logo
Democratic senator says he has recordings of favors ‘promised' by Trump's IRS pick

Democratic senator says he has recordings of favors ‘promised' by Trump's IRS pick

The Hill20-05-2025

Sen. Ron Wyden (Ore.), the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, said Tuesday he has recordings of business associates of President Trump's pick to lead the IRS, former Rep. Billy Long (R-Mo.), saying they expect to get favors from him once he is in office.
Wyden cited recordings of two instances of people saying they expect to receive favorable treatment from Long.
'Our staff investigators have on tape now tax promoters saying you met with them at the inauguration and promised [them] a favorable private letter ruling,' Wyden said Tuesday during Long's confirmation hearing in the Senate Finance Committee.
Long has worked as a tax credit promoter, an industry that pushed tax credits to businesses as the government sent out $5 trillion in rescue stimulus during the pandemic.
Wyden's revelation about the recordings came at the end of Long's confirmation hearing and Long was not given a chance to respond, though he defended his work as a tax promoter throughout the hearing, specifically with regard to the disputed 'tribal' trax credits.
'My only involvement in this matter … was to connect interested friends of mine … just friends, if they had any interest,' Long said.
The first recording mentioned by Wyden concerns an alleged 'promise' made by the former lawmaker to tax promoters about a favorable ruling from the IRS. The other concerns 'favorable treatment' for a company called White River Energy that had Long on its payroll regarding a 'tribal tax credit' that is in dispute.
'We also have on tape the White River CFO, who gave you the thousands of dollars, that he expects favorable treatment of these fake tribal tax credits,' Wyden said.
Long, who received $65,000 from White River, according to the Senate Finance Committee, said he 'never talked to anybody' at the company but instead worked 'through' a company called Capitol Edge Strategies. Long couldn't name the Native American tribe on behalf of which he facilitated the sale of the disputed tribe tax credit.
'I worked through Capitol Edge Strategies. I didn't work through – I never talked to anybody at White River. I don't even know anybody at White River, and I don't have any way to know who the tribe is even,' he said.
While Democrats homed in Long's potential transgressions along with how he would respond to requests from the president, Republicans said they appreciated Long's work in the private sector, saying it makes him a good advocate for small businesses.
'What he will do is bring a fresh and much needed perspective to the IRS,' Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) said. 'Before entering public service, he was a small business owner and professional auctioneer – careers that grounded him in the real world challenges that everyday small business owners … face.'
Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee released a detailed statement on Tuesday of the relationship between White River Energy and Long. In their account, White River sold phony tax credits to investors and then reassured them that they'd have friends in the IRS who'd be able to 'take the heat off.'
Immediately after their credits were outed as fake, the company started donating to Long's inactive Senate campaign, Finance Committee Democrats said.
'Shortly thereafter, in mid-January, the folks down at White River decided it was time to whip out their checkbooks and start donating to Congressman Long's long-dormant Senate campaign. It still had outstanding debt dating back two and a half years. More than $165,000 poured into the campaign coffers, the vast majority of it from tribal tax credit promoters, including people at White River,' they wrote.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment .
White River Energy did not immediately respond to questions about any previous interactions with Long or why they allegedly paid him $65,000.
During Long's confirmation hearing, Democrats focused on Long's work as a tax credit promoter.
'You have a blatant conflict of interest here, having received payment for marketing [tax credits],' Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minn.) said during the hearing.
The IRS has seen a string of different commissioners since President Trump took office. Usually, IRS commissioners are permitted to serve out their terms as nonpartisan civil servants but former IRS commissioner Danny Werfel resigned just before Trump's term started after he promised to fire him.
Since Werfel, the IRS has been led by career agents Doulas O'Donnell, Melanie Krause and Gary Shapley, all of whom left amid controversies, including a power struggle between Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and presidential adviser Elon Musk and the outside access of a government cost-cutting panel to sensitive taxpayer data.
The IRS has pulled a 180-degree turn since the Biden administration, which authorized an $80 billion overhaul and major hiring initiative for the national tax collection office, which was clawed back by Republicans.
The Trump administration has undertaken large-scale layoffs at the agency, specifically targeting new tax compliance hires. One report suggested the agency could lose as much as 40 percent of its workforce due to layoffs, hiring pauses, and regular retirement in the coming years.
'The IRS is at a crossroads, and we need a leader who doesn't just talk about modernization but who can get the job done,' Blackburn said during the hearing.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Congress to grill Kathy Hochul on NY sanctuary laws — and local GOP offers spicy advice over what questions they should ask
Congress to grill Kathy Hochul on NY sanctuary laws — and local GOP offers spicy advice over what questions they should ask

New York Post

time31 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Congress to grill Kathy Hochul on NY sanctuary laws — and local GOP offers spicy advice over what questions they should ask

ALBANY – State Republican lawmakers offered advice to their congressional counterparts ahead of Gov. Kathy Hochul testimony on Thursday over sanctuary policies – outlining a list of questions to fling at the Democrat. The GOP legislators sent a letter to House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer ahead of Hochul's trip to Washington, DC where she'll be grilled by a congressional panel on the Empire State's sanctuary laws. 'Governor Hochul's sanctuary state policies have played a direct role in the ongoing migrant crisis throughout our state, despite bipartisan concern including repeated warnings from New York City Mayor Eric Adams,' Assemblyman Michael Tannousis (R-Staten Island) wrote in the letter, cosigned by various other New York GOP lawmakers. Advertisement 'We believe that Governor Hochul must be held accountable for her failure to reverse the state's sanctuary policies and recklessness with taxpayer dollars,' Tannousis continued. Gov. Kathy Hochul is set to testify on capitol hill Thursday on New York's sanctuary city laws and its handling of the influx of migrants. Hochul is voluntarily appearing before the House committee on Capitol Hill and will testify alongside Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker. The hearing is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Advertisement In their letter, the Republican state lawmakers ask the House Republicans to ask Hochul to outline: Why New York continued to accept migrants during the height of the crisis The vetting process for migrants and concerns about public safety A shady $432 million no-bid contract awarded to DocGo to help mitigate the crisis Her justification for roughly $4 billion the state has spent dealing with migrants Why some municipalities weren't reimbursed with costs associated with the migrants Tannousis said he wants the House Oversight committee to follow through after Hochul's testimony to deliver 'accountability.' The governor has tried to navigate a vague middle ground when it comes to the state's sanctuary policy, which is still based on a 2017 executive order issued by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo who is now running for mayor of New York City. Advertisement Assemblyman Michael Tannousis and other Albany Republicans wrote a letter to the House panel suggesting areas where they should hammer Hochul. Michael McWeeney Hochul had promised specifics and clarity over her guidance on how New York would work with federal immigration authorities. Instead, her office only provided a list of four broad categories of situations that would trigger state law enforcement to work with the feds, such as if ICE has a judicial warrant or when relevant to investigating another crime committed in New York. Hochul had previously said she was 'happy to go down' to DC for the hearing. 'I'll tell them our policy in the state of New York is not to use state resources, our state police, to enforce the civil infractions,' Hochul said earlier this year.

DNC votes to redo vice chair elections, dealing a blow to David Hogg
DNC votes to redo vice chair elections, dealing a blow to David Hogg

Washington Post

time36 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

DNC votes to redo vice chair elections, dealing a blow to David Hogg

The Democratic National Committee has voted to hold new elections for two leadership positions, dealing a blow to DNC Vice Chair David Hogg that could lead to his removal after months of internal turmoil. In a 294-99 vote that concluded Wednesday, DNC members agreed to move forward with redoing the contest earlier this year that elected Hogg and another Democrat, Malcolm Kenyatta, as vice chairs. The DNC will now vote from Thursday through Saturday — and then Sunday through Tuesday — to fill the two slots, which both men can seek again.

Democrats are in the polling dumps — fighting America on this key demand
Democrats are in the polling dumps — fighting America on this key demand

New York Post

time37 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Democrats are in the polling dumps — fighting America on this key demand

The Democratic Party has never been more unpopular — yet no Democrat seems to understand why. Some say they're not fighting President Donald Trump hard enough. Others say they aren't messaging their agenda well enough. In reality, they're fighting too hard for an agenda that Americans reject, with a central demand of welfare for all. Thirty-two years after President Bill Clinton promised to 'end welfare as we know it,' no idea unifies the Democratic Party more than the belief that welfare should be never-ending. This vision of government dependency spurred their most notable policies of recent years, and explains their intransigent opposition to Republican reforms. While some Democrats show an increasing willingness to compromise on other leftist priorities, such as biological men in women's sports, the party brooks no dissent on welfare — even though Americans want to fix the system's many failures. Consider the ongoing federal budget battle. House Republicans have put together a reconciliation bill that would slow the rate of Medicaid growth — from a projected 59.6% increase to 40% — over the next decade. Democrats oppose even that, including GOP attempts to end waste, fraud and abuse. Yet the latest federal data show that 22% of Medicaid payments and 12% of food-stamp payments went to ineligible recipients. More than 70% of likely voters want to protect taxpayers from fraud and abuse, polls show, yet Democrats essentially deny there's a problem that needs to be solved. In fact, when the Trump administration proposed a rule in March to end $11 billion in improper ObamaCare subsidies — aiming solely to curtail fraud — Democrats immediately opposed it. Democrats are just as adamant when it comes to work requirements for welfare recipients. My organization, the Foundation for Government Accountability, recently found that six in 10 able-bodied adults on Medicaid don't work at all, hoovering up resources that would benefit the truly vulnerable. When voters in purple Wisconsin were asked two years ago if welfare recipients should work as a condition of receiving benefits, nearly 80% said yes — but national Democrats now say no. They also reject Republican attempts to block Medicaid payments for illegal immigrants, which would save billions of dollars over the next decade. More than 70% of voters don't want illegal immigrants to receive government benefits, yet Democrats bizarrely disagree. But it's not just Congress; Democrats are striking the same strange tune in state capitols. Over the past 10 years, virtually all Republican-led states have taken steps to purge waste, fraud and abuse from welfare programs. By contrast, Democrat-run states have expanded illegal immigrants' access to Medicaid and pushed able-bodied adults onto welfare programs. In recent months, Democratic governors in Kansas and Arizona have vetoed Republican bills that would ban food-stamp purchases of soda and junk food — a reform that could lower state and federal Medicaid spending and encourage healthier choices. Democrats have a long history of supporting restrictions on consumers' options, but as soon as welfare enters the picture, they oppose it. Apparently limiting freedom is fine by them, but limiting federal welfare is unthinkable. The left's unwillingness to support even modest welfare reforms reflects the reality that government dependency is the biggest thing Democrats now offer Americans — even beyond limitless immigration and the Green New Deal. The Affordable Care Act, the central achievement of Barack Obama's presidency, dramatically expanded Medicaid while creating a new welfare system for the individual health-insurance market. Joe Biden enacted a work-destroying child tax credit and sought perpetual expansions of Medicaid and food stamps under the guise of pandemic relief. A slew of Biden regulations made it easier for people to abuse the taxpayer's generosity, from Medicaid to food stamps to free school lunches for rich kids. Democrats' end goal is clear: Get every American on the dole. Yet insisting that government dependency is always the answer means Democrats can't publicly admit that seemingly infinite welfare has any shortcomings. In fact, the left's agenda of welfare-for-all is profoundly harmful, and voters know it. Democrats have built a welfare system that taxpayers can't afford while pushing millions of people out of the workforce — a dual assault on the economic growth. They've left fewer resources for disabled children and the elderly by prioritizing able-bodied adults and illegal immigrants. And they're corrupting the foundational American belief that welfare is temporary assistance whose recipients should work to get back on their feet. No wonder Democrats are so unpopular: They're fleecing taxpayers, crippling the economy, hurting the truly needy and giving handouts to those who don't deserve them — none of which has Americans' support. The first Democrat who wakes up on welfare will be the hero their party desperately needs. Hayden Dublois is data and analytics director at the Foundation for Government Accountability.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store