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  1. The amendment was to a bill in the 83rd Congress, H.R. 8300, which was enacted into law as the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. The amendment was proposed by Senator Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas on July 2, 1954.

  2. Dec 2, 2017 · the Johnson Amendment can be found in those documents. Suggested revisions to the category of exempt organizations instead focused on reducing the perceived advantage they enjoyed in competition with for-profit entities.4 The idea of amending the Internal Revenue Code in 1954 to prohibit political activities by certain exempt

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  4. Jan 10, 2020 · The Johnson Amendment was adopted in 1954, restricting tax-exempt churches from participating in political campaigns or risk losing their tax-exempt status. Some churches have complained the restriction inhibits their religious expression.

  5. Aug 24, 2018 · In 1954, two wealthy Texans had used tax-exempt organizations they headed, the Facts Forum and the Committee for Constitutional Government, to support a young state senator who opposed Johnson in that year’s primary election. Johnson won handily but was reportedly incensed that two tax-exempt entities had opposed him. 7

  6. Jul 26, 2016 · President Johnson proposed the amendment to the tax code that has greatly restricted the free speech of pastors and churches on July 2, 1954. 100 Cong. Rec. 9604 (daily ed. July 2, 1954). The words “in opposition to” were added in 1986.

  7. Johnson Amendment and “allow our representatives of faith to speak freely and without fear of retribution.”2 The Johnson Amendment is a piece of 1954 legislation that regulates what tax-exempt organizations—including churches and religious institutions—can say and do when it comes to politics. The Johnson Amendment states:

  8. The Johnson Amendment: Fact-checking the Narrative There is more to the story of the Johnson Amendment than is generally being presented to the nonprot community. By Robert M. Penna Aug. 24, 2018 f all the issues currently facing the American nonprot community, few seem to evoke

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