For Immediate Release
September 28, 2004 |
Media Contact:
Michelle Ringuette
+1 (202) 986 6093;
+1 (202) 550 1321 |
Catholics for a Free Choice Files IRS Complaint
Against Culture of Life Foundation
Antichoice organization violates election law
with blatant attacks
on candidate
Statement of Frances Kissling, President, CFFC
Washington, DC—Can a tax-exempt organization flagrantly disregard
the prohibitions on its 501(c)(3) status and publicly target a
candidate for higher office for defeat?
Today, Catholics for a Free Choice filed a complaint with the Internal
Revenue Service against the Culture of Life Foundation for blatant
violation of its charitable status. The Culture of Life Foundation
has consistently engaged in partisan attacks against presidential candidate
John Kerry, going so far as to call him a “bad Catholic” and
publishing materials on its website suggesting that Catholics may not
vote for “pro-abortion politicians.” CFFC called on the
IRS to “take immediate action to stop the Foundation’s
ongoing violation of the law [and] revoke its tax exemption.”
On September 14, 2004, less than two months before what is predicted
to be a very close election for president, the Culture of Life Foundation
distributed to thousands of people an email labeling candidate John
Kerry as a “bad Catholic” and suggesting that voting for
him would be “a problem.” The email links to an article
written by the Foundation and posted on its website, suggesting that
Catholics may not vote for “pro-abortion politicians.” One
week later the Foundation wrote and published another article on its
web site citing a variety of religious scholars taking the position
that Catholics could not vote for a pro-abortion candidate under almost
any circumstance.
It is hard to imagine a more blatant intervention in a campaign for
public office than the recent materials published by the Foundation.
Not only was the email communication and linked article sent to thousands
of people in close proximity to the election, but the text of the email
blatantly refers to a specific candidate and suggests that Catholics
may not vote for him and remain within the tenets of their faith. One
cannot credibly argue that the distribution of this material to the
readers of an anti-abortion website is not detrimental to John Kerry’s
candidacy.
There is precedent to revoke the tax exemption in circumstances such
as this. In Branch Ministries v. Rossotti, a church lost its tax exemption
because it published an advertisement shortly before an election, mentioned
a particular candidate by name and used religious principles to suggest
that people can not vote for that candidate.
The Culture of Life Foundation case is even more egregious as it targeted
an audience likely to agree with the Foundation’s position while
in Branch Ministries, the article simply went to all readers of a national
newspaper.
This election season has seen unprecedented violations of tax exempt
statutes by conservative Catholic organizations. This is the third
such complaint CFFC has had to file with the IRS, and we fully expect
that we will need to file several more before the 2004 election.
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 the
Culture of Life Foundation’s direct engagement in political activity
and to consider revoking the tax-exempt status of this and any other organization
that violates the law.
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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.