News

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.
It’s another blow to church-state separation just in time to get conservative churches revved up for the midterms.
The agency's agreement in a court filing formally reverses a decades-old provision of the tax code, but the motion would need ...
The change in IRS code came after a lawsuit tried to challenge the Johnson Amendment, a longstanding principle of separation ...
A 2019 survey from Pew Research found that 76% of Americans and 70% of Christians say clergy should not endorse candidates ...
WASHINGTON - The Internal Revenue Service said in a court filing on Monday that it believes churches should be permitted to ...
In a joint court filing intended to end an ongoing case against the IRS, the tax collection agency and the National Religious ...
The IRS hopes to settle a lawsuit brought by a pair of Texas churches and a group of religious broadcasters over rules that ...
New interpretation of tax law is a win for conservative Christians who have long opposed the Johnson Amendment.
The IRS announced churches can endorse political candidates through an exemption in the Johnson Amendment. The announcement ...