President
Donald Trump signed an executive order Thursday meant to allow churches
and other religious organizations to become more active politically,
though the actual implications of the document appeared limited.
The
order, which Trump inked during a ceremony in the White House Rose
Garden, directs the IRS not to take "adverse action" against churches
and other tax-exempt religious organizations participating in political
activity that stops short of an endorsement of a candidate for office.
But
pastors are already free to deliver political speeches, and regularly
do. Churches and other tax-exempt organizations are restricted from
endorsing or explicitly opposing political candidates under the 1954
Johnson Amendment, but the executive order Trump signed Thursday makes
clear that those activities would still not be permitted.
Instead,
the order prevents the IRS from expanding its restrictions on political
activity by religious groups. It also provides "regulatory relief" for
organizations that object on religious grounds to a provision in
Obamacare that mandates employers provide certain health services,
including coverage for contraception.
Evangelical Christian leader Russell Moore said the order is "more symbolic than substantive."
"The
very fact that religious freedom is part of the conversation and
religious freedom is being affirmed I think is a step in the right
direction," he said on CNN's "Erin Burnett OutFront" Thursday night.
"Now obviously if this is the end of the story, I'm really disappointed,
but I think we ought to hold out the hope that this is just the
beginning and that there are more steps to be made."
During remarks Thursday, Trump said the order would prevent religious groups from being singled out for their political views.
"We
will not allow people of faith to be targeted, bullied or silenced
anymore," Trump proclaimed, which were marking the National Day of
Prayer. "And we will never, ever stand for religious discrimination.
Never, ever."
Trump's language
stood in contrast to certain steps his administration has taken to bar
entry to citizens from some Muslim-majority nations and his campaign
trail vows to stop all Muslims from entering the country. Courts have
put his travel ban executive orders on hold -- finding Trump's own words
provided evidence of a "Muslim ban."
Religious discrimination is barred by the US Constitution.
In
his remarks, Trump said that "pastors, priests and imams" were targeted
by the Johnson amendment, and would be freer to engage in political
activity under his executive order.
The
1954 Johnson amendment says any tax-exempt group can lose its exemption
if it is found to have endorsed or actively opposed a candidate for
political office. The IRS is officially tasked with investigating
suspected violators of the law, though only one organization has lost
its exemption as a result of IRS action in the six decades the law has
been in place.
Legal experts said the order would not have a discernible effect on policy.
"President
Trump's executive order did not ease the current restrictions on
political activity by religious organizations," said Lawrence Noble,
general counsel of the Campaign Legal Center. "The executive order
allows the IRS to restrict the activity it currently considers
political, but prohibits the IRS from expanding the restrictions to
cover activity not covered before the executive order."
The
order, which declares that it is the policy of the Trump administration
"to protect and vigorously promote religious liberty," also stops short
of offering broad exceptions for groups to deny services based on
religious grounds
An earlier
version of the order, which had previously leaked to The Nation, would
have provided sweeping legal protections for people to claim religious
exemptions, provisions that civil liberties groups claimed would allow
for discrimination against LGBT Americans.
"America
has a rich tradition of social change beginning in our pews and our
pulpits," Trump said in front of an audience of religious leaders
Thursday. "We must never infringe on the noble tradition of change from
the church and progress from the pew."
"Under
my administration, free speech does not end at the steps of a cathedral
or a synagogue or any other house of worship," he went on. "We are
giving our churches their voices back and we are giving them back in the
highest form."
Trump himself vowed early in his
presidential tenure to get rid of the measure, though completely
striking the amendment would require an act of Congress.
"I
will get rid of and totally destroy the Johnson amendment and allow our
representatives of faith to speak freely and without fear of
retribution," Trump said in February.
Some religious leaders, however, object to any measure that would make it easier to inject politics into places of worship.
"For
decades, the Johnson amendment has prevented houses of worship from
being turned into partisan political tools. A majority of clergy -- and
Americans -- support the status quo and oppose political endorsements
from the pulpit," Interfaith Alliance president Rabbi Jack Moline said.
"President Trump's executive order reportedly aims to gut the Johnson
Amendment and clear the way for the Religious Right to weaponize their
churches for partisan battle."
"If
the effort succeeds these churches would become conduits for unregulated
'dark money' in elections, with no restrictions or disclosure
requirements," he said.
In a letter
delivered to House and Senate leaders last month, a group of religious
leaders argued against scrapping the Johnson amendment, citing similar
concerns that such a move could turn religious groups into political
organizations.
"The charitable
sector, particularly houses of worship, should not become another cog in
a political machine or another loophole in campaign finance laws," the
group wrote.
Briefing reporters
Wednesday evening, a senior Trump administration official downplayed the
possibility that churches would soon act as political groups advocating
for particular candidates.
"Nobody
is suggesting that churches are allowed, or it's legal, for tax-exempt
organizations to tax out ads endorsing candidates," the official said.
"That's illegal now for them, as a condition of their tax-exempt status.
So we're not changing what's legal, we're not changing what's illegal,
just enforcement discretion."
Selectively
enforcing law has drawn scrutiny in past administrations, and before
the order was signed Wednesday, some experts predicted it could present
another legal challenge to Trump's administration.
The
American Civil Liberties Union threatened the Trump administration with
a lawsuit when details of the executive order emerged Wednesday.
But on Thursday, the group rescinded its threat, saying the order had no teeth.
"It
turned out the order signing was an elaborate photo-op with no
discernible policy outcome," the organization tweeted. "Trump's
assertion that he wished to 'totally destroy' the Johnson amendment with
this order has proven to be a textbook case of 'fake news.'"
Reference: CNN
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