For months, Republicans have been trying to use what happened at Benghazi as the weapon with which to mortally wound Barack Obama’s second term. Although it seems clear to me that some terribly bad judgement was used connected with Benghazi (and it’s clear the administration lied about it subsequently), there’s no way it was something to bring an administration down. It was just politically embarrassing.
The brewing IRS scandal, on the other hand, is starting to look as though Richard Nixon rose from the grave and started giving Democrats political advice for the past few years.
You’ve heard about the scandal already, so I’m not going to waste time covering the specific allegations, partly because you can read them elsewhere and partly because it’s still early in the story, so the facts are developing. All we know is that the Internal Revenue Service used agents to give extra scrutiny to conservative groups and also leaked confidential information to media about conservative groups. (ProPublica is a progressive left media group, and it’s the one admitting that it was given the documents.)
Nobody is questioning that it happened. The question is how widespread it was and who directed it. First, we were told that it was limited to just one IRS office. Then it became clear that IRS officials in Washington were involved. How high did it go? Nobody outside the government knows yet.

Her dad didn’t want to help her, so here’s a jack-o’-lantern for Hannah
AUDIO: We lose the love we need by letting imperfections scare us
What if I hadn’t been afraid to follow Paul Finebaum’s advice 20 years ago?
If Ron Paul was ‘our last hope,’ what’s your backup plan now?
Tuesday’s Senate vote reminds me of German ‘Enabling Act’ of 1933
Her cat’s presence brings comfort to grandmother dying in hospital
Just a sandwich: Why do people make everything so political?
‘Self government’ means you govern yourself, not obey your neighbors