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IRS revokes tax status of far-right anti-abortion group.


The Internal Revenue Service in September revoked the tax-exempt status of Operation Rescue West, an anti-abortion group that two years ago announced it would work to block the election of U.S. Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) to the presidency.

The IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  does not provide explanations for actions like this, but Catholics for a Free Choice Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC) is a pro-choice political organization whose founders hold the belief that "the Catholic tradition supports a woman's moral and legal right to follow her conscience in matters of sexuality and reproductive health.  (CFC CFC

See: Controlled foreign corporation
), a foe of Operation Rescue West, complained about the organization to federal tax authorities in 2004. At that time, CFC accused the anti-abortion group of blatant electioneering.

Religion News Service reported that during the Democratic Party's convention in 2004, Operation Rescue West placed a full-page ad in The Wanderer, a conservative Catholic newspaper, soliciting donations to "defeat [Kerry] in November and enable President Bush to appoint a pro-life Supreme Court Justice."

A spokeswoman for Operation Rescue West said the group would continue its activities.

"Losing our tax exemption doesn't have much of an effect on us one way or the other," Cheryl Sullenger said. "We have learned some lessons through this whole thing, and I think we're in a better place now than we were before the IRS investigation."

Catholics for a Free Choice has also asked the IRS to look into the activities of Catholic Answers, a group CFC says published biased voter guides in 2004. It has also accused the group Priests for Life Priests for Life (PFL) is a Roman Catholic pro-life organization based in New York. It functions as a network to promote and coordinate pro-life activism with the primary strategic goal of ending abortion and euthanasia and to spread the Gospel of Life according to the encyclical  of improper politicking and recently released a report titled "Faithless Politics" outlining the group's pattern of partisan intervention.

In other news about religion and politics:

* An Episcopal congregation in California that is being investigated by the IRS for possible political intervention in 2004 has announced it will resist the inquiry.

All Saints Church All Saints Church, or All Saints' Church or variations on the name may refer to: Australia
  • All Saints Church, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
  • All Saints Church, Henley Brook, Western Australia
Barbados
 in Pasadena is being investigated because a guest minister gave a sermon the Sunday before the 2004 election that was sharply critical of President George W. Bush. The IRS has asked the church to provide various documents related to the homily homily (hŏm`əlē), type of oral religious instruction delivered to a church congregation. In the patristic period through the Middle Ages the focus of the homily was on the explanation and application of texts read or sung during the .

Church officials say they will not comply.

"We came to this decision because we believe that these summonses intolerably infringe upon our constitutional rights," church official Robert A. Long Robert Alexander Long (1851–1934) was a Missouri lumber baron, millionaire, and philanthropist.

Long made his fortune in lumber operating the Long-Bell Lumber Company.
 said in a statement.

* The Christian Science Monitor says church-based politicking is a bad idea. The newspaper editorialized against the practice Oct. 5, observing, "[T]he chief danger is to religion itself. Ultimately, people join churches for spiritual nurturing, progress, and fellowship. That purpose peters out when a church acts too much like a political party. A minister's highest calling has to be helping congregants to a better understanding of God, and giving them spiritual tools to deal with their life and their world. That's very different from telling them how to use these tools in political campaigns."

* U.S. Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) has introduced legislation that would allow houses of worship to intervene in political campaigns. The bill, dubbed "The Religious Freedom Act of 2006" (S. 3957), would revise the prohibition against church-based politicking.

Inhofe's bill is modeled on a measure pushed by U.S. Rep. Walter B. Jones

For other people named Walter Jones, see Walter Jones (disambiguation).


Walter Beaman Jones, Jr. (born February 10, 1943, in Farmville, North Carolina) is an American politician; a Republican, he currently represents North Carolina's 3rd
 (R-N R-N Raion (Russian, district; used in postal addresses) .C.) in the House. Inhofe's action is likely to keep the issue alive through the 2008 elections.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Americans United for Separation of Church and State
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:PEOPLE & EVENTS
Publication:Church & State
Date:Nov 1, 2006
Words:514
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