For Immediate Release
October 25, 2004 |
Media Contact:
Michelle Ringuette
+1 (202) 986 6093;
+1 (202) 550 1321 |
Catholics for a Free Choice Files IRS Complaint
Against Denver Archdiocese
Denver’s Archbishop Charles Chaput violates
election law with repeated efforts to direct voters toward Bush vote.
Statement of Frances Kissling,
President, Catholics for a Free Choice
Washington, DC—With eight days remaining until Americans will
choose their next president, Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC) has
filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service against the Archdiocese
of Denver for Archbishop Charles Chaput’s attempts to influence
the outcome of the election.
CFFC has called on the IRS to exercise its “immediate action
against the Archdiocese of Denver, which has violated its status as
a public charity under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 501(c)(3)
by intervening in campaigns for public office.”
Archbishop Chaput, leader of the Archdiocese of Denver, has repeatedly
engaged in voter instruction by explicitly urging Catholics to vote
against candidates who support abortion rights and embryonic stem cell
research. In fourteen of 28 of his columns in the archdiocese’s
weekly newspaper, Archbishop Chaput has repeatedly and continuously
urged voters to reject candidates opposed to the organization’s
views. This publication has been made widely available through the
archdiocese website, as well as through traditional print subscriptions.
The archbishop has also attempted to influence voters during public
speeches, interviews and on Friday, October 22, in an op-ed in the
New York Times.
Without mentioning anyone by name, the archdiocese has frequently
equated a vote for certain candidates as sinful and even outright “evil.” In
the “Archbishop’s Column” in the Denver Catholic
Register, Archbishop Chaput has instructed Catholics how to vote by
suggesting that voting for Catholic candidates who do not agree with
the archdiocese betrays the church. In an April 14, 2004 column entitled “How
to tell a duck from a fox: Thinking with the Church as we look toward
November,” the Archbishop questioned the honesty of Catholic
candidates who do not walk lockstep with the church on abortion issues.
Expanding on this he implicated the responsibility of voters to reject
these candidates, “God will hold each of us accountable – from
the average voter to senators and presidents – for how well we
have used our political power to serve the common good and the human
person.”
The archbishop concluded by specifically charging, “Candidates
who claim to be ‘Catholic’ but who publicly ignore Catholic
teaching about the sanctity of human life are offering a dishonest
public witness. They may try to look Catholic and sound Catholic, but
unless they act Catholic in their public service and political choices,
they’re really a very different kind of creature. And real
Catholics should vote accordingly.” [Emphasis added.]
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.
According to the New York Times, Archbishop Chaput has also instructed
voters during public speaking appearances by reiterating presidential
nominee John Kerry’s opposition to church teachings (“Group
of bishops using influence to oppose Kerry,” October 9, 2004).
In an interview for the same article, the archbishop likened a vote
for a prochoice or pro-embryonic stem cell research candidate as a
sin against the church, “If you vote this way, are you cooperating
in evil? … And if you know you are cooperating in evil, should
you go to confession? The answer if yes.”
The archdiocese has made the full transcript from this interview available
on its website, where Kerry is specifically mentioned as one of the
Catholic candidates contemplated by the archbishop.
Archbishop Chaput points out that the archdiocese has never endorsed
a particular candidate; however, this does little hide the fact that
he is providing clear guidance to voters on who to choose. Urging voters
to reject prochoice candidates and those who favor embryonic stem cell
research, specifically John Kerry, is the unmistakable goal of these
communications.
A 501(c)(3) organization need not explicitly urge voters to support
or oppose a particular candidate for illegal campaign intervention
to take place. As the IRS staff training manual on election-year activities
by tax-exempt organizations puts it:
“[A] 501(c)(3) organization may avail itself of the opportunity
to intervene in a political campaign in a rather surreptitious manner.
The concern is that an IRC 501(c)(3) organization may support or oppose
a particular candidate in a political campaign without specifically
naming the candidate by using code words to substitute for the candidate’s
name in its messages, such as “conservative,” “liberal,” “pro-life,” “pro-choice,” “anti-choice,” “Republican,” “Democrat,” etc.,
coupled with a discussion of the candidacy or the election. When this
occurs, it is quite evident what is happening – an intervention
is taking place.”
This year, CFFC has filed complaints with the IRS against Catholic
Answers, Inc., Operation Rescue West, the Culture of Life Foundation
and Priests for Life for their flagrant violations of their tax exempt
status.
In filing these complaints, Catholics for A Free Choice does not infringe
on either the right to free speech or the practice of religion. Each
of these groups made a contract with the federal government and the IRS
when they sought to be exempt from paying taxes. In return for such a
privilege they agreed not to participate in election campaigns in ways
that constitute an endorsement or opposition to specific candidates,
explicitly or implicitly. In much the same way that campaign involvement
by individuals and profit making corporations is regulated by law, the
involvement of tax exempt organizations is regulated to prevent the indirect
use of taxpayer funds in political campaigns. We think these laws are
equitable and we call on all tax exempt organizations to follow them.
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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.