Senate Panel OKs IRS Nomineee

Senate Panel OKs IRS Nomineee

amaxwell@govexec.com

The Senate Finance Committee Wednesday approved the nomination of Charles F. Rossotti to be commissioner of the IRS on a voice vote.

Rossotti had recieved the support of Finance Committee William Roth, Jr., R-Del., and other members of the panel at a hearing last week.

At the hearing, Roth said the selection of Rossotti, who is a private-sector technology executive, "breaks the mold of former IRS commissioners." Roth predicted that Rossotti would win Senate approval if he shows "a powerful and undiluted commitment to reform."

"Your background is uniquely suited to the task," Roth told Rossotti. "You are not a career civil servant. You are a successful businessman."

President Clinton nominated Rossotti, chairman of the Fairfax, Va.-based American Management Systems Inc., in July, because he said his business management and computer experience could turn around a troubled IRS.

"Charles Rossotti has the combination of leadership skills, understanding of what serving customers means and expertise with information technology that the IRS needs at this critical juncture," Deputy Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summer said. "I hope and expect he will receive a ringing endorsement from the entire Senate in the coming days."

Last week, the House Ways and Means Committee approved a package of major changes that would expand taxpayer rights and create an 11-member board comprised primarily of private citizens to oversee the IRS.

Support for reform and restructuring of the IRS has been building since Senate Finance Committee hearings on the agency last month.

Rossotti's nomination now goes to the full Senate.

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