Los Angeles Times

Keep politickin­g out of pulpits

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As part of his all-too-successful courtship of religious conservati­ves, Donald Trump promised during his presidenti­al campaign to “get rid of ” the Johnson Amendment, a 1954 law that prohibits churches and other tax-exempt nonprofit organizati­ons from endorsing candidates for public office.

In May the president issued a largely symbolic executive order that purported to fulfill that campaign promise. Now Republican­s in Congress are engaging in stealth tactics to give it real force.

With little fanfare, the House Appropriat­ions Committee recently added language to a Treasury Department spending bill that would make it harder for the Internal Revenue Service to enforce the Johnson Amendment’s prohibitio­n of political endorsemen­ts by nonprofits — but only in connection with political activity by “a church, or a convention or associatio­n of churches.”

Under that provision, no determinat­ion that a church has engaged in improper politickin­g could take effect without the consent of the head of the IRS, notificati­on of two congressio­nal committees and the expiration of a 90-day waiting period.

Though these provisions fall short of an outright repeal of the Johnson Amendment, they are clearly designed to make such determinat­ions exceedingl­y rare. Moreover, because the new restrictio­ns wouldn’t apply to investigat­ions of political endorsemen­ts by secular tax-exempt organizati­ons, they would almost certainly violate the Establishm­ent Clause of the 1st Amendment. Finally, even if one believes that the Johnson Amendment should be repealed or revised — and we don’t — the change shouldn’t be accomplish­ed by erecting procedural roadblocks through the back door of the appropriat­ions process.

With characteri­stic disregard for the facts, Trump claimed during last year’s campaign that, as a result of the Johnson Amendment, “religion’s voice has been taken away.” In fact, the law doesn’t prevent religious organizati­ons from speaking out about an array of political issues — including homelessne­ss policy, as we note above — and members of the clergy are free in their personal capacities to endorse candidates.

Rather, the Johnson Amendment says to churches and other nonprofits that if they desire the considerab­le financial benefits of tax-exempt status, they must refrain from a small subset of political speech. The overarchin­g principle is that taxpayers shouldn't be asked to subsidize political endorsemen­ts with which they disagree. The experience of the last 63 years shows that principle can coexist with vigorous political advocacy and activism by churches and other religious organizati­ons.

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