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To: Mr. Whist who wrote (266582)6/24/2002 8:42:37 PM
From: CYBERKEN  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Every strike.

Every lobbying effort.

Every payoff to every politician.

Every dollar of coercive dues collected.

These are all crimes. Teacher's unions should be outlawed. Education should be totally privatized. The ignorance of our general public is the NEA's greatest crime of all...



To: Mr. Whist who wrote (266582)6/24/2002 10:15:05 PM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
June 20, 2002 -- Landmark President Mark R. Levin testified before the the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, the Subcommittee on Worforce Protections, on the political activities of the NEA in violation of federal tax, campaign and labor laws.
landmarklegal.org

Opening Statement of
Mark R. Levin, President
Landmark Legal Foundation
Subcommittee on Workforce Protections
House Education and Workforce Committee

June 20, 2002
Do the 2.7 million members of the National Education Association (“NEA”) – which is the nation’s largest union – know how their dues are being used? The answer is no. More specifically, do they know how much of their money is being used to influence political activities at the federal, state and local levels? The answer is no.

Does the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) – which is supposed to enforce the Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”) -- know how much tax-exempt, general revenue the NEA spends on political activities? The answer is no. Does the Department of Labor (“Labor”) know how much money the NEA spends on political activities? The answer is no.

While we cannot determine the full extent to which the NEA is directly and indirectly participating in political activities, or the exact level of funding it expends in this regard, the fact that it is active in political campaigns, and spends millions of tax-exempt dollars on these activities, is beyond dispute. The evidence for this includes the NEA’s own budgets, strategic plans, financial statements, accomplishment reports, handbooks, and information provided to the Federal Election Commission (“FEC”) in response to subpoenas issued by that agency in the performance of an investigation.

On June 23, 2000, Landmark Legal Foundation filed a comprehensive complaint against the NEA with the IRS. The complaint provides substantial and specific evidence of the NEA’s political activities and expenditures. On July 20, 2001, Landmark filed a second comprehensive complaint against the NEA with the IRS. In addition to further examples of the NEA’s political expenditures, Landmark provided the IRS with significant information disclosing the close coordination of political strategy and expenditures among the NEA, the Democratic National Committee (“DNC”), other Democratic organizations, the 1996 Clinton-Gore campaign, other Democratic candidates, the AFL-CIO, and Emily’s List.

I have attached Landmark’s complaints against the NEA, including additional related complaints filed with the IRS, FEC and Labor, to my written statement. I would also request that the exhibit books Landmark provided to these agencies as attachments to the complaints be included in this Committee’s record as they provide voluminous evidence of the NEA’s political activities and expenditures.

Some examples of the NEA’s political expenditures included:

In its 1998-2000 Strategic Plan and Budget, the NEA’s strategic priorities include:
-$350,000 for “cyberspace advocacy systems developed and maintain on the NEA and state affiliate Web sties that mobilize Association members and the public in support of pro-public education legislation and candidates at the state and federal level.”

-$386,000 for “organizational partnerships with political parties, campaign committees, and political organizations representing elected officials at the state and national levels strengthened, increasing legislators’ commitment to support public education on a bipartisan basis.”

-$540,000 over two years for development of a “national political strategy … to address issues such as congressional and legislative reapportionment and redistricting, campaign finance reform, candidate recruitment, independent expenditures, early voting, and vote-by-mail programs in order to strengthen support for pro-public education candidates. …”

-The 1998-1999 NEA Interim Financial Statements, prepared by NEA auditors, reported an actual expenditure of $3,026,212 through April 30, 1999 for “Increased and lasting bipartisan political advocacy support.” Moreover, the NEA budgeted an additional $2,033,650 for the remaining four months of the fiscal year ending on August 31, 1999.

- The NEA’s 1996 Strategic Focus Plan included:$9.6 million to “build bipartisan constituencies among those running for and elected to public office to support public education.” Activities designed to accomplish this objective included: “Screening candidates for federal office; conducting political surveys for candidate evaluation; mobilize members and other resources… to support the election of pro-education candidates and ballot measures; provide technical assistance, surveys, and training in political campaign work to affiliates and member at all levels; identify and evaluate new/innovative ways to effect election results, such as mail ballot early voting, term limits on state elected officials, etc.; cultivate working relationships with Democratic and Republican parties.”

Some examples of the NEA’s coordination activities include:

- The NEA’s Strategic Plan and Budget for fiscal years 2000-2002 indicates an allotment of $1,993,735 for “[a]coordinated state-specific campaign developed and implemented to elect bipartisan pro-public education candidates in the 2000 general election.”
-In 1995 and 1996, a group known as the “National Coordinated Campaign Steering Committee” (“Steering Committee”) met between six and eight times for the purpose of planning the coordinated campaign. The Steering Committee met at DNC headquarters in Washington, DC; in New Orleans, LA; in August of 1995; and in Chicago, IL, during the time of the Democratic National Convention (August 26-29, 1996). Attendees included representatives from the NEA, DNC, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (“DCCC”), the Clinton/Gore ’96 Primary Committee and the Clinton/Gore ’96 General Committee, and EMILY’s List.

- During 1996, an extensive Coordinated Campaign operated in the state of North Carolina with the goal of electing Democratic candidates. The Coordinated Campaign provided services such as voter registration activities, early vote programs, staff training, and voter canvassing at the state and local levels.

-A statement from the Etheridge for Congress Committee, which participated in the Coordinated Campaign, demonstrates the extent to which the NEA participated and coordinated political activities:

When the draft plan is initialized in the state, it is forwarded to the DNC for review. If the plan meets the DNC’s specifications, it is shared with the National Coordinated Campaign funding partners at the AFL-CIO, NEA, Emily’s List (in targeted states), and the other national campaign committees for review. When the DNC and it’s (sic) national partners, including the DSCC/DCCC/DGA/LCC, the AFL-CIO and the NEA agree on the contents of a plan, each national partner will give their funding commitment to the state.

The NEA and its state affiliates are 501(c)(5) tax-exempt organizations. Each is required to file a Form 990 tax return. The instructions accompanying the Form 990 require explicitly that certain political expenditures must be reported by exempt organizations. The instructions state, in part:

Line 81 Expenditures for political purposes-
A political expenditure is one intended to influence the selection, nomination, election, or appointment of anyone to a federal, state, or local public office, or office in a political organization, or the election of Presidential or Vice Presidential electors. It does not matter whether the attempt succeeds.

An expenditure includes a payment, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, or gift of money, or anything of value. It also includes a contract, promise, or agreement to make an expenditure, whether or not legally enforceable.

The NEA is permitted to engage in political activity, as defined by IRC 527(f) (and set forth in the instructions to Line 81, above), if all such political expenditures and activities are fully accounted for and reported to the IRS as taxable income. Despite overwhelming and indisputable evidence that the NEA is involved in these activities, it has reported to the IRS, since at least 1994, that it has made no such political expenditures.

And despite the fact that all this information has been provided to the IRS, NEA spokesperson Kathleen Lyons has stated publicly that the NEA has yet to receive an audit letter from the IRS.

Nearly two years ago, Landmark asked Edward Coleman, former chief of the Exempt Organizations Division at the IRS – which oversees and enforces compliance with the IRC by tax-exempt organizations – to review Landmark’s June 23, 2000 complaint and supporting exhibits. I have attached Mr. Coleman’s memorandum to my written testimony. However, I believe it’s useful to provide the Committee with some excerpts for this hearing. Mr. Coleman wrote, in part:

- You allege that the NEA’s political guidebooks provide evidence of a systematic strategy to integrate political action in all aspects of union organizations, rather than segregate those activities from general operations.
Based on my analysis of the political guidebooks and workshop material …, it appears that NEA engaged in political activities, the cost of which should have been reported as political expenditures on line 81a of its Form 990.

- Your complaint states that among NEA’s Program Accomplishments was the apparent expenditure of millions of dollars to promote and support candidates for public office. However, none of these expenditures were reported on line 81a of NEA’s Form 990.

My review of this allegation …supports your conclusion that NEA had reportable political expenditures.

- Your complaint sets forth nine other examples of alleged reportable political activity.

These examples certainly raise the question of political expenditures that should have been reported on the NEA’s Form 990.

Mr. Coleman concluded:

… I concur with your analysis of NEA’s alleged political expenditures and your recommendation of an IRS examination of the NEA. NEA certainly appears to have filed inaccurate Forms 990 and neglected to pay taxes on Forms 1120-POL.
On August 7, 2001, the Associated Press published a story entitled “Unions Don’t Cite Political Activities.” The reporter examined documents released by the FEC, including those provided to the IRS by Landmark in its July 20, 2001 complaint. AP quoted Tom Miller, the manager of the IRS section that writes the rules for tax-exempt groups: “If you look at some of the things that have been out there publicly, some of the (union) activities fall on that side of the line. If I was an examiner and have documents showing the purpose is to elect Democratic candidates, and they say it’s not partisan, it shifts the burden to them.”

The situation is no better at Labor. The purpose of the Landrum-Griffin Act (“Act”) was to empower union members by providing them with access to financial information relating to their union’s affairs. Union members would then be able to question certain practices and hold their leaders to account.

The Act requires unions with total annual receipts of $200,000 or more to submit a Form LM-2. The financial information – receipts and expenditures -- provided on the Form LM-2 must be “in such detail as may be necessary accurately to disclose its financial condition and operations for its preceding fiscal year and in such categories as prescribed by the Assistant Secretary.” 29 C.F.R. Sec. 403.2(b) (2001).

The NEA’s political activities are widespread and pervasive. Yet, the NEA’s Form LM-2s, going back to at least 1994, don’t reported a single dollar spent on political activities – not under Schedule 12 (Contributions, Gifts and Grants), Schedule 13 (Office and Administrative Expense), or Schedule 15 (Other Disbursements). And what’s clear is that the NEA has chosen to interpret the reporting requirements under each of these schedules as broadly as possible so as to avoid disclosing its political expenditures to its membership.

In conclusion, the most diligent NEA member cannot discern how much his union engages in, or how much of his union dues are being spent, on political activities. The most logical places for him to look for this information are the IRS and Labor. But the NEA’s public filings with these departments won’t be of any help because neither the Internal Revenue Code nor the Landrum-Griffin Act are being enforced.



To: Mr. Whist who wrote (266582)6/24/2002 10:32:30 PM
From: greenspirit  Respond to of 769667
 
Wall Street Journal - America's Labor Party

8/31/2001 -

Of all the strengths of America's labor movement, historically two have distinguished it from the more radicalized versions that prevail on the continent. One was its determined anti-communism. The other was an agenda geared less to ideology than to concrete issues like pay and working conditions. Worth recalling this Labor Day weekend is that it wasn't Henry Ford who said "the worst crime against working people is a company that fails to operate at a profit." It was the first president of the American Federation of Labor, Samuel Gompers. Given this tradition, it's no surprise that America never did spawn a Labor Party.

Until now, that is.

That party, of course, calls itself the Democratic Party. But if the Federal Elections Commission is correct and we had any kind of truth in advertising, the Democrats would change their name to the American Labor Party. In a report stamped "sensitive," the FEC's general counsel concluded that such was the extent of labor's muscle in the 1996 elections that the AFL-CIO and its affiliates enjoyed-in exchange for financial contributions-the "authority to approve or disapprove plans, projects and needs of the DNC and its state parties."

Now, if the unions want to push their agenda through something called the Democratic Party, unlike the exponents of campaign-finance reform we think the First Amendment protects their right to do so. The problem, however, is not what they spend but where they get the money. A privileged legal position guarantees full union treasuries, simply because in many states workers are required to pay dues whether they want to or not.

Leave aside, for a moment, the obvious scandals such as union boss Ron Carey, a "reformer" now on trial for an elaborate money-laundering scheme aimed at keeping Mr. Carey president of the Teamsters and Bill Clinton president of the United States. For the evidence subpeonaed by the FEC suggests that the real scandal may be the wholesale integration of America's most powerful unions into the Democratic Party structure. A document spelling out the Coordinated Campaign leaves little to the imagination: "When the DNC and its national partners, including... the AFL-CIO and the NEA, agree on the contents of a plan, each national partner will give their funding commitment to the state." The next paragraph explains that plans "must be submitted with a signature page" demonstrating the "formal sign-off" of the principal players.

When we raised this with the NEA, a spokeswoman told us that the document in question was a DNC form. If true, surely that's more damning still, because it confirms that the DNC viewed the terms as a clear quid pro quo: a fixed contribution in exchange for a union seat on campaigns. A response on the DNC's own letterhead confirms, for example, the existence of a "National Coordinated Campaign Steering Committee" that met at DNC headquarters and "normally" included the AFL-CIO and the NEA. The only reason we know about these arrangements, moreover, is because the Landmark Legal Foundation grabbed the subpoenaed documents during a four-day window in May when the FEC made them publicly available. The Democrats and the AFL-CIO, by contrast, sent in lawyers asking for a court order to keep these documents sealed - successfully, as it happens, if too late. Plainly there's much here they'd rather their own members never learn.

This transition of the Democratic Party parallels the transition in the economy. Since 1975, the percentage of union members who are public sector employees has leapt from 21.5% to 43.7%. In terms of today's economy, that works out to fewer than one in 10 private-sector employees belonging to a union. So while the popular image of a unionist remains a Pittsburgh hardhat, today's union member is increasingly more likely to be that bureaucrat snapping at you to get in line down at the division of motor vehicles. Even within the AFL-CIO, its largest member union is one dominated by public-sector employees.

Manifestly the numbers alone put the lie to any claim by union bosses today to represent the American worker. Surely this Labor Day we do well to view this dwindling union presence in the real economy as a sign of contentment, and to recognize, as ordinary Americans do, that their 4OlKs and benefits are inextricably linked to the fortunes of the businesses they work for. Perhaps that's why the only glimmers of economic sense within the labor movement comes from those who still depend on the private sector for their paychecks, witness the Teamsters' support for drilling in Alaska. By contrast, as we pointed out during last year's convention, the auto workers and coal miners are being replaced within the Democratic Party by those who depend on tax dollars, from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees to the public school teachers unions.

In this context, it was only inevitable that the party of government should integrate itself with the unions of government. Maybe their name should say so.



To: Mr. Whist who wrote (266582)6/24/2002 10:39:58 PM
From: greenspirit  Respond to of 769667
 
The Wall Street Journal - The New IRS Math

9/20/2000 - .

The wheels of Washington’s bureaucracy don’t always grind slowly. Within two months of receiving a letter from Democratic Congressman David Skaggs in 1996, the IRS launched audits against both the Heritage Foundation and Citizens Against Government Waste. So it will be interesting to watch what the IRS does with a far more substantive — and well-documented — complaint against the National Education Association. All the more so now that a former IRS officer who has reviewed the case agrees it cries out for a full investigation.

That man is Edward D. Coleman, a 27-year veteran of the IRS’s exempt-organizations function, who served as the division’s director from 1986 to 1990. We reported on this case back in June, when the Landmark Legal Foundation lodged a complaint alleging that the NEA was not reporting the full extent of its political activities. Since 1994, the NEA has reported spending zero dollars for political activities on its Form 990s, the tax form required of all tax-exempt organizations. That’s zero, as in nothing. And this from the union that has consistently sent the largest chunk of delegates to recent Democratic national conventions.

Unlike then-Congressman Skaggs, however, the Landmark people didn’t just make an accusation. They documented it with mounds of supporting evidence, showing that the numbers the NEA reports to the IRS do not square with their own budgets, handbooks and workshops. At the time the initial complaint was filed, the Associated Press quoted two other former senior IRS officers, also with experience in the same exempt-organizations division, that it all looked pretty fishy.

Landmark asked Mr. Coleman to review their complaint. That he has now done. In a letter to Landmark president Mark Levin dated Saturday, Mr. Coleman said he reviewed allegations that the NEA systematically mixed its political activities into all aspects of union activities, that its strategic priorities include political activities, that its UniServ directors (local administrators) were involved in political activities, and that it had engaged in various other political activities that don’t jibe with the “0” the NEA reported to the IRS.

Mr. Coleman goes through these allegations point by point. His conclusion is clear. “In sum,” he writes, based on my review of the complaint and supporting exhibits that were filed with the IRS, I think that there is a very strong basis for the IRS to select NEA for an examination. A field examination would enable the IRS to corroborate the extent of the NEA’s political undertakings and expenditures and to ascertain why the NEA has not reported any political expenditures on line 81a of its Forms 990.

“In addition, the IRS should determine why NEA has not filed Forms 1120-POL, U.S. Income Tax Return for Certain Political Organizations, and paid the appropriate tax.

“Accordingly, I concur with your analysis of NEA’s alleged political expenditures and your recommendation of an IRS examination of NEA. NEA certainly appears to have filed inaccurate Forms 990 and neglected to pay taxes on Forms 1120-POL.”

Why wouldn‘t the NEA report these kind of things? Too, this is the union itself and not its PAC. Therefore, any political expenditures reported would be taxable. Even more important perhaps, under the Supreme Court’s 1988 Beck decision — whose enforcement Bill Clinton blocked in one of his first Presidential acts — unionists have a right to a refund of that percentage of their dues that go to political purposes. If no money is reported spent for politics, workers get no refunds.

The NEA responded to our question via e-mail, saying it hadn’t heard from the IRS, noting that Mr. Coleman had been “compensated” for his opinion and citing a May 1999 IRS audit that it says found everything in order.

We wouldn’t presume to judge whether the NEA has in fact violated the law. But surely it’s worth noting that three former IRS officers who are in a better position to judge think Landmark has a good case for an investigation. And in a section titled “facts” in a recent agreement with the AFL-CIO over another election complaint, the Federal Election Commission referred to the 1996 Democratic National Committee campaign as “partially financed by the DNC and national allied organizations such as the AFL-CIO, the National Education Association (NEA) and Emily’s List.”

The Landmark complaint with the IRS, of course, does not deal with the NEA’s activities this election year; we won’t know what it reports about campaign 2000 until after the President is sworn in. Meantime, the NEA’s “Strategic Plan and Budget, Fiscal Years 2000-2002,” calls for millions in additional spending on political advocacy. We await the roar of criticism from the chorus of campaign-finance reformers over the NEA’s behavior.

In his L.A. acceptance Al Gore himself put his finger on the problem. “So often,” he told the cheering crowd, “powerful forces and powerful interests stand in your way.” And none more powerful and influential than the teachers union that stands at his side.



To: Mr. Whist who wrote (266582)6/24/2002 10:52:40 PM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Reps to Hear About NEA's Abuse of Dues, Harassment of Members

By Jim Brown and Jody Brown
June 19, 2002
headlines.agapepress.org

(AgapePress) - Two Ohio school employees who were harassed by the National Education Association for having religious objections to the union's liberal agenda will be testifying on Capitol Hill.

Dennis Robey, a high school teacher in New Carlilse, and Kathleen Klamut, a school psychologist in Ravenna, intend to discuss the abuses they have incurred for refusing to support the NEA's pro-abortion, pro-homosexual agenda. The hearings will take place on Thursday before the House Subcommittee on Workforce Protections, which is chaired by Republican Charlie Norwood of Georgia.

Norwood says the hearings will focus on "the failure of unions to follow the law when it comes to the use of union dues for political purposes." His office points out that even though unions violate federal law and the laws of most states when they use dues to fund campaigns for public office, unions continue to spend hundreds of millions of such money on political campaigns.

Dan Cronin is with the National Right to Work Foundation, which represents Robey and Klamut. He says the teachers will address the need to end forced unionism.

"Among those corridors where we have union puppets, it's going to be scoffed at, looked down upon -- they're going to obviously try to portray [Robey and Klamut] as being somehow out of the mainstream," Cronin says. "But I think both of these folks are going to come across as very clear, common-sense, good people who just want their rights respected -- and hopefully people will see that you have ordinary citizens around the country who are being threatened and harassed by big union militants."

Also scheduled to speak before Norwood's subcommittee are Mark Levin, president of the Landmark Legal Foundation, and Bob Williams, president of the Evergreen Freedom Foundation. Both of those organizations claim their study of union political activity indicates a pattern of willful noncompliance with the law.

Meanwhile, a bill that would end the forced unionization of workers is languishing in the House of Representatives. According to Cronin, Republican John Boehner, chairman of the Education and Workforce Committee, is blocking the National Right to Work Act (HR 1109) from coming to a vote.

Cronin says the Act would protect the rights of individuals like Robey and Klamut, both of whom are from Boehner's home state of Ohio.

"It would make union membership 100% voluntary," Cronin explains. "So if you were in a situation like Kathleen Klamut or Dennis Robey's, where the union at your place of work is supporting causes that you feel are immoral, you don't have to join. You wouldn't have to pay union dues or go through any kind of a process of filling out forms or being threatened, harassed, or intimidated because you could simply just not join the union."

According to Cronin, Republicans like Boehner are alienating their base by attempting to appease labor unions that have never shown an inclination to support conservative causes. And he says he is not aware of any unions that force their workers to send their dues to a conservative organization.