HR-227-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Vince Fong (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would open a two-year window during which members of the clergy and Christian Science practitioners who previously obtained an irrevocable exemption from Social Security and Medicare (payroll) taxes on their ministerial earnings could choose to revoke that exemption. Under current law, that exemption is permanent once granted. The bill would also require the IRS to develop and carry out a plan to notify eligible individuals that they may revoke their prior exemption.
Who benefits
Clergy members and Christian Science practitioners who opted out of Social Security and Medicare taxes earlier in their careers but now wish to re-enter the system — particularly those who are younger and have enough working years remaining to accumulate qualifying Social Security credits. Spouses and dependents of those clergy who would gain access to derivative Social Security benefits. The Social Security and Medicare trust funds, which would receive additional payroll tax revenue from newly re-enrolled participants.
Who is hurt
Clergy members who re-enroll would immediately begin paying payroll taxes (currently 15.3% of self-employment income for self-employed individuals), reducing their take-home earnings during the opt-back-in period. Religious organizations that employ clergy on a salary basis may face increased administrative complexity. Clergy who are close to retirement and re-enroll may pay taxes without accumulating enough credits to meaningfully increase their eventual benefits. The U.S. Treasury could see a short-term revenue offset if the new payroll tax inflows are outweighed by future benefit obligations, depending on the age profile of those who re-enroll.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the original exemption was designed to respect religious objections to public insurance programs, but that many clergy made that irrevocable decision when young and have since changed their circumstances or views — leaving them with no path to Social Security retirement benefits. They contend that allowing a one-time revocation window corrects an inequity, giving clergy the same ability to participate in the retirement safety net available to virtually every other American worker, without compelling anyone who wishes to remain exempt to change their status.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the exemption was granted as a permanent, irrevocable accommodation of sincere religious conscience, and that allowing revocation undermines the integrity of that commitment — potentially encouraging future applicants to treat the exemption as a temporary financial calculation rather than a genuine religious conviction. They contend that clergy who re-enroll late in their careers may receive disproportionately large benefits relative to their contributions, creating an actuarial cost to the Social Security and Medicare trust funds that is borne by all other participants.