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Marjorie Taylor-Green: Democrat-Led Settlement Bill Creates 'New IRS Force'

Marjorie Taylor Green warns Democrat-led settlement bill passing Senate over the weekend will create a 'new IRS force' of 87,000 tax officials doing. Buy more guns and ammo.

The Joint Commission on Taxation, a bipartisan oversight body , said the IRS would receive 78% to 90% of the additional $200 billion it would collect as a result of its strengthened workforce. is expected to come from SMEs. Less than $200,000 per year.

Green, a Republican congressman from Georgia, tweeted over the weekend.

"And we also buy guns and ammunition."

Greene added:

When the Senate Settlement Bill passes this weekend, 87,000 of her IRS agents will be hired with her $80 billion taxpayer fund. will be split.

And they're also buying more guns & ammo.

Low-to-middle-income Americans&small businesses will be prime targets for the Democrat's new IRS army.

1/3 pic.twitter.com/G43qh5mv9p

— Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green 🇺🇸 (@RepMTG) August 2022 5th

lawmakers also criticized the bill's climate clause, tweeting: An energy-starved agenda will literally drive Americans into the dark.

Greene added: "Wind turbines & solar panels are underdeveloped as reliable sources of energy."

, said it was "leaving America behind."

IRS building
Getty Images

Green said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's recent visit to Taiwan He said he would "break off all climate negotiations with the United States" and that now Beijing is "significantly increasing coal and fossil fuel energy."

Her addition of 87,000 IRS staff is a key part of the Democrats' $740 billion spending package, which over the weekend she passed the Senate by a 51-50 vote. Vice President Kamala Harris had a tie vote.

Republicans criticized the measure,saying it would increase harassment of middle-class taxpayers, while Democrats called for additional Claimed we needed an agent. breadwinner.

Chuck Schumer
Michael Reynolds/EPA-EFE/Shutter

It was made possible after Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) agreedwith centrist Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV).

The two men engaged in covert negotiations formonths after President Biden's "build better" spending proposal, opposed by Manchin, collapsed.

Schumer also conceded to another centrist SenatorKirsten Cinema (D-Ari.) to get the 50th vote needed to support the bill. did .

The bill is expected to pass the Democratic-controlled House before being sent to President Biden's desk.