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Churches can speak about candidates from the pulpit without risking their nonprofit status, the IRS said in a court filing ...
Houses of worship can now back political candidates without possibility losing their standing as tax-exempt nonprofits. That is what the ...
Churches and other houses of worship can now officially endorse political candidates to their congregations, the IRS ruled Monday.
The Catholic Church “maintains its stance of not endorsing or opposing political candidates,” said U.S. Conference of ...
The impact of a new Internal Revenue Service rule that enables churches to endorse candidates from the pulpit without ...
The IRS said that religious leaders could endorse political candidates in churches and other religious centers without losing their tax-exempt status — carving out an exemption from a decades-old tax ...
In court filings Monday, the IRS has largely backed down on a decades-old rule that barred churches from engaging in ...
The IRS announced Monday that churches, and other houses of worship, are allowed to endorse political candidates and still maintain their tax-exempt status.
In a year already chock-full of wins for conservative evangelicals in their culture wars, the Internal Revenue Service said ...
The Pulpit Is No Place for Partisan Politics The IRS said in a Monday court filing that a political endorsement ban on tax-exempt organizations should not apply to churches. Churches have always been ...
The Internal Revenue Service has given churches and other houses of worship the green light to endorse political candidates.
The Internal Revenue Service has said that churches can now endorse political candidates without fear of losing their tax-exempt status.
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