Rep. Adrian Smith, U.S. Representative for Nebraska's 3rd District | Facebook Website
Rep. Adrian Smith, U.S. Representative for Nebraska's 3rd District | Facebook Website
Rep. Adrian Smith (R-NE) and Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-NC) introduced the IRS Overreach Prevention Act today, a bill aimed at prohibiting the IRS from continuing or developing a successor to its in-house Direct File pilot program.
The representatives issued statements regarding their motivations for introducing the legislation. "Since Democrats supersized IRS funding in 2022, the Biden-Harris Administration has been steadily moving toward its goal of comprehensive monitoring over the personal finances of Americans. The Direct File program is part and parcel of this scheme, and last month’s TIGTA report revealed IRS refused to set numerical benchmarks to evaluate the results of its unauthorized pilot,” said Rep. Smith. “The last thing American taxpayers need is an IRS with expanded ability to predetermine what tax they owe and burden them with audits. This bill directs IRS to drop the program, which lacks both measurable success and statutory authority, and focus on better serving hard-working Americans.”
Rep. Edwards echoed these sentiments: "With a national debt at $34 trillion and counting, American taxpayers deserve transparency and accountability on how their hard-earned taxpayer dollars are spent.” He added, “Reports of inaccurate data surrounding the cost and benefit of the IRS’ Direct File program coupled with actual usage rates demonstrate that the Free File program, which was used 17 times more than Direct File in pilot states, sufficiently addresses the need for free tax filing software without federal government intervention. The IRS Overreach Prevention Act will prohibit the government from wasting funds on the Direct File program which has proven to be unnecessary and a waste of tax dollars.”
Cosponsors of this bill include Reps. Don Bacon (R-NE), Kevin Hern (R-OK), Carol Miller (R-WV), Guy Reschenthaler (R-PA), Greg Steube (R-FL), Claudia Tenney (R-NY), and Steve Womack (R-AR).
In January 2023, Reps. Adrian Smith and Michelle Steel's (R-CA) bill to repeal the Biden Administration’s $80 billion IRS expansion became notable as it was among the first bills passed by House in that session of Congress.
In April 2024, Smith led his Ways and Means Committee colleagues in writing to request defunding for FY 2025 for this specific initiative.
In June 2024, Smith again led efforts questioning Commissioner Daniel Werfel about statutory authority related concerns about fund allocation for development and advertisement of this controversial program.