After a lot of poking around, The New York Times has found that the IRS scandal is coming up quite a bit short on the bottom line.
Not only did the tax-exempt status division target both conservative and liberal groups (though certainly far more conservatives), but most of the ineptitude by the agency’s Cincinnati office was aimed at a wide array of nonprofit groups that have no connections at all to politics.
Here’s a portion of the Times’ report:
“Two months of investigation by Congress and the IRS has produced new documents that have clouded much of the controversy’s narrative. In the more complicated picture now emerging, many organizations other than conservative groups were singled out: “progressive” organizations, medical marijuana purveyors, organizations formed to carry out President Obama’s health care law, and open source software developers who create software tools for computer code writers and distribute them free of charge.
Apparently, the software group’s were given an especially hard time by the IRS crew.
Meanwhile, here are the numbers that show the overall picture:

