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3d
Religion News Service on MSNDespite tempest over a tax exemption, Trump's IRS keeps Johnson Amendment intactNotwithstanding the consent decree, it's an open question whether the US Supreme Court would go along with voiding the ...
To settle a case challenging the Johnson Amendment, the IRS has proposed to allow at least two churches to endorse candidates from the pulpit.
You want a service from the government, you pay for it. But taxation with conditions of behavior attached is worse than theft ...
Free speech doesn’t stop at the church door,” writes former Broward GOP executive director Lauren Cooley. The IRS’ recent ...
In 1995, the IRS retroactively revoked the church’s tax-exempt status, arguing the ad crossed the line into prohibited ...
A 2019 survey by Pew Research found that 76% of Americans and 70% of Christians say clergy should not endorse candidates from ...
The IRS reversed decades of legal precedent in a July 7 court filing by saying that churches and other religious 501c(3) organizations can endorse political candidates in certain circumstances.. The ...
As if everyday life in these United States wasn’t politicized enough, your local house of worship could soon become a part of ...
6dOpinion
Boulder Daily Camera on MSNThe IRS now says churches can endorse candidates. Here’s why we shouldn’t. (Opinion)Despite the IRS lifting its ban on churches endorsing political candidates, I still won’t be. Because it wasn’t fear of ...
A reinterpretation of a tax rule signals that houses of worship may now be able to endorse political candidates without losing tax-exempt status.
The decades-old Johnson Amendment does not apply to speech by houses of worship to its congregation through “customary channels of communication,” the IRS said in a July 7 court filing in the ...
The rule was introduced by former President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1954 when he was serving as the U.S. Senate majority leader.
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