Religious Right Prepares Political Fight from the Pulpit
By Jason Croucher on June 23, 2008
Elections tend to bring out both the best and the worst in people, and, sometimes, they cause people to do irrational things they would avoid otherwise. We're all just humans, after all, and we don't always act in our best interest when we become passionate.
I guess, then, that irrational passion is to what I'm tossing the Religious Right's recent decision to actively violate the law and run the risk of losing the tax-exempt status for churches across the country because of it.
For years, Religious Right groups have complained about the federal tax law that forbids houses of worship and other tax-exempt groups to intervene in political campaigns by endorsing or opposing candidates.Several organizations pushed Congress to change the statute, without success. The Religious Right suffered another setback in 2000, when a federal appeals court unanimously upheld the constitutionality of the tax law.
Now the nation’s best-funded and most prominent Religious Right legal group is gearing up for another go in court – once it finds a plaintiff who will knowingly break the law and spark an Internal Revenue Service penalty.
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When speaking to groups of students or progressive activists
around the nation, Jason likes to begin by explaining why he feels he's
something of an odd duck as city council member in a city of 3,000 in a red
state: He's 24 (he'll be 25 next September), he's a progressive Democrat, and
he is quite possibly the only openly gay elected official in his state.
"Which one do you think people are most surprised about?" he asks. Nope, not
the obvious one - nearly every time it's, "You're liberal and you got elected
in Kansas?"
It is wrong for me to be so gleeful about the Republican Party's stunning lose in the Mississippi First yesterday, isn't it? And about the ones in Louisiana and Illinois, too?
Our Founding Fathers, when laying out the profoundly important rights to be guaranteed to us by the first amendment they proposed to the Constitution, gave us everything we needed to make sure we had the “freedom of ideas;” to make sure we could think, believe, say, and write whatever we wanted– particularly about our government.



The eyes of the political establishment in Kansas are all fixed on one race this year, the re-election battle of Congresswoman Nancy Boyda, with good reason, of course, because it promises to be hot. The Republican primary might actually reduce the district into the state of nature up until August, with one candidate's political life ending up being solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and brief.
People expect government to do ridiculous, stupid, or off-the-wall things sometimes. The taxpayers have watched for years as pointless bills are debated and projects are funded that either benefit only the elected official’s reelection campaign or a flock of Blue-Footed Boobies living off the coast of southern California.