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IRS to Issue Rules to Silence Conservative Groups -- The New American

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  • IRS to Issue Rules to Silence Conservative Groups -- The New American

    IRS to Issue Rules to Silence Conservative Groups

    The New American

    Bob Adelmann
    2/6/2014

    Excerpt:

    The 90-day period for public input into the IRS’ proposed new rules for Tea Party and other conservative groups to qualify for tax-exempt status is about to end. Carefully crafted to put “tea party groups out of business,” as House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.) put it, the announcement was made just before Thanksgiving and then forgotten. The rules are the result of “reverse-engineering” the activities found to be most threatening to the Washington establishment, and under the new guidelines, those activities will be outlawed, come March.

    Those activities include
    • Voter registration drives to get out the vote

    • Distribution of any material prepared by (or on behalf of) a political candidate

    • Preparation or distribution of voter guides that refer to candidates

    • Holding any event within 60 days of a general election at which a political candidate appears as part of the program

    The new rules deliberately target just Tea Party and conservative groups under Section 501(c) 4 of the Internal Revenue Code, but not similar activities by unions under Section 501(c) 5, as noted by House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.):

    The fact that the Administration’s new effort only applies to social welfare organizations — and not powerful unions or business groups — underscores that this is a crass political effort by the Administration to get what political advantage they can, whenever they can
    .
    - (bold and color emphasis added in the preceding two paragraphs)

    In its press release dated November 26, 2013, the Treasury Department said that the new rules will “clarify” and “improve” the understanding of what activities are allowed, and not allowed, in order to claim tax exemption. IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel explained:

    This is part of ongoing efforts within the IRS that are improving our work in the tax-exempt area.

    Once final, this proposed guidance will continue moving us forward and provide clarity for this important segment of exempt organizations.

    The IRS announcement said that further “clarifications” will be forthcoming that will address “other issues” as necessary.

    These new proposed rules come at a bad time for the IRS, as continuing revelations of deceit pour out of Washington. Lawyers for the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) have been busy exposing President Obama’s lie that there’s “not even a smidgen of corruption” inside the IRS: The ACLJ has brought out revelations that decisions to stall approval of applications from conservative groups came from the very top of the IRS, that Tea Party applications were specifically flagged for close attention, that the IRS targeted enemies of the administration with audits and harassment, and that, despite the negative publicity, the resignations of top officials, and the claiming of Fifth Amendment privileges, Tea Party groups are still being targeted and delayed in their quest to gain tax exempt status.

    When the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) looked into those allegations, it confirmed those suspicions:

    The IRS used inappropriate criteria that identified for review Tea Party and other organizations applying for tax-exempt status based upon their names or policy positions instead of indications of potential political campaign intervention.

    [The IRS] 1) allowed inappropriate criteria to be developed and stay in place for more than 18 months, 2) [which] resulted in substantial delays in processing certain applications, and 3) allowed unnecessary information requests to be issued.

    Although the processing of some applications with potential significant political campaign intervention was started soon after receipt, no work was completed on the majority of these applications for 13 months....

    Many organizations received requests for additional information from the IRS that included unnecessary, burdensome questions (e.g., lists of past and future donors).

    In his article published by Fox News, ACLJ attorney Jay Sekulow said he was going to press forward with his federal lawsuit against the IRS representing 41 groups who were discriminated against. Sekulow then asked:

    The question is not whether the IRS was corrupt. It was and is. The question is, how corrupt? How far up the chain of command does the corruption extend?

    Most Americans following the story already know the answer to Sekulow’s questions. A much better question — one that has not been asked publicly — is this one: Why would any Tea Party or conservative group even bother with trying to obtain tax exempt status in the first place? First of all, according to the IRS, “Contributions to civic leagues or other section 501(c)4 organizations generally are not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes,” so possible donors have less reason to contribute to an organization's cause

    Second, such an exemption involves an enormous amount of time and effort (and patience) to pass muster and get approval. Third, once the exemption is approved, that’s just the beginning of the paper blizzard. For example, the compliance guide for 501(c)4 groups is 40 pages long.

    The argument for getting an exemption goes something like this: It’s important to gain credibility so that donors may feel comfortable supporting us. Once an exemption is granted, the donors are shielded from public exposure as to their identity and the amount of their support.

    But nowhere in any IRS regulation does it state that such groups must apply. And so why would they? Why would they want to subject themselves willingly to the threat of falling out of compliance, the threat of being sued or mulcted for back taxes and fees if they do fail to comply? Why would they invest precious resources that could otherwise be used far more wisely and effectively in the freedom fight?

    .............................................

    View the complete article at:

    http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews...rvative-groups
    Last edited by bsteadman; 02-07-2014, 06:05 PM.
    B. Steadman

  • #2
    Republican Leaders Fight Back Against IRS Power Grab

    FrontPage Magazine

    Matthew Vadum
    2/10/2014

    Excerpt:

    Republicans are fighting back against proposed new IRS rules that they say would make formal the tax agency’s infamous crackdown on Tea Party groups that oppose the Obama agenda, stripping them of their free speech rights during election cycles.

    “Every American needs to know about this abuse of power,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky) said in a recent speech on the Senate floor. “Let me be clear: What the administration is proposing poses a grave threat to the ability of ordinary Americans to freely participate in the Democratic process.”

    The new rules, first unveiled around Thanksgiving when no one was paying attention, would prevent so-called 501c4 advocacy groups from participating in certain kinds of political activity. Such nonprofit organizations would be prevented from communicating with voters about candidates or political parties within 60 days of a general election.

    On the House side, Speaker John Boehner (Ohio), Majority Leader Eric Cantor (Va.), Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (Calif.), Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Wash.), Dave Camp (Mich.), and Hal Rogers (Ky.) have signed a letter asking newly minted IRS chief John Koskinen to kill new proposed regulations dating from November that they say are intended to silence conservative groups.

    On the Senate side, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.), Minority Whip John Cornyn (Texas), John Thune (S.D.), Orrin Hatch (Utah), and Richard Shelby (Ala.) also signed the letter that suggests Koskinen would be perceived as a puppet of the Obama White House if he didn’t pull back from the regulations. In the Obama era IRS officials have been accused of spending an inordinate amount of time at the White House and getting far too cozy with top administration figures.

    “It is our view that finalizing this proposed rule would make intimidation and harassment of the administration’s political opponents the official policy of the IRS and would allow the Obama administration to use your agency as a partisan tool,” the lawmakers said in the letter.

    “This would be a serious error, especially in the light of the recent track record of intimidation at the IRS. It would also cement your reputation as someone who is unable or unwilling to restore the public’s faith in this important agency.”

    Although Koskinen, who was sworn in as IRS Commissioner on Dec. 23, said he did not participate in drafting the rules, he has refused Republican demands to block their implementation.

    “Everyone can make comments about our draft regulations as they are now,” Koskinen said in testimony before a House Ways and Means subcommittee last week.

    “There will be a public hearing,” he said. “There will be numerous occasions for people to bring any information that they would like, or perspectives, about those regulations forward before they are finalized. And they’re not going to be finalized in the near-term future,” he added, noting that the administration had received 21,000 comments on the regulations.

    According to FreedomWorks, the proposed IRS guidelines would restrict the political activities of tax-exempt 501c4 organizations, expand the already unchecked discretionary power of the IRS, and institutionalize the agency’s targeted harassment of conservative and libertarian nonprofits in the Obama era.

    These “draconian IRS regulations … would make it virtually impossible for tea parties that want to participate in the political process to do their business,” said Matt Kibbe, president of FreedomWorks.

    “They’re going after conservative groups, they’re going after libertarian groups, and they’re going after citizen groups that want to organize people based on the values of the constitution; based on the ideas of freedom and have an impact on the political conversation. If that sounds familiar, what they’re doing is formalizing the same persecution, the same targeting that we saw coming out of the IRS leading up to the 2012 election.”

    What most of the news coverage of the sordid IRS saga misses is that Democrats are angry about Republican-friendly nonprofits. They are upset that nonprofits that oppose Obama are allowed to exist at all. They use specious arguments to justify the Obama administration’s increasingly naked repression of its domestic political enemies.

    Democrats correctly view Tea Party groups, that is, right-wing populist groups, as an existential threat to the Left. These nonprofits tend to be Republican-leaning organizations and they have been successful so far in derailing, or at least slowing, parts of President Obama’s ongoing transmogrification of America.

    Democrats don’t want any conservative nonprofits to enjoy tax-exempt status. Such nonprofits are all working against the Left, standing in the way and preventing America from becoming a leftist utopia.

    Using the IRS to hurt right-of-center groups is fair game, according to left-wingers. President Obama can’t even bring himself to admit that what happened at the IRS was corrupt.

    In an embarrassing television interview that aired Super Bowl Sunday, Obama lied shamelessly to save his skin in the horrendous IRS targeting scandal that could yet cost him the presidency. There was “not a smidgen of corruption” in the IRS saga, Obama told an incredulous Bill O’Reilly in the on-air mendacity marathon as he smeared Fox News Channel and blamed the network, instead of his own misdeeds, for his deepening political woes.

    In fact we now know that officials at the highest level of the Obama administration had been conspiring for years, plotting a Chicago thug-style knee-capping of conservative opposition groups.

    A congressional hearing revealed last week that the IRS was planning to justify unfairly targeting nonprofit anti-Obama groups as early as 2012, long before a government watchdog exposed the depth of the targeting.

    The smoking gun came in the form of an email from Treasury Department tax policy attorney Ruth Madrigal to several IRS officials including the infamous Lois Lerner who invoked the Fifth Amendment’s non-incrimination privilege to avoid coming clean during a high-profile congressional inquiry.

    “Don’t know who in your organizations is keeping tabs on c4s,” Madrigal wrote, referring to the tax-exempt Tea Party groups recognized under section 501(c)(4) of the federal tax code, “but since we mentioned potentially addressing them (off plan) in 2013, I’ve got my radar up and this seemed interesting.”

    .....................................

    View the complete article at:

    http://www.frontpagemag.com/2014/mat...rs-power-grab/
    B. Steadman

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