According to a Mike McKinney entry on yesterday’s 7-to-7 blog, a group called Americans United for Separation of Church and State has called for an Internal Revenue Service investigation of the Diocese of Providence because of Bishop Thomas Tobin’s letter published in the Rhode Island Catholic criticizing Republican Presidential candidate Rudolph Giuliani's position on the issue of abortion. From the Americans United press release…
The Internal Revenue Service should investigate the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, R.I., for opposing Republican presidential candidate Rudolph W. Giuliani, says Americans United for Separation of Church and State.The rather casual assumption that publishing a newspaper equals partisan political activity raises a number of significant questions…In a June 13 complaint to the IRS, Americans United Executive Director Barry W. Lynn said Bishop Thomas J. Tobin, writing in the diocesan newspaper, Rhode Island Catholic, appears to have violated federal tax law by attacking Giuliani and stating that he “would never support a candidate who supports legalized abortion”....
Americans United’s letter to the IRS noted that federal tax law forbids non-profits to use organizational resources to support or oppose candidates for public office. In a revenue ruling scheduled for issuance June 18, for example, the IRS states that leaders of non-profits endanger their organization’s tax-exempt status by making “partisan comments in official organization publications"....
Carroll --
Your final point is one that Giuliani should seriously consider.
Posted by: brassband at June 14, 2007 2:15 PMIf Bishop Tobin wants to sell his moral authority and become a political whore like Falwell, Robertson, Dobson, Sharpton, Jackson, etc., who are we (and the law) to stop him?
Posted by: Rhody at June 14, 2007 7:17 PMAmericans United is also registered as a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization with the IRS and thus also barred from endorsing or opposing candidates. So does AU's own criticisms of politicians, which can be found on its Web site and journal, Church and State, qualify as political campaigning, etc.?
Maybe the IRS should investigate AU to see if it ever violated any laws.
It would be preferable if everyone respected one another's rights to free speech, press, and the free exercise of religion. But since AU is seeking to censor Bishop Tobin (and discourage bishops from publicly criticizing pro-choice Catholic politicians), then it should be held to the same standard.
Posted by: D------ at June 18, 2007 3:35 PM