IRS Complaint Filed Againt Two Kansas Churches
Mark W. Everson, the commissioner of the I.R.S., has repeatedly warned that the agency will crack down on religious organizations that violate laws barring charities of any type from involvement in partisan political activities. Several weeks ago, Bruce Wilson diaried the controversy at Talk to Action when a campaign memo by Kansas Republican Attorney General Phill Kline, who is running for reelection, leaked. The memo detailed how he directed his campaign to manipulate churches to assist his campaign in apparent violation of their non-profit tax status. Read the full memo here: Another potential election related tax-code violation came-up this past week when Ohio gubernatorial candidate Ken Blackwell made a "surprise" appearance at a Cincinnati church following a presentation by David Barton, a Christian nationalist propagandist and consultant to the Republican National Committee. It is evident that in this election cycle, bending and breaking the IRS rules proscribing electioneering by tax-exempt organizations, including churches, continues to be a key tactic of the Christian Right in the Republican Party. Because of this, there are many interpretations of convenience of the rules flying around out there, despite the IRS' best efforts to let everyone know the rules and their intention to enforce them, but the basic rule is this: "...all section 501(c)(3) organizations are absolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office." The IRS offers some further clarification: What is Political Campaign Intervention?
IRS Complaint Filed Againt Two Kansas Churches | 0 comments ( topical, 0 hidden)
|
||||||||||||
|