Reject Nonprofit Censorship in the Budget Reconciliation Bill

Republicans in the House Ways & Means Committee have included language in their partisan budget reconciliation “megabill” that will hand the executive branch new and far reaching powers to silence dissent in the United States. The provision is pulled from H.R. 9495, the Stop Terror-Financing and Tax Penalties on American Hostages Act which grants the Secretary of the Treasury virtually unfettered discretion to designate any U.S. nonprofit as a “terrorist supporting organization” and to strip it of its tax-exempt status. The legislation does not require disclosure of the reasons for such a decision or the evidence relied upon to support it, nor would the government be required to provide any evidence in its possession that might undermine its decision.

The potential for abuse under H.R. 9495 is immense, as the Trump administration would be handed a tool it could use to curb free speech, censor nonprofit media outlets, target political opponents, and punish disfavored groups across the political spectrum. Moreover, the addition of this authority to the tax code would allow the IRS to explicitly target and harass domestic nonprofits using its investigative authority. This authority could be used to target political opponents through the fear of crippling legal fees, the stigma of the designation, and donors fleeing controversy to stifle dissent, chilling free speech and advocacy.

The House passed a version of this bill a week after the 2024 election, but it did not move forward in the Senate. Now they’re using the filibuster-proof budget reconciliation procedure to push it through as quickly and easily as possible. Demand your legislators reject this provision and deny the Trump administration new powers to silence their opposition.

Contacts for this topic:

Hi, my name is [NAME] and I’m a constituent from [CITY, ZIP].

I’m calling to urge [REP/SEN NAME] to oppose language from H.R. 9495, the Stop Terror-Financing and Tax Penalties on American Hostages Act, that’s included the budget reconciliation bill. This broad and far-reaching provision has too much potential for abuse to curb free speech and censor political opposition.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

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