Rogue pastors endorse candidates, but IRS looks away
By RACHAEL BADE | 11/3/14 5:04 AM EST
A record number of rogue Christian pastors are endorsing
candidates from the pulpit this election cycle, using Sunday sermons to
defiantly flout tax rules.
Their message to the IRS: Sue me.
But the tax agency is doing anything but. Although the IRS was sued itself for not enforcing the law and admitted about 100 churches may be breaking the rules, the pastors and their critics alike say the agency is looking the other way. The agency refuses to say if it is acting.
At the same time, the number of pastors endorsing candidates
in what they call Pulpit Freedom Sunday jumped from 33 people in 2008 to more
than 1,600 this year, according to organizers, Alliance Defending Freedom. And
this year, they’ve stepped up their drive, telling pastors to back candidates
any Sunday up until the election, not just one Sunday as in past years.
The church leaders are jumping in high-profile races that
will help decide the Senate and tight governor races across the country,
endorsing candidates from Thom Tillis (R) over Sen. Kay Hagan (D) in North Carolina to Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R) over Alison Lundergan Grimes (D) in Kentucky.
Rev. Mark Cowart, pastor at Colorado Springs-based Church
For All Nations, suggested good Christians should vote Democratic Colorado Gov.
John Hickenlooper out of office in an Oct. 19 sermon, where he endorsed his GOP
rival, Bob Beauprez.
“Beauprez is against more gun control, does not support
abortion and he does protect the man-woman marriage — that’s the one I’m voting
for. … I’m endorsing biblical principles,” the preacher said in a video of the
service, pacing a church stage and chopping his hand through the air for
emphasis.
At issue is the churches’ tax break as tax-exempt 501(c)(3)
organizations. They don’t pay taxes, and donations to them can be deducted from
contributors’ taxable income.
But with that break comes limits on political endorsements.
Charities are barred from engaging in political campaigns.
So while pastors can discuss abortion, gay marriage and
other controversial issues in their sermons, they’re not allowed to back
candidates or use church money to fund campaign activities, and keep their tax
break.
“You can’t have a tax-exempt entity engaged in politics
because that involves using tax-exempt money for political purposes, so it’s an
unfair playing field,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-founder of the Freedom From
Religion Foundation, the organization that sued the IRS in 2012 for failing to
enforce electioneering restrictions on churches. The group settled this summer
with an understanding that the IRS would eventually take action.
So far there’s been no evidence they have.
IRS Commissioner John Koskinen in an interview last month with Tax Analysts
suggested the IRS isn’t planning to crack down on churches anytime soon. He
said the FFRF lawsuit news “spread out into the world … somehow we are doing
something very different and we are going to show up either more aggressively
or more often in a different way than we have in the past, and that is not what
that case was about at all.”
It’s another sign of the tax agency turned upside down by
the tea party targeting controversy. Although the IRS is under fire from the
right for being heavy-hand with conservative tax-exempt entities, it’s also
getting hit from the left for failing to enforce decade-old rules governing
churches and politics.
The law was written in 1954 by then-Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson
(D-Texas), who was facing a contentious reelection challenge where several
501(c)(3)s endorsed his opponent, labeling him soft on communism.
The pastors, who make it easy for the IRS by often taping
their sermons and mailing them to the tax agency, argue that it infringes on
their First Amendment rights.
“The church is God’s organization — what right does the
government have to control this?” said Rev. Kevin Baird of Legacy Church in
Charleston, S.C.
In a recent sermon Baird questioned the integrity of a local
state Senate Republican official up for reelection, who calls himself
“pro-life” yet has not advanced legislation on the issue in his committee.
In Charlotte, N.C., Southern Baptist preacher Mark Harris —
who made his own failed bid for Sen. Hagan’s seat in the GOP primary earlier
this year — said he made clear to his congregation that he backed Tillis,
decrying Hagan’s pro-choice and gay marriage stances as “deeds of darkness”
during an October service.
In Georgia a week later, Rev. Jeff Whitmire used his sermon to
back Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal (R) and Senate candidate David Perdue (R), over
their Democratic counterparts Jason Carter and Michelle Nunn, he said.
And Cowart in Colorado also endorsed Rep. Cory Gardner (R)
over incumbent Sen. Mark Udall (D)
saying, “We need to see him out.”
Their ultimate goal: igniting a lawsuit with the IRS and
taking the issue to the Supreme Court.
“If by chance a member of the IRS gets this sermon and is
listening, sue me,” said evangelical pastor Jim Garlow of the San Diego-based Skyline
Church, after backing Democratic Rep. Scott Peters for reelection. His
Republican challenger, Carl DeMaio, is gay, and could advance a “radical
homosexual agenda,” Garlow warned.
Kay Hagan
Kay Hagan is a U.S. Senate senator, and an honorary
co-chair for the Third Way.
Note:
Mark Udall is a U.S. Senate senator, and an honorary
co-chair for the Third Way.
Thomas R. Carper
is a U.S. Senate senator, and an honorary
co-chair for the Third Way.
Christopher
Coons is a U.S. Senate senator,
and an honorary co-chair for the Third Way.
Claire McCaskill
is a U.S. Senate senator, and an honorary
co-chair for the Third Way.
Jeanne Shaheen is
a U.S. Senate senator, and an honorary
co-chair for the Third Way.
William
M. Daley is a trustee at the Third Way,
a member of the Commercial Club of
Chicago, and was the chief of staff for the Barack Obama administration.
Brian
L. Frank is a trustee at the Third Way,
Jane Lakes Harman’s son, and was a
director at the Harman International
Industries, Inc.
Jane Lakes Harman
is Brian L. Frank’s mother, a stockholder
in the Harman International Industries,
Inc., a trustee at the Aspen
Institute (think tank), and married to Sidney
Harman.
Sidney
Harman was married to Jane Lakes
Harman, the chairman for the Harman
International Industries, and a trustee at the Aspen Institute (think tank).
Reynold
Levy was an advisory board member for the Aspen Institute (think tank), and a trustee at the Third Way.
William D. Budinger
is a trustee at the Third Way, and a
trustee at the Aspen Institute (think
tank).
James S.
Crown is a trustee at the Aspen Institute (think tank), and a member
of the Commercial Club of Chicago.
Commercial Club of
Chicago, Members Directory A-Z (Past Research)
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Lester Crown
is a member of the Commercial Club of Chicago, and was a lifetime
trustee at the Aspen Institute (think tank).
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Aspen Institute (think
tank).
George Soros
was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society, and is the founder
& chairman for the Open Society
Foundations.
Open
Society Foundations was a funder for the Atlantic Council of the United
States (think tank).
Henry A. Kissinger was a lifetime trustee at the Aspen
Institute (think tank), is a director at the Atlantic Council of the
United States (think tank), a member of the Bohemian Club, a director at the American Friends of Bilderberg
(think tank), and a 2008 Bilderberg conference participant (think tank).
Belizean_Grove
is the equivalent to the male-only social group, the Bohemian Club.
Henrietta
Holsman Fore is trustee at the Aspen
Institute (think tank), and a member of the Belizean Grove.
Deborah L.
Wince-Smith is a member of the Belizean
Grove, and was a member of the IRS
Oversight Board.
IRS Oversight
Board is a citizen’s board for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
Charles O.
Rossotti was the commissioner for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
is a director at the Atlantic Council of the United States (think tank),
and the chairman for the AES Corporation.
John A. Koskinen
was a director at the AES Corporation, and is the commissioner for the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS).
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