The Senate Finance Committee voted 17-9 to approve Daniel
Werfel, a longtime federal budget official and former acting
commissioner of the IRS, to lead the tax-collection agency as
its commissioner.
If approved, he will be in charge of allocating $80 billion in
new funding for the agency, part of Biden's major tax and
climate bill passed by Congress in August.
That has made Werfel's nomination contentious. No date has been
set for a full Senate vote.
Republicans have claimed that money will fund an army of 87,000
new agents to harass Americans on their taxes, though the IRS
says it will focus enforcement on corporations and wealthy
filers.
The funding will also be used to replace retiring employees,
answer taxpayer questions and upgrade obsolete computer systems,
according to U.S. Treasury officials and tax experts.
Democrats say the increase in funding is desperately needed to
step up enforcement and catch fraud.
Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, a Democrat, said Werfel
"understands the importance of rebalancing the tax code to make
it more fair, to go after the tax cheating by too many wealthy
and big corporations."
Republican Senator John Cornyn, who opposed Werfel's nomination,
said the IRS has botched tech upgrades and struggled to answer
taxpayers' questions.
"As a reward, the administration pushed through an $80 billion
blank check without producing a single spending plan," he said
at a committee meeting before the vote.
If confirmed by the Senate, Werfel would take over from former
Commissioner Charles Rettig, an appointee of former President
Donald Trump, whose term expired in November.
Werfel will need a simple majority in the 100-seat Senate to be
approved.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Washington; editing by Andy
Sullivan and Cynthia Osterman)
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