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One of the largest efforts was orchestrated by the anti-abortion group Priests for Life, which produced what it calls a nonpartisan guide contrasting McCain and Obama's positions. The Rev. Frank Pavone, the group's national director, said volunteers avoid taking literature inside churches without permission and place fliers in parish parking lots unless they encounter resistance. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops advises that Catholic organizations should not authorize the distribution of "partisan campaign materials or biased voter education materials" in private parking lots. The Rev. Michael Watson of St. Andrew parish in Columbus, Ohio, said he encountered people placing material "paid for by the Ohio Republican Party" on windshields in the church lot in violation of a diocesan policy barring distribution of any political literature on church property. Watson said in an e-mail the activists wouldn't follow the policy, so police officers assigned to traffic control and other duties at the parish "responded to it," he said. In Pennsylvania, an anti-Obama flier from an anti-abortion political action committee also appeared at churches. The flier features images of men holding hands on a wedding cake and photos of what appears to be a dismembered baby. To push back, the left-leaning group Catholics United dispatched staff and volunteers to six cities Sunday to alert church officials about unwelcome material. "Our position is it's a violation of the sacred space of the church to have political
-- and especially partisan propaganda -- in this space," said Chris Korzen, the group's executive director. Korzen said another goal was to protect parishes' tax-exempt status. Pavone accused the group of partisan motivations and said fliers from outside groups don't endanger churches. Robert Tuttle, a professor of law and religion at George Washington University, said IRS regulations on politics deal only with conduct by churches. So leafletting by outside groups, announcements from Obama backers or McCain volunteers handing out pamphlets are not problematic for the IRS, he said. "What you're really looking for is the church itself endorsing or supporting a particular candidate," Tuttle said. "That would take someone acting on behalf of the church."
[Associated
Press;
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