U.S. lawmaker calls on IRS chief to resign over handling of hacked data

Reuters

Published Apr 15, 2016 02:23PM ET

U.S. lawmaker calls on IRS chief to resign over handling of hacked data

By Dustin Volz

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The head of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service should resign due to the agency's inability to improve its defenses against hacks on taxpayer data, a Republican lawmaker said on Friday.

Republican Representative Barbara Comstock said new leadership is needed to replace IRS Commissioner John Koskinen due to failures to secure Americans' sensitive information from malicious intrusions, escalating a line of attack from Republicans who frequently criticize the federal tax collection service.

"Commissioner Koskinen has provided little confidence that cyber security is a top priority at the IRS," Comstock said in a statement shared with Reuters, adding she was concerned the agency apparently has no one in charge of cyber security.

The IRS did not immediately comment.

More than 700,000 individuals may have had their personal information pilfered by hackers during an intrusion last year, the IRS announced in February. That number has been repeatedly revised upward from initial estimates that were far smaller.

Comstock, in her statement, cited a Government Accountability Office report released last month that found the IRS struggling to upgrade its information security plan. The IRS agreed to work toward implementing dozens of outlined recommendations.

Koskinen appeared before congressional committees this week and said complying with the GAO recommendations was a priority.

The commissioner has been under near-constant fire from Republicans since he took over the agency in 2013 amid controversy over whether the IRS was targeting conservative groups.

More than 60 Republicans have signed on to a resolution introduced in October to impeach Koskinen on charges that he has impeded a congressional investigation into the IRS's treatment of conservative groups.

Comstock is the first lawmaker to call for Koskinen's resignation solely for cyber security reasons, an aide said.

Koskinen is not the first Obama administration official to be targeted by Congress for his handling of cyber security. Last year Katherine Archuleta, head of the Office of Personnel Management, resigned after several lawmakers from both parties called for her ouster following the theft of personal data of more than 21 million individuals.