|
Pulpit Freedom Sunday: Will This be the Year? |
|
|
Written by Don Byrd
|
|
Thursday, 21 June 2012 |
|
Every election cycle, a handful of ministers around the country flaunt IRS rules prohibiting candidate endorsements by tax exempt non-profits, in hopes of sparking a lawsuit to challenge the regulation. Reuters reports on some clergy already gearing up, hoping for the largest efforts yet.
The situation is fraught with peril for the IRS, which needs to be seen as apolitical. When it cracks down on political activities proscribed by the 501(c)(3) regulations, it is inevitably branded as partisan.
When the target is a church, mosque or synagogue,enforcement puts two fundamental American values at odds: freedom of speech and the separation of church and state. Although the agency has enforced the tax-exemption rules against churches in the past, it has so far ignored the provocations of Freedom Sunday.
...
The result of agency inaction, according to tax experts and former IRS staffers, will be a lot more electioneering by leaders of the faithful, in local races as well as national, and to the benefit of Democrats as well as Republicans.
"It will get worse unless the IRS takes action, and they seem reluctant," said Nicholas Cafardi, dean emeritus and professor of law at Duquesne University and the longtime lawyer for the Catholic diocese of Pittsburgh.
Pulpit Freedom Sunday, as they call it, is scheduled for October 7 this year. Stay tuned.
|