Josh Barro, Columnist

Don't Buy the 'Social Welfare' Defense of the IRS

You don't have to do a lot for the social welfare to legally qualify as a 'social welfare organization.'
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(Corrected to remove reference to Club for Growth in fourth paragraph)

A lot of the calls for the Internal Revenue Service to crack down on political 501(c)(4) organizations -- which is what the IRS was trying to do when it touched off the scandal over Tea Party groups -- focus on the claim that ideological, political groups are obviously not "social welfare" organizations as required under the law. Not so fast.

"Social welfare" is a term of art that doesn't mean exactly what it sounds like. To qualify, a group must have the aim of producing benefits that accrue to the community as a whole, not just its members. "Benefit" and "community" are construed broadly; organizations do not have to demonstrate that the policies they promote are good or that they benefit everyone.