IRS plan to curb politically active groups threatened by opposition from both sides
By Matea Gold, Wednesday, February 12, 11:33 AM
Conservatives call it a scheme to silence President Obama’s critics. Liberals complain the administration risks trampling on the First Amendment.
Protests are coming from all directions about the Obama administration’s proposal to curb secretive groups that play an increasingly dominant role in American politics.
In 2012, such tax-exempt organizations poured hundreds of millions of
dollars into efforts to defeat Obama, and they are already taking the
lead in shaping the landscape of this year’s midterm elections.
That kind of spending would be much harder under draft rules the Treasury Department rolled out in November that would define what constitutes political activities for “social welfare” groups organized under the 501(c)(4) section of the tax code. But now, the opposition is so intense that many believe the proposed regulations are in serious jeopardy.
The battle over the rules will test Obama’s ability to shape policy through executive action, a tactic the White House is increasingly embracing in the face of a recalcitrant Congress.
More than 23,000 comments — the majority of them sharply critical — have been filed in response to the proposed regulations, shattering the Internal Revenue Service’s previous records.
Republican lawmakers, who
say the rules are aimed at constraining Obama’s conservative opponents,
are pushing legislation to delay them. But protests have also come from
groups on the left such as the American Civil Liberties Union, which has
argued that the regulations could cause serious free speech problems —
as well as logistical nightmares.
Amid the debate, tax-exempt groups that do not disclose their
financial supporters are already emerging as major players in the 2014
midterms. Americans for Prosperity, a conservative advocacy group backed
by the billionaires Charles and David Koch, has pumped $27 million into ads attacking
congressional Democrats. On the left, organizations such as Patriot
Majority and League of Conservation Voters have sought to counter the
attacks.The effort to rein in such players is caught up in the charged political atmosphere of last year’s IRS targeting scandal, when an audit revealed that agency staff had singled out nonprofit groups with words such as “tea party” and “patriot” in their names for extra scrutiny.
Critics and supporters of the proposal agree that the vehement objections could delay or even derail the rules. Tax experts now expect the Treasury Department to pull back the regulations and rewrite them — or perhaps even withdraw them completely.
“There is a valid concern
that the IRS is going to back away from any enforcement at all,” said
Stephen Spaulding, staff counsel for Common Cause, which backs more
limits on tax-exempt groups, adding: “They’re being pummeled.”
Tax attorney Marcus Owens, a former top IRS official, had a more dire
prognosis: “I think the regulations are dead in the water.”Administration officials indicated that the rule-making was proceeding.
“Treasury and the IRS issued the proposed guidance as a first step in a careful, thoughtful process to clarify the rules governing social welfare and other tax-exempt organizations, consistent with the recommendations of the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration,” spokeswoman Victoria Esser said in a statement. “Clarification of these rules is an important goal and one that we are committed to, although there are still many steps remaining before final rules are released.”
But congressional Republicans are seeking to head off any new restrictions. On Tuesday, the House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation to prevent any rules from taking effect for a year. A similar measure was introduced in the Senate by Jeff Flake of Arizona and Pat Roberts of Kansas, co-sponsored by 37 additional senators, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
The proposal “would essentially allow the IRS to bully and intimidate Americans who exercise their right of free speech,” McConnell said on the Senate floor this month.
“The
administration knew it could never get anything like that through
Congress the democratic way, so it is trying to quietly impose these new
regulations through the back door — through the back door — by
executive fiat,” he added.
Advocates for tightening the political activities of 501(c)(4) groups
say there are flaws in the proposed regulations but contend that
conservative critics are only interested in allowing nonprofits to
engage in campaigns without revealing their donors, as political
committees must.
“What we’ve seen from the
likes of Leader McConnell and many folks on the right is really
egregiously dishonest,” Spaulding said. “It’s been incredibly over the
top, and it’s raised the temperature to the point that folks need a
reminder as to what this whole controversy is about in the first place:
multimillionaires using these (c)(4)s as tax shelters to spend unlimited
amounts of money on politics.”
The use of tax-exempt
groups as political vehicles took off in the wake of the Supreme Court’s
Citizens United decision, leading to a flood of applications to the IRS
from new organizations seeking recognition as 501(c)(4)s. Such groups
have wide latitude under tax laws, governed only by a regulation from
1959 that states that a social welfare organization must be “primarily
engaged in promoting in some way the common good and general welfare of
the people of the community.”
A lack of specific guidance about how much such nonprofits can engage
in campaigns may have led IRS employees to inappropriately target some
groups for extra scrutiny, the Treasury Department’s inspector general
concluded in a May 2013 audit.
Treasury sought to begin
clarifying the rules in November, releasing draft regulations that for
the first time define what constitutes “campaign-related political
activity” for 501(c)(4)s. Those activities would not count toward a
group’s social welfare purpose.
But the proposal sweeps
into that category many routine functions of advocacy groups, including
nonpartisan voter registration, candidate forums and get-out-the-vote
activities. That triggered alarm across the political spectrum.
“The proposed rule
threatens to discourage or sterilize an enormous amount of political
discourse in America,” the ACLU wrote in a 26-page comment that urges
the IRS to revamp the proposal.
Among
the most troubling aspects, ACLU counsel Gabriel Rottman said, is that
the regulations would classify as political activity the mere mention of
candidates or political parties on a group’s Web site in the run-up to
primaries or elections — requiring organizations to scrub their Web
sites or try to calculate how much they were spending to maintain those
Web pages.
Objections have also been registered by labor unions, which are formed under a different part of the tax code and fear the new rules would eventually apply to their activities.
The loudest protests are
coming from groups on the right, as organizations such as FreedomWorks
and Tea Party Patriots have urged members to submit comments objecting
to the rules.
Conservative
election law attorney Cleta Mitchell said she has spent the last month
doing briefings and national conference calls for nonprofit groups,
warning them of the potential impact.
In the end, she said, she
hopes “the IRS will realize that these proposed regulations are an
abomination and will discard any thought of trying to push them to final
implementation.”
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