For Immediate Release
July 26, 2004 |
Media Contact:
Michelle Ringuette
+1 (202) 986 6093;
+1 (202) 550 1321 |
Catholics for a Free Choice Files IRS Complaint
Against Operation Rescue West’s Opposition to John Kerry
Antichoice group violates election law with
ad in conservative weekly
Statement of Frances Kissling, President, Catholics for a Free Choice
Washington, DC—Catholics for a Free Choice today filed a complaint
with the Internal Revenue Service against Operation Rescue West for
blatant violation of its charitable status. CFFC called on the IRS to
exercise its “authority to revoke the tax-exempt status of this
organization and bring an action to enjoin this organization’s
planned political activities in Boston” during this week’s
Democratic Party Convention.
On July 15, 2004, the antichoice group published a full-page ad in
the Wanderer, an ultra-conservative national Catholic weekly. In the
ad, Operation Rescue West called on readers to make what it says is
a “tax-deductible donation to help pay the bills and affect the
outcome of the election” and called for readers to give a tax-deductible
donation to help “defeat [John Kerry] in November and enable President
Bush to appoint a pro-life Supreme Court Justice to finally overturn
Roe v. Wade.” In making its case, Operation Rescue West cited
the statements of several cardinals and bishops who have attacked Catholic
politicians for their support of a woman’s right to choose and
invited the support of readers as they are “going into the middle
of a war in Boston.” [Emphasis in original.]
The group said that the money raised would be spent in Boston during
the Democratic Convention, where it plans to distribute antiabortion,
anti-Kerry materials and display highly visible ads on trucks at key
sites. This egregious violation of US tax laws, which prohibit charitable
organizations from endorsing or opposing candidates for public office,
is perhaps the most visible and vicious of recent campaigns by various
tax-exempt organizations opposed to abortion rights and, by extension,
candidates who support these rights.
During this presidential campaign, antichoice activists and organizations
have violated, if not the letter, certainly the spirit of the law. In
May 2004, Americans United for Separation of Church and State filed
a complaint with the IRS against Bishop Michael Sheridan of the Colorado
Springs diocese in Colorado. While a handful of bishops have issued
statements threatening to deny prochoice Catholic politicians communion,
Bishop Sheridan issued the most wide-reaching statement to date when
he said he would deny communion to both prochoice Catholic politicians
AND Catholics who vote for candidates who are prochoice. The Catholic
church, along with other religious institutions, is a tax-exempt charitable
organization. In return for that exemption, religious institutions agree
to neither explicitly nor implicitly endorse nor oppose any specific
candidate for elected office. By barring Catholic elected officials
and voters from communion during an election year, Bishop Sheridan’s
action could only be construed as a statement of opposition to the hundreds
of Catholic prochoice candidates who will be running for political office
this year, including a candidate in a tight Senate race in Colorado.
Earlier this year, abetted by former US ambassador to the Vatican Ray
Flynn, Michael Galloway launched Your Catholic Voice, a 501(c)(4) organization.
In addition to lobbying on specific state and national issues, the group
aims to educate and mobilize Catholic voters around a select group of
issues, most notably “life,” “family” and religious
“freedom.” According to Roll Call, the voter education program
will “mobilize those Catholics to vote against politicians”
who take positions Your Catholic Voice disagrees with. Galloway himself
claims to have been “put in place here by the Vatican” and
singled out Sen. Kerry for having “created a public scandal by
receiving Holy Communion.”
A number of other conservative Catholic groups have engaged in questionable
campaigns and statements during this election cycle. The American Life
League published several ads targeting Catholic prochoice Democratic
members of Congress, with Wild West-style “Wanted” posters.
The Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute, while protesting that
it does not get involved in electoral politics, singled out one “vitally
important” race: the Republican Senate primary between “the
pro-life Pat Toomey and the pro-abortion Arlen Specter.” On the
eve of the Democratic Convention, Fr. Frank Pavone, the president of
the charitable organization Priests for Life, was due to speak at a
meeting entitled, “Election 2004: How to Vote Authentically Catholic”
where attendees learnt how to “support the pro-life, pro-family
positions of candidates for local and national office.” Earlier,
Bush adviser and Crisis magazine publisher Deal Hudson sent around an
email effusively praising Bobby Jindal, a Republican candidate for Congress
from Louisiana.
Numerous polls of Catholic attitudes have shown that the positions
taken by these groups are not mainstream Catholic positions. The most
recent, a June 2004 poll of 2,239 Catholics by Belden Russonello &
Stewart and commissioned by CFFC, showed that 83 percent of respondents
believe that Catholic politicians are not religiously obliged to vote
on issues the way bishops recommend and 61 percent of Catholics support
legal abortion. [click
here to see full poll results]
Charitable status is a privilege, not a right. Organizations are free
to educate their members and the public, but must do so within the legal
limits of their charitable status. Organizations even have the right
to participate in the election process if they choose to renounce their
charitable status. What they are not free to do is flout the federal
statutes and IRS regulations that govern all charities by endorsing
or targeting candidates during an election year.
Catholics for a Free Choice has called on the IRS to investigate Operation
Rescue West’s direct engagement in political activity and to consider
revoking the tax-exempt status of this and any other organization that
violates the law.
Catholics for a Free Choice is a non-partisan organization. We
do not support or oppose candidates for public office. CFFC shapes and
advances sexual and reproductive ethics that are based on justice, reflect
a commitment to women’s well being, and respect and affirm the
moral capacity of women and men to make sound decisions about their
lives. Through discourse, education, and advocacy, CFFC works in the
US and internationally to infuse these values into public policy, community
life, feminist analysis, and Catholic social thinking and teaching.