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1 (June 15, 2004)

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                                                                Order Code RS21549
                                                              Updated  June 15, 2004



 CRS Report for Congress

              Received through the CRS Web



      Campaign Activity by Churches: Legal

  Analysis of Houses of Worship Free Speech

                        Restoration Act

          Erika Lunder, Marie  B. Morris, and L. Paige Whitaker
                          Legislative Attorneys
                          American Law  Division

Summary


     Churches and other Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 501(c)(3) tax-exempt
 organizations can lose their tax-exempt status if they participate in a political campaign.
 The Houses of Worship Free Speech Restoration Act, H.R. 235 (108' Congress) would
 permit churches to engage in unlimited amounts of certain types of political campaign
 activity without jeopardizing their tax-exempt status. It would amend the IRC so that
 churches could not lose their tax-exempt status because of the content, preparation, or
 presentation of any homily, sermon, teaching, dialectic, or other presentation made
 during religious services or gatherings. H.R. 235 is similar in purpose to the Houses
 of Worship Political Speech Protection Act, H.R. 2357 (107h Congress), although the
 107' Congress bill took a different approach. H.R. 2357 received a floor vote on
 October 2, 2002, and failed to pass by a vote of 178 to 239.

     H.R. 4520 (108h Congress), the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, had included
 a provision addressing the participation of churches in political campaign activity, but
 the Committee on Ways and Means struck the provision by unanimous consent on June
 14, 2004. The provision, former section 692 (Safe Harbor for Churches), would have
 codified existing law on the consequences to churches of statements made by religious
 leaders as private citizens, allowed churches to make a limited number of unintentional
 violations of the political campaign activity prohibition without jeopardizing their tax-
 exempt status, and imposed a sanction on unintentional violations of the prohibition.

     These provisions appear to respond to Branch Ministries v. Rossotti, 211 F.3d 137
 (D.C. Cir. 2000), where the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upheld the
 authority of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to revoke the tax-exempt status of
 churches that engage in prohibited campaign activities. This report provides an
 overview of current tax and campaign finance law relevant to this legislation, a
 discussion of how H.R. 235 (108th Congress), H.R. 4520 (108th Congress), and H.R.
 2357 (107' Congress) would amend current law, and a comparison of the three bills.
 This report will be updated as developments occur.


Congressional  Research  Service +  The Library of Congress

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