Obama on Wednesday demanded and accepted the resignation of the acting IRS commissioner, Steven Miller. The president said it is important to have a new leader for the organization while it attempts to put in safeguards to ensure the special screening of political advocacy groups does not happen again. Werfel has agreed to remain in the new job through Sept. 30.Werfel has served for most of the Obama administration as controller of the Office of Management and Budget, overseeing federal procurement, financial disclosure and working to fight waste. A lawyer by training who also worked as a budget official in the George W. Bush administration, Werfel has helped reduce the administration’s level of improper payments to contractors and has been working to manage the mandatory budget cuts known as the sequester.
Werfel has served as controller of the Office of Management and Budget since October 2009, making him chiefly responsible for the government’s financial management, government contracting, information technology and personnel policy.
Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah), the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said he wasn’t familiar with Werfel, but would be open to considering him as a permanent commissioner.
“If I was the president I would find the very best business man I possibly could who’d be willing to take it over and have the authority to be able to straighten the mess out,” Hatch said. “I don’t know whether Werfel has that kind of dimension or not, but I hope he does.”
The appointment comes as Obama tries to quell multiple controversies. Earlier Thursday, Obama called for Congress to pass funding beefing up security at U.S. diplomatic facilities, after last year’s attack on the U.S. diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya.
At a press conference Thursday, Obama reiterated that he did not know aboutIRS targeting of conservative groups before an inspector general’s report was leaked to the news media, and he vowed to “hold accountable” anyone involved in the practice.
He also dismissed the idea of appointing a special counsel to investigate the matter, saying that a criminal investigation announced by the Justice Department and the IRS inspector general’s probe were sufficient.
Obama made the remarks in a joint news conference with visiting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.