IRS Threatens Political
Speech
July 24, 2006
Five
years ago, I wrote about threats made by the Internal Revenue Service against
conservative churches for supposedly engaging in politicking.
Today, the IRS is again attempting to chill free speech, sending notices
to more than 15,000 non-profit organizations—including churches—regarding
its new crackdown on political activity.
But
what exactly constitutes political activity?
What if a member of the clergy urges his congregation to work toward
creating a pro-life culture, when an upcoming election features a pro-life
candidate? What if a minister admonishes churchgoers that homosexuality is
sinful, when an initiative banning gay marriage is on an upcoming ballot?
Where exactly do we draw the line, and when does the IRS begin to violate
the First amendment’s guarantee of free exercise of religion?
I
agree with my colleague Walter Jones of North Carolina that the political views
of any particular church or its members are none of the government’s business.
Congressman Jones introduced legislation that addresses this very serious
issue of IRS harassment of churches engaging in conservative political activity. This bill is badly needed to end the IRS practice of
threatening certain politically disfavored faiths with loss of their tax-exempt
status, while ignoring the very open and public political activities of other
churches. While some well-known leftist preachers routinely advocate socialism
from the pulpit, many conservative Christian and Jewish congregations cannot
present their political beliefs without risking scrutiny from the tax collector.
The
supposed motivation behind the ban on political participation by churches is the
need to maintain a rigid separation between church and state. However, the First
amendment simply prohibits the federal government from passing laws that
establish religion or prohibit the free exercise of religion. There certainly is
no mention of any "separation of church and state," yet lawmakers and
judges continually assert this mythical doctrine.
The
result is court rulings and laws that separate citizens from their religious
beliefs in all public settings, in clear violation of the free exercise clause.
Our Founders never envisioned a rigidly secular public society, where people
must nonsensically disregard their deeply held beliefs in all matters of
government and politics. They certainly never imagined that the federal
government would actively work to chill the political activities of some
churches.
Speech is speech, regardless of the setting. There is no legal distinction
between religious expression and political expression; both are equally
protected by the First amendment. Religious believers do not drop their
political opinions at the door of their place of worship, nor do they disregard
their faith at the ballot box. Religious morality will always inform the voting
choices of Americans of all faiths.
The
political left, however, seeks to impose the viewpoint that public life must be
secular, and that government cannot reflect morality derived from faith. Many
Democrats, not all, are threatened by strong religious institutions because they
want an ever-growing federal government to serve as the unchallenged authority
in our society. So the real
motivation behind the insistence on a separation of church and state is not
based on respect for the First amendment, but rather on a desire to diminish the
influence of religious conservatives at the ballot box.
The
Constitution's guarantee of religious freedom must not depend on the whims of
IRS bureaucrats. Religious institutions cannot freely preach their beliefs if
they must fear that the government will accuse them of "politics." We
cannot allow churches to be silenced any more than we can allow political
dissent in general to be silenced. Free societies always have strong,
independent institutions that are not afraid to challenge and criticize the
government.