lawgator1
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If a group does not want to be recognized as part of the Tea Party, then why does it call itself the Tea Party? The Tea Party is recognized by the U.S. House of Representatives as a faction of the Republican Party. It has its own caucus within the Republican Party. Do you dispute this? If not, then how many times must I post this fact? Just tell me now so that I can copy and paste the correct number for you. Is three times sufficient, or must I post that fact ten times for you before your sense of integrity assimilates that fact? How many times do you need to see it?
Have you read the tax code sections on tax deductible status for nonprofit corporations?
You surely do know that Blacks are a race, not a political party. The Congressional Black Caucus is officially nonpartisan. I don't recall the GOP banning them. As a matter of fact, a Black man was Chairman of the Republican National Committee a few years ago.
The fact that there are Tea Party candidates and a caucus does not imply that an organization cannot use that name in their org's name and qualify for 501c4 status. How many times do I have to post that?
I would imagine there is some qualifying group out there with the word "democratic" in their name - are the forbidden from tax exempt status since their name includes the name of a political party? We both know the answer to that.
By asking for a list of books its membership read? Sure. . .For the sake of argument, that should be the last time. Let's move on to the next question. If a group names itself after a political faction recognized by the U.S. House as a caucus of the Republican Party, don't you think it is ethical for the IRS to flag it and require rigorous examination to receive tax exempt status?
For the sake of argument, that should be the last time. Let's move on to the next question. If a group names itself after a political faction recognized by the U.S. House as a caucus of the Republican Party, don't you think it is ethical for the IRS to flag it and require rigorous examination to receive tax exempt status?
For the sake of argument, that should be the last time. Let's move on to the next question. If a group names itself after a political faction recognized by the U.S. House as a caucus of the Republican Party, don't you think it is ethical for the IRS to flag it and require rigorous examination to receive tax exempt status?
only if they apply it across the entire political spectrum. Either everyone plays under the same rules or no one does
Ham, it has a caucus within the Republican Party in the U.S. House of Representatives. It is not just a politically linked term; it is a faction of a national political party.
only if they apply it across the entire political spectrum. Either everyone plays under the same rules or no one does
Ham, it has a caucus within the Republican Party in the U.S. House of Representatives. It is not just a politically linked term; it is a faction of a national political party.
For the sake of argument, that should be the last time. Let's move on to the next question. If a group names itself after a political faction recognized by the U.S. House as a caucus of the Republican Party, don't you think it is ethical for the IRS to flag it and require rigorous examination to receive tax exempt status?
It is not just part of the political spectrum. It is part of a national political party, the Republican Party, and it is recognized as such by the U.S. House of Representatives. Are you going to ban me if I paste that fifty times? It's a fact. How many times do you need to read it before you stop ignoring it?
For the sake of argument, that should be the last time. Let's move on to the next question. If a group names itself after a political faction recognized by the U.S. House as a caucus of the Republican Party, don't you think it is ethical for the IRS to flag it and require rigorous examination to receive tax exempt status?
asymmetrical application of any standard by a regulatory body is illegal, period.
not sure what's so hard to understand about this.
Also, if you look at the history - Tea Party organizations pushing issues existed before Tea Party candidates did. It is reasonable to see that an org supporting Tea Party issues is no more political than one support "green" issues (they have a political party), etc.
You mean the party organized before it ran candidates. lol You think Tea Party candidates should have run before there was a Tea Party. LOL