501 C 4's - What the Scandal is About
The scandal surrounding the Internal Revenue Service is
centered on the scrutiny of a group of organizations better known as “nonprofits.” Section 501 of the Internal Revenue code
provides special tax treatment for these organizations. All of these organizations are "tax exempt" which means they
pay no income tax, but they have to be formed for specific purposes and approved by the IRS.
Most folks are familiar with 501(C) 3 organizations. These are groups like the Cancer Society or the Symphony
or various foundations. Not only do these
groups pay no income tax, if you make a donation your contribution is
tax deductible. These are set up for educational or charitable purposes and can only engage in minimal political activity.
But there are other types of 501 (C)
organizations. Those in the news today
are known as 501 (C) 4’s. Traditionally,
they are defined as civic leagues, local employee associations, and groups that
promote the social welfare. 501 (C) 4’s also pay no taxes, but donations
to them are NOT tax deductible to the donor.
They are allowed to participate in political activity and lobbying so
long as it is not in direct support of a specific candidate and not the primary
focus of the organization. That is
generally defined as spending less than 50% of its money on political activity.
While this type of entity has been around for a long time,
over the last 15 years they have morphed into organizations that promote a
point of view. More traditional C 4’s
have been “think tanks.” These are
groups of folks formed to study how to implement various political
philosophies. There are liberal think
tanks…such as Moveon.org and Media Matters…and conservative think tanks such as
the Heritage Foundation and Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS.
Over the years, all of the think tanks have concentrated
less on thinking and more on politics.
Moveon.org, originally formed to support Bill Clinton during his
impeachment, was probably the first to stretch the definition of 501 C
organizations, both 3’s and 4’s. It was
followed by Media Matters…an organization that was ostensibly formed to study
news in the media. It quickly was
transformed by massive infusions of cash from George Soros into a liberal
advocacy group which attempted to shut down Fox News.
Liberals, who generally tend to know the law better than
conservatives, discovered a quirk in the 501 laws. Although C 4’s have to report the amount of
money given to them, they do not have to report who gave them the money. This was perfect for “community
organizing.” The most notorious of these
community action groups was ACORN and its affiliates, which was ultimately
disbanded after being caught on tape doing some not so nice stuff. But during the 2008 election, it served as a
political action group ostensibly to register folks to vote…but was mostly campaigning for
Barack Obama.
Conservatives quickly learned the tricks of the trade,
and moved to form their own C 4 organizations to counteract groups like ACORN. Welcome to the Tea Party. These grass roots groups formed to oppose
Obamacare, and rapidly morphed into generally government action groups
promoting the Constitution and small government.
Then came the mother lode. Congress passed a law called McCain Feingold
which attempted to limit the amount of money donated to federal candidates. It was an overkill bill that attempted not
only to stop large personal, corporate and union donations to political
campaigns, but to actually stop opposition political activity aimed at an
incumbent federal officeholder 30 days before the election. For those who bothered to read it, it was
clear on its face it was unconstitutional.
In 2010, the US Supreme Court, in a series of cases now known
as Citizens United after the lead case, threw McCain Feingold out.
And it went even further, specifically allowing corporations and unions
to form C 4 organizations and engage in supportive political activity. (It also allowed for the formation of Super Pacs, also a good political vehicle. But unlike the C-4's, donors are reported to the Federal Elections Commission.)
The floodgates were open.
The liberals, already ahead of the game with their community organizing
groups, hit the ground running. The
conservatives, quick learners, weren't far behind. The IRS was deluged with C 4 applications as
various groups raised money from various unions and corporations to engage in “social
welfare” activities.
For reasons yet to be determined, the Internal Revenue
Service which typically takes 8-12 weeks to process these applications took a
political turn itself. It deliberately
decided to target conservative groups for scrutiny. Not only that, it targeted the individuals
who filed the applications for personal IRS audits. In some cases, investigators from other
government agencies showed up at people’s houses to investigate them, including the FBI and ATF. Meanwhile, all liberal C 4’s were routinely
approved. To accomplish this peculiar
form of “justice”, the IRS set up a series of code words to determine approval
or scrutiny. If you had the words Tea
Party or Constitution in your name, you are probably still waiting for
approval and have been audited.
It asked questions like what is the content of your prayers. Provide copies of all emails and texts. Provide complete membership lists. Provide telephone numbers of your members. How much money do you carry in your wallet? Provide copies of all your promotional literature.
On the other hand, if you had the words “green” or “community” in your name or were directly related to Barack Obama, you were approved with prompt efficiency with NO scrutiny. Many of these organizations received approval in as few as three weeks.
It asked questions like what is the content of your prayers. Provide copies of all emails and texts. Provide complete membership lists. Provide telephone numbers of your members. How much money do you carry in your wallet? Provide copies of all your promotional literature.
On the other hand, if you had the words “green” or “community” in your name or were directly related to Barack Obama, you were approved with prompt efficiency with NO scrutiny. Many of these organizations received approval in as few as three weeks.
In the middle of this mess, Barack Obama’s election 2008
campaign committee miraculously morphed into a C 4 organization called Organizing
for America. His 2012 election committee became
Organizing for Action in January of 2013, also a C 4…run by his re-election staff to
support his legislative agenda. Of course...that's a good thing!!!! Not political at all!!!!!
The politicization of the IRS is dangerous stuff and illegal. One has to be blind and deaf not to know what happened here. The left can argue all they want that election laws are bad. But the law is the law...and at the end of the day it was the enforcement of the law that was bad and corrupt and bias and scary. Chilling free speech and political activity by an incumbent administration's use of the Internal Revenue Service is the WORST kind of politics. It is Nixonian. The law itself is fine. The Supreme Court said so.
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