Like Peggy Noonan, National Journal columnist Ron Fournier argues that the IRS scandal requires a review outside the normal U.S. Justice Department investigative process.

You’re being spun, America. On the vital question of whether the Internal Revenue Service incompetently or corruptly targeted conservative groups, both the White House and GOP are rushing to judgment – and they want you to follow like lemmings.

Don’t do it.

Nearly six weeks ago, President Obama responded to an inspector general’s report detailing the targeting, which had been long denied by the IRS. “The misconduct that it uncovered is inexcusable. It’s inexcusable, and Americans are right to be angry about it, and I am angry about it,” Obama said, vowing to “hold the responsible parties accountable.”

The IG report was based on a cursory audit. It was not a full-fledged investigation. And yet Democrats disingenuously claimed that it exonerated the Obama administration and the president’s re-election campaign from any involvement in IRS targeting.

To truly “hold the responsible parties accountable,” Obama still needed a thorough and impartial inquiry led by investigators who would question witnesses under oath, and would subpoena the White House and his own re-election campaign for related emails and other documents.

He did not ask for that. …

… There is a hard truth that partisans won’t admit: Until more is known, we can’t implicate or exonerate anybody.

If forced to guess, I would say that the IRS and its White House masters are guilty of gross incompetence, but not corruption. I based that only on my personal knowledge of – and respect for – Obama and his team. But I shouldn’t have to guess. More importantly, most Americans don’t have a professional relationship with Obama and his team. Many don’t respect or trust government. They deserve what Obama promised nearly six weeks ago – accountability. They need a thorough investigation conducted by somebody other than demagogic Republicans and White House allies.

Somebody like …. a special prosecutor.