Advertisement

Trump will sign order inviting more politics at church, but no ‘religious liberty’ clause involving LGBT debate

President Donald Trump speaks during a school choice event in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington on May 3, 2017.
(Evan Vucci / AP)
Share

President Trump plans to sign an executive order aimed at protecting politically active churches from losing their tax-free status.

The order, timed for Thursday’s National Day of Prayer, does not include the broad religious liberty provisions leaked in February that could have allowed businesses to discriminate based on sexual orientation and other moral objections.

The new order contains a more vague blanket statement that declares the administration is committed “to protect and vigorously promote religious liberty.”

Advertisement

The order is also designed to allow religious groups to avoid a mandate to provide contraception coverage under President Obama’s healthcare law, the Affordable Care Act, potentially expanding an exemption that had been carved out in the courts. A senior administration official who briefed reporters Wednesday night would not describe how that provision would work, saying only that unspecified “regulatory relief” would come later.

The official emphasized that the order would not change existing law. The most significant portion of the order would direct the Internal Revenue Service to “exercise maximum enforcement discretion” in enforcing the Johnson amendment, which restricts religious groups from endorsing political candidates without risking their tax-exempt status.

Trump met with evangelical leaders Wednesday night and plans to meet with Catholic leaders Thursday morning before signing the order.

Evangelicals supported Trump strongly during his election and had been pressuring the administration to go further in giving businesses discretion to assert morality clauses without running afoul of anti-discrimination laws.

Essential Washington: Full coverage of the Trump administration »

Advertisement