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White House does not take aim at green tax status

White House does not take aim at green tax status

A White House official stated on Tuesday that the White House does not have immediate plans to strip non-profit climate-focused organizations of their tax-exempt status. This was said as these groups prepared for a series of executive orders.

A White House official said that "no such orders are currently being drafted or discussed".

More than 5,000 people listened in on a Zoom call held by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Public Citizen last week to learn how charities could prepare for an executive action that may be taken as early as Earth Day, Tuesday. A reporter attended the call.

A political law firm, Sandler Reiff, circulated to its clients in the non-profit sector and the philanthropic sector a memo that advised them to not panic if they were threatened with losing their tax-exempt status, or if international work was frozen by the government.

After recent remarks from President Donald Trump, which targeted the charitable status granted to Harvard University, concerns were raised. This was seen as an initial shot at other so-called "501(c3)" organizations, named after the section of the tax code exempting charities from income taxes.

The White House issued an Earth Day Statement on Tuesday, outlining the steps that his administration is taking to protect our environment. These include supporting nuclear energy and geothermal power, expanding responsible logging, forest management, and ending forced paper straw use.

The statement praised Trump's tariffs against China as a means to reduce "dependence on China's high pollution industries, and ensure the U.S. is leading by example in cleaner production and global stewardship."

The White House pointed out that recent orders to open more federal lands for oil, gas, and mineral development as well as rollbacks in federal air and water regulations were environmental victories that encouraged responsible energy projects. (Reporting and editing by Sonali Paul; Valerie Volcovici)

(source: Reuters)