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Churchgoers Get Direction From Bush Campaign By Alan Cooperman Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, July 1, 2004; The Bush-Cheney reelection campaign has sent a detailed plan of action
to religious volunteers across the country asking them to turn over church
directories to the campaign, distribute issue guides in their churches
and persuade their pastors to hold voter registration drives. Campaign officials said the instructions are part of an accelerating
effort to mobilize President Bush's base of religious supporters. They
said the suggested activities are intended to help churchgoers rally support
for Bush without violating tax rules that prohibit churches from engaging
in partisan activity. But tax experts said the campaign is walking a fine line between permissible
activity by individual congregants and impermissible activity by congregations.
Supporters of Sen. John F. Kerry (Mass.), the presumptive Democratic presidential
nominee, charged that the Bush-Cheney campaign is luring churches into
risking their tax status. "I think it is sinful of them to encourage pastors and churches
to engage in partisan political activity and run the risk of losing their
tax-exempt status," said Steve Rosenthal, chief executive officer
of America Coming Together, a group working to defeat Bush. The instruction sheet circulated by the Bush-Cheney campaign to religious
volunteers lists 22 "duties" to be performed by specific dates.
By July 31, for example, volunteers are to "send your Church Directory
to your State Bush-Cheney '04 Headquarters or give [it] to a BC04 Field
Rep" and "Talk to your Pastor about holding a Citizenship Sunday
and Voter Registration Drive." By Aug. 15, they are to "talk to your Church's seniors or 20-30
something group about Bush/Cheney '04" and "recruit 5 more people
in your church to volunteer for the Bush Cheney campaign." By Sept. 17, they are to host at least two campaign-related potluck dinners
with church members, and in October they are to "finish calling all
Pro-Bush members of your church," "finish distributing Voter
Guides in your church" and place notices on church bulletin boards
or in Sunday programs "about all Christian citizens needing to vote." The document was provided to The Washington Post by a Democrat. A spokesman
for the Internal Revenue Service, Frank Keith, said, "It would be
inappropriate for the IRS, based on a limited set of facts and circumstances,
to render a judgment about whether the activities in this document would
or would not endanger a church's tax-exempt status." He pointed out, however, that the IRS on June 10 sent a strongly worded
letter to both the Republican and Democratic national committees, reminding
them that tax-exempt charitable groups "are prohibited from directly
or indirectly participating or intervening in any political campaign on
behalf of, or in opposition to, any candidate for public office." That warning came one week after The Post and other news media reported
on a Bush-Cheney campaign e-mail that sought to identify 1,600 "friendly
congregations" in Pennsylvania where Bush supporters "might
gather on a regular basis." The IRS letter noted that religious organizations are allowed to sponsor
debates, distribute voter guides and conduct voter registration drives.
But if those efforts show "a preference for or against a certain
candidate or party . . . it becomes a prohibited activity," the letter
said. Milton Cerny, a tax specialist in the Washington office of the law firm
Caplin & Drysdale who formerly administered tax-exempt groups for
the IRS, said there is nothing in the campaign instructions "that
on its face clearly would violate" the law. "But these activities, if conducted in concert with the church or
church leadership, certainly could be construed by the IRS as the church
engaging in partisan electioneering," he said. "The devil is
in the details." Rosemary E. Fei, a tax specialist at the San Francisco law firm of Silk, Adler & Colvin, said the campaign checklist "feels dangerous to me" not just because of what is in it, but because of what is not. "There's no mention whatsoever that churches should be careful to
remain nonpartisan," she said. © 2004 The Washington Post Company
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