The IRS and the Tea Parties: Should You File That Form?
As the scandal over the proposed IRS rules attacking citizen activists grows, the administration digs in. It is a good bet that the rules will be finalized soon, though perhaps the IRS
will rethink some of the most blatantly unconstitutional sections, such
as those forbidding all mention of the names of candidates. Even if
the House voted to delay the rules, the double-whammy of Senate inaction
and a presidential veto would kill the effort, so the Democratic
grandees have no reason to bend.
The
prospect of quick action raises an interesting question: should citizen
activists pay any attention to rules? Why not just ignore them?
Most of the commentary accepts the progressive narrative that the rules would indeed shut down citizen-activists.
To reach this conclusion requires two assumptions:
(1) that a citizen activist organization must obtain advance IRS approval of its tax-exempt status; and
(2) that obtaining tax-exempt status matters.
The
first of these is wrong, and the second is dubious. After consultation
with good tax lawyers, any activist group might well conclude that it
can damn the torpedoes and go full speed ahead.
First, the approval issue.
A
basic division in the non-profit world concerns the ability of donors
to deduct contributions from their personal income taxes. Foundations,
charities, churches, and schools are called “(c)(3)s” because their
exempt status is contained in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue
Code. Anyone who gives to a (c)(3) can deduct the gift. 501(c)(3)
explicitly forbids (c)(3)s to engage in politics – including lobbying,
grassroots organizing, and electoral activity.
In addition, section 508(a) says that a (c)(3) must
file an application with the IRS. If the agency approves, the
tax-exempt status is retroactive, but the approval must be obtained.
Citizen-activist
groups are “social welfare” organizations, called “(c)(4)s” because
they are covered by section 501(c)(4). Contributions to (c)(4)s are not
deductible by the donor; “tax-exempt” means only that the group pays no
taxes on its own income (assuming it has any).
Two other important differences between (c)(4)s and (c)(3)s exist.
First, the prohibitions on political activity contained in 501(c)(3) do not apply to (c)(4)s.
The latter are allowed to lobby and engage in grassroots organizing. However, in a series of weird ipse dixits dating back to 1959,
the IRS declared that electoral activity is not within the meaning of
the term “social welfare,” but that a (c)(4) can still engage in such
politicking as long as it is connected to the main mission and does not
constitute too great a proportion of the group’s activities. (The
pending proposal is the latest in this series.)
The
second big distinction between (c)(3)s and (c)(4)s is that the
requirement that the IRS approve an application for exemption does not
apply to (c)(4)s.
This
distinction derives from the minutiae of the Internal Revenue Code.
Subsection 501(a) says that organizations described in subsection
501(c), including all its subsections, “shall be exempt.” Then, section
508(a) says that an organization seeking exemption under 501(c)(3) must
file an application – but 508(a) does not refer to (c)(4)s.
Within
the tax trade, the fact that the statute refers to (c)(3)s and does not
mention (c)(4)s means that a (c)(4) is not required obtain IRS
approval of its exemption. Various IRS documents confirm this, as in a 2012 IRS letter to Sen. Orrin Hatch: “The law allows section 501 (c)(4) organizations to self-declare and hold themselves out as tax-exempt.”
The
IRS does not like to call attention to this reality, so its language is
usually opaque, but the point is well-established in the legal
literature on non-profits.
Thus
it is open to a social welfare group to create a non-profit corporate
entity under state law without filing anything with the IRS.
(Thereafter, it must file annual Form 990 tax returns.)
Indeed, there are sound reasons to follow this course. If the organization files for approval, then the IRS can ask for promises about the group’s proposed activities. These can be more restrictive than the law requires, but if the organization agrees, it will have signed under penalty of perjury.
In
the opinion of many lawyers, the proposed rules exceed the agency’s
authority, violate the First Amendment, and are unlikely to survive
judicial review. (See the materials collected by the Center for Competitive Politics.)
So an activist organization could make its own judgment as to what the
law requires, and fight over the issue some years down the road if the
IRS disputes its future annual returns. (Over 93,000 social welfare
organizations file 990s.)
The
second question is, what happens if a social welfare organization is
not tax-exempt? For a (c)(3), which needs to assure donors that they
can take a deduction, denial of exempt status is a disaster. But this
is not so for (c)(4)s, which are funded with after-tax dollars. The
organization would be subject to a tax on its income, but most activist
organizations do not have any, and donations would not be income under
some previous IRS rulings. So it is hard to see serious tax
consequences if a group operates without the benefit of (c)(4) status.
Some
difficulties might arise under yet another section of the code, section
527, which covers political organizations created to collect and spend
money for candidates. Under 527, a (c)(4) that engages in electoral
activities might be taxed on the lesser of the expenditure or its
investment income, but what citizen-activist group has investment
income?
On
the whole, many conservative spokesmen are doing the cause no favors by
fear-mongering. Their emphasis on mobilizing to stop the IRS from
crippling citizen-activists leaves the false impression that if rules
are not stopped, then the Tea Party organizations will indeed be
crippled.
This
is not the case, and the spokesmen should be explaining the situation,
not sowing panic. Granted, all tax rules are tricky, careful legal
advice is needed, and compliance with the campaign finance laws creates a
separate set of important issues. But the IRS rules need not inhibit
the citizen-activist movement.
The
citizens should demand one thing of Congress, though. While no law is
possible, the Republicans should be pressured to pass a
sense-of-the-House resolution that the IRS rules are illegitimate,
illegal, and unconstitutional, and that no citizen should be morally or
legally bound by them unless and until they are upheld by the courts.
Such a resolution would be legal and political terra incognita,
and its formal impact would be subject to rancorous dispute. But it
might do some good as a legal matter, and it would certainly stiffen the
will to resist the IRS over-reaching.
A House resolution would also highlight the biggest elephant in the room – the crisis of political legitimacy
that is undermining the foundations of the Republic. A government that
does not regard itself as bound by law cannot complain if its citizens reciprocate in kind.
James
V DeLong lives in Red Lodge, MT. His career history includes a tour as
research director of the Administrative Conference of the United
States, and his formal comments on the IRS proposal are here.
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