IRS Will Revise Proposed Regulations for 501(c)(4) Organizations

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In November, the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department released proposed regulations regarding permissible political activity for Section 501(c)(4) organizations -- those that are required to have social welfare as a primary purpose.
United States Corporate/Commercial Law
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In November, the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department released proposed regulations regarding permissible political activity for Section 501(c)(4) organizations -- those that are required to have social welfare as a primary purpose.

The IRS received a record-breaking number of public comments on the proposed regulations (over 150,000!), mainly from those who felt the proposed rules were too restrictive on the activities of social welfare organizations. Although the IRS originally planned to hold a public hearing on the proposed regulations this summer, given the extremely strong substantive response the IRS recently announced it will first revise the proposed regulations before holding a public hearing. Although the IRS has not announced what form the revisions will take or when to expect a revised draft, IRS Commissioner John Koskinen recently told lawmakers not to expect a revised version of the rules until next year.

Under the existing rules, such organizations are permitted to engage in an unlimited amount of lobbying and some lesser amount of political activity, and are not required to disclose their donor lists, thus permitting wealthy donors to anonymously spend money to influence political campaigns. The proposed guidelines explicitly define certain political activities as "candidate-related political activities" and thus outside the category of social welfare. Notably, nonpartisan activities, such as voter registration drives, are included in the proposed guidance as candidate-related political activities. Given that the proposed rules are intended to limit advocacy on behalf of or against any particular political candidate, one questions whether voter registration drives and other nonpartisan activities are broadly includable as candidate-related political activities. It will be interesting to see if the revised draft of the guidance continues to define such nonpartisan activities as outside the category of social welfare.

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