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The rule was introduced by former President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1954 when he was serving as the U.S. Senate majority leader.
The IRS made headlines this week with a quiet but significant policy shift: Churches can now formally endorse political ...
Churches can endorse candidates from the pulpit without endangering their tax-exempt status, the IRS said in a Texas court ...
More than 90 Democratic lawmakers filed a brief with a federal court this week telling it to block an agreement between the ...
In court filings July 7, the IRS has largely backed down on a decades-old rule that barred churches from engaging in ...
IRS says it will no longer penalize houses of worship for endorsing political candidates during religious services, as long ...
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The new IRS interpretation came after decades of debate and, most recently, lawsuits from the National Religious Broadcasters ...
Shannon Ellis, head of the union that represents Kansas City IRS employees, said the Trump administration won’t even confirm ...
An IRS clarification on churches endorsing political candidates to their congregations draws praise, concern from local religious leaders ...
If a judge approves a proposed court order, the IRS will soon allow churches to endorse candidates from the pulpit again ...
Where Scripture speaks clearly to a contemporary issue, I’m ready to listen. But don’t let me hear who the pastor prefers in ...
The IRS lost 26% of its 102,000-person workforce to layoffs and buyouts this year through early June, amid a larger effort by ...
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