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Salon: Hidden in GOP tax bill: A plan to turn churches into dark-money spigots

Nov 27, 2017

By: Amanda Marcotte

There’s no doubt that the main purpose of the Republican tax bill, in both its House and Senate forms, is to slash taxes for corporations and the rich while making the rest of the country pay for it. But Republicans are also stuffing a wish list of right-wing goals into the bill. One provision of the House legislation that has gotten relatively little media attention has the potential to drastically remake our campaign finance system, and tilt the already unfair playing field even further toward the Republicans.

Ever since 1954, a legislative add-on known as the Johnson Amendment has prevented charities, social welfare organizations and, perhaps most importantly, churches from endorsing candidates. Such institutions may lose their tax-exempt status if they engage in electioneering. The House bill would functionally dismantle the Johnson Amendment, thereby opening the door to pastors endorsing candidates from the pulpits and for charities large and small — even the Red Cross or Salvation Army — to openly support political candidates or causes in the course of their official charitable work.

“The tax bill threatens the integrity of our elections and all of our tax-exempt organizations,” Maggie Garrett, the legislative director for Americans United for Separation of Church and State, said in an emailed statement. “No one wants to turn our charitable nonprofits, houses of worship and foundations into political campaign tools.”

This provision, Adam Bozzi of End Citizens United explained to Salon, would create “a gaping loophole in our campaign finance system.” Bozzi explained it could “allow a big political donor who wants to make a contribution through the back door to give to a church, which could then endorse a candidate and engage in electioneering.”

To make it even worse, the tax-exempt status of churches and charities means that any millionaire or billionaire who funneled political spending through such a group could then turn around and claim that donation as a tax writeoff. Money given to a pastor in order to buy his endorsement wouldn’t look any different on paper than money given to a church for its charitable work or other legitimate purposes. Republicans are creating a loophole that will allow rich people to shelter political donations from taxes while influencing election campaigns in total secrecy.

The proposed House bill supposedly limits charity or church workers to political endorsements “in the ordinary course of the organization’s regular and customary activities in carrying out its exempt purpose.” But that language is both fatally vague and functionally useless. The entire point of the Johnson Amendment is to keep political endorsements out of the usual course of an organization’s activities. This bill wouldn’t merely let pastors preach from the pulpits in support of a favored candidate; it would also permit Planned Parenthood to recommend candidates to patients who come in for medical care, or permit the Salvation Army to endorse candidates when providing its services to poor people.

Most Americans — including most evangelical Christians — support the Johnson Amendment. This is likely not just because of concerns about the political influence of churches and nonprofits, but also because people want to have some aspects of American life to be free of our almost endless election campaigns.

“The mission of the charity itself is threatened” under this scenario, Bozzi argued. “They may bend to the big donor who comes in and drops a million dollars, or $2 million or $10 million.” That’s unfair to the citizen who gives $50 to a church or charity and wants to know that money is going to support the group’s stated mission, instead of going into some candidate’s campaign coffers.

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Read the rest at Salon.