The
Johnson Amendment threatens religious organizations and charities with
loss of their
tax-exempt status if they endorse or oppose political candidates. The
restriction was promoted by Texas Senator Lyndon Johnson in 1954 after a
conservative nonprofit group (no
church was involved in its inception) with its own political agenda
produced
material in favor of Johnson's primary opponent with the intent of
defeating Johnson. Many believe this was Johnson's motivation for
proposing the amendment.
The Johnson Amendment which applies to any charitable organization seeking tax-exempt status was added to the federal tax code where such organizations were designated by the code 501(c)(3). This designation included
groups organized and operated exclusively for charitable purposes such as religious, scientific, and educational. It simply stated that absolution
from tax liability is forfeited for being involved in partisan politics. It was not considered controversial at the time (it was
agreed to without any record of discussion or
debate) and was continued without controversy in the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 enacted during the Ronald Reagan administration.
The Johnson Amendment prevents campaign contributions from being funneled
through 501(c)(3) organizations which would mean this amendment prevents political
contributions from being tax-deductible for donors. Since
churches are exempt from the
reporting requirements required of other 501(c)(3) organizations, they
present a special opportunity for creating a mechanism where political
contributions
could be made in violation of relevant campaign financing laws.
Majorities of both the general public and of clergy oppose repeal of
this amendment, and The National Council of Nonprofits and the
Independent Sector,
a coalition of nonprofits, foundations, and corporations have
stated their opposition to the repeal the Johnson Amendment.
This
amendment is controversial now because clever political strategist have
come to recognize the tremendous campaign potential that exists in
properly motivated religions. Without the Johnson Amendment, there is a
risk that someone might
create arguably fake churches to be used as a mechanism to obtain
anonymous, tax-deductible
contributions to spend on political activity. In effect, a church could
conceivably become its own super PAC. Nobody wanted to repeal this
amendment until the last few decades when it became apparent there was a
huge political advantage that could be gained from doing it.
Extracted from Trump's Religious Executive Order.
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