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Despite the IRS lifting its ban on churches endorsing political candidates, I still won’t be. Because it wasn’t fear of ...
First Amendment: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ...
This week in Washington, the Trump administration faced increasing political controversy over its handling of documents ...
A decades-old rule prohibited politicking from the pulpit. Without it, some worry churches could become “linchpins to sway ...
Instead, the I.R.S. agreed to a narrower carveout — one that experts in nonprofit law said might sharply increase politicking ...
The Internal Revenue Service announced last week it is overturning a restraint on churches and other houses of worship that was supposed to keep them from endorsing candidates for political ...
The government-nonprofit complex has spent decades using Americans' money to capture institutions for a political agenda.
Florida houses of worship can now endorse political candidates in some cases, an exception created by the IRS recently.
I write this column having just received the news that the IRS has asked a judge to create an exception to the Johnson ...
The IRS gutted the Johnson Amendment, which prohibited religious institutions from endorsing candidates without losing their tax-exempt status. They were doing it anyway.The post Politics from the pul ...
As if everyday life in these United States wasn’t politicized enough, your local house of worship could soon become a part of ...
Rabbis and other clergy members in the United States may endorse candidates from the pulpit without jeopardizing their house of worship’s tax-exempt status, the Internal Revenue Service has decreed.