Opinion

How the government can stop ‘churches’ from getting treated like real churches by the IRS

The Family Research Council is a conservative advocacy group with a “biblical worldview.” While it has a church ministries department that works with churches from several evangelical Christian denominations that share its perspectives, it does not represent a single denomination. Although its activities are primarily focused on policy, advocacy, government lobbying and public communication, the Internal Revenue Service granted the council’s application to be treated as “an association of churches” in 2020.

Concerned that the IRS had erred in allowing the council and similar groups to be designated churches or associations of churches, Democratic members of the House of Representatives sent the Treasury secretary and the IRS commissioner letters in 2022 and 2024 expressing alarm. The House Democrats pointed to what appeared to be “abuse” of the tax code and asked the IRS to “determine whether existing guidance is sufficient to prevent abuse and what resources or Congressional actions are needed.”

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How the hell could Trump be running neck-and-neck with Harris?

With less than 40 days until Election Day, how can it be that Trump has taken a small lead in Arizona and Georgia — two swing states he lost to Biden in 2020? How can he be narrowly leading Harris in the swing state of North Carolina? How can he now be essentially tied with her in the other key swing states of Michigan and Wisconsin?

More generally, how can Trump have chiseled away Harris’s advantage from early August? How is it possible that more voters appear to view Trump favorably now than they did several months ago when he was in the race against Biden?

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The secret weapon Republicans use to win elections

After Ronald Reagan struck down the Fairness Doctrine and the Equal Time Rule, Republican money men got the memo. Whichever party controlled the most states would have a big edge in both the Senate (and thus control of the Supreme Court nominations) and the Electoral College, and most of the low- and medium-population states had relatively inexpensive media markets.

You could buy or lease radio stations for less than a party might spend over a four-year electoral cycle on advertising, so why not simply acquire a few hundred stations across a dozen or more states and program them with right-wing talk radio 24/7?

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Is this the October Surprise?

October surprise? Jack Smith has filed a massive collection of evidence demonstrating Trump’s direct involvement in an attempted coup against the government of the United States, and Judge Chutkan may make it publicly available. The next two to three weeks will decide what we see and when, as Trump’s lawyers first will file their opposition to the release. For anybody who’s been paying attention, we all knew Trump and his buddies were criming against our country during the last weeks of his presidency (apparently Merrick Garland missed that for two years), but the release will probably drive a short news cycle which may inform a few low information voters.

For the first time ever, Democrats make it rain in all 50 states. Over at Daily Kos, Morgan Stephens is reporting that the DNC is sending money to every state in the union, something we haven’t seen since Howard Dean’s “50 state strategy” back in 2008. This is great news; rightwing billionaires have been funding Republicans, particularly in low population states, for decades and the result has been the Red sweep of rural states and areas. Democrats are going to try to break some Republican supermajorities and help out down-ticket Red state candidates; the Harris campaign has also pitched in $25 million for the effort. Now, if they’d just convince some leftie mega donors to buy radio stations in those Red states (media is cheap in those areas!), we could seriously get about flipping a few purple or even Blue.

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The road to change goes through rural America — if Democrats would only travel it

Crime is down in America. The stock market is up.

Inflation is down in America. The U.S. economy is up — the envy of the free world, in fact.

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Trump lies, Vance amplifies — and their thirst for power is dangerous

Heading into November, Donald Trump’s rhetorical strategy on the economy is simple: Insist it is doomed, blame it on Kamala Harris, and tie everything back to immigration.

The Trump campaign’s thematic simplicity--fact-free, lowest-common-denominator forward-- appeals to uneducated voters. Insulated from the truth by complicit right-wing echo chambers, his base enjoys the koolaid as Trump insists the sky is falling.

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Comrade Trump isn’t defending capitalism — he’s defending white power

Recently, Donald Trump had this to say about Kamala Harris:

“She's a Marxist, communist, fascist, socialist.”

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Kamala Harris declares war on Trump's 'failed policies'

The first thing you should know about Kamala Harris’ big speech on economics on Wednesday is that it stood in diametric opposition to virtually everything Donald Trump has said about the economy.

I don’t mean in terms of policy, though it does that, too.

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How a terrorism exhibit in Colorado distorts the story of Jan. 6

When the CELL first opened in 2008, Melanie Pearlman, the executive director, remarked to a Denver Post reporter that the exhibit transcended partisanship. Everyone could agree, after all, that terrorism should be countered.

“It can’t be taken to a partisan level,” Pearlman said.

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Behind Trump’s profoundly weird understanding of money

Donald Trump still doesn’t like being called weird, but that doesn’t stop him from acting that way. During a rally on Monday, the GOP nominee had this to say to women voters: “I am your protector. I want to be your protector ... you will no longer be abandoned, lonely or scared. You will no longer be in danger ... You will no longer be thinking about abortion."

So the man most responsible for the fall of Roe and the disempowerment of American women is now promising to protect them? Yeah, that’s weird – and gaslight-y, too. He’s the villain who wants his victims to believe he’s their hero. That kind of lie forms the basis of many abusive relationships.

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Ron DeSantis was hailed as the future of the GOP — and now he’s just another Trump toady

On Nov. 8, 2022, Florida was the first big state where midterm election results started rolling in, confirming what most pundits believed was the story of the night: Democrats were in for a bloodbath.

The Sunshine State, which had been a key battleground in presidential races for decades, was now a conservative bastion, with Republicans flipping four congressional seats, winning a supermajority in both the state House and Senate and easily holding onto a U.S. Senate seat.

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The real threat to democracy: White men

At a time when we’ve never needed good to prevail over evil more, I simply don’t trust enough of my fellow white men in America to do the right thing in November.

As an expert spanning 64 years on this sore subject, I want to spend a few minutes kicking that — and us — around a bit today.

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The week Fox News finally faces its reckoning

This week may well see a court decide the fate and future of Fox “News” and thus the Republican Party, at least in its current hard-right neofascist form. And odds are Fox viewers are blissfully ignorant about the pitched battle that just played out in a Reno courtroom over the future of their beloved propaganda outlet.

Sir Keith Murdoch was the notoriously racist and misogynist owner of a small newspaper chain in Australia. It was inherited by his son, Rupert, who — using sensationalism and bigotry — turned it into a multi-billion-dollar enterprise that spans three continents.

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