IRS says churches can endorse candidates from pulpit
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7hon MSN
A surprise move by the IRS that would allow pastors to back political candidates from the pulpit without losing their organization’s tax-exempt status is drawing praise from conservatives and even some progressive religious groups but concern from other leaders of faith,
Churches can speak about candidates from the pulpit without risking their nonprofit status, the IRS said in a court filing
More than 90 Democratic lawmakers filed a brief with a federal court this week telling it to block an agreement between the IRS and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) that would give the
Tax year 2026 and filing season 2027 is the target date for retiring the Filing Information Returns Electronic, or FIRE, system.
Freedom Path lawsuit challenges IRS's "facts and circumstances" test, claiming the agency silenced conservative nonprofits through vague rules over tax status.
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U.S. Rep. Emilia Sykes wants to secure the future of the Internal Revenue Service’s “Direct File” tax filing program and require that all states make it available to their residents. The Akron Democrat on Wednesday introduced legislation called the “Get Your Money Back Act" that would keep the program developed under the Biden administration from being terminated by Republicans
I understand why some might see the IRS’ move as a necessary step in ensuring that rabbinic leaders do not stand idly by in the face of political injustice. The Orthodox leader Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik recorded his grandfather — the unparalleled ...