citizen for his politics, the president forswore those
obligations. He both undermined public faith in federal institutions and
put his employees in an impossible situation.
Every thinking American must henceforth wonder if Mr. VanderSloot has
been targeted for inquiry because of his political leanings. And every
federal servant must wonder if his inquiries into an Obama enemy will
bring suspicion or disgrace on the agency—even if the inquiry is
legitimate.
As for Mr. VanderSloot, to what authority should he appeal if he
believes this to be politically motivated—given the Justice Department
on down is also controlled by the man who targeted him? (The White House
did not return an email requesting comment.)
If this isn't a chilling glimpse of a society Americans reject, it is
hard to know what is. It's why presidents are held to different rules,
and should not keep lists. And it's why Mr. Obama has some explaining to
do.
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