After Promising To Release His Tax Returns, Trump Aide Says He Won’t Because ‘People Didn’t Care’
Seventy-four percent of Americans want Trump to release his tax returns.
WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump will not release his tax returns because
“people didn’t care” about it during the election, one of his top aides said
Sunday.
“He’s not going to
release his tax returns. We litigated this all through the election. People
didn’t care,” White House advisor Kellyanne Conway said on ABC, two days
after Trump took the oath of office.
Conway’s statement not
only echoes Trump’s Jan. 11 assertion that only reporters care about his tax
returns, but goes further in stating that he simply won’t release the returns
at all. She was answering a question about a White House petition for Trump to
release his tax returns that had received over 200,000 signatures, a total that
necessitates a White House response. An ABC poll from Jan. 12-15 found that 74
percent of the public wanted Trump to release his returns.
During the presidential
campaign, Trump repeatedly stated his taxes had been under a routine Internal
Revenue Service audit since 2009 and that he could not release them until the
audit was finished. He further promised that he would release his tax returns
once the audit was completed.
“I don’t mind
releasing,” he said during his first president debate with
Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. “I’m under a routine audit.
And it’ll be released. And as soon as the audit’s finished, it will be
released.”
The IRS has already stated that there is nothing
preventing Trump from releasing his returns while they are under audit. The
government agency, which is now under Trump’s control, further stated that
Trump’s tax returns prior to 2009 are not even under audit at all. Trump
claimed during the campaign that his lawyers didn’t want him to release the
returns.
Trump handed over his
tax returns when they were under IRS audit to state officials in Pennsylvania
and New Jersey as part of the legal process to apply for casino licenses in the states.
Conway’s insistence
that Trump’s election negates any need for transparency is similar to a
statement from Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son, during the
campaign that his father should not release his tax returns because it would
not help him politically.
“Because he’s got a
12,000-page tax return that would create probably 300 million independent
financial auditors out of every person in the country asking questions that
would distract from his main message,” Donald Jr. said.
Every president since
Richard Nixon, save Gerald Ford, has released their tax returns
either during the campaign or upon taking office (Ford released a summary when
he ran in 1976). Nixon even released his tax returns when they were under IRS audit in the midst of
the Watergate scandal.
“Trump’s refusal to
release his tax returns shows contempt for the public that elected him, and
suggests that President Trump will fall short on even basic questions of public
accountability,” said John Wonderlich, the executive director of the
pro-transparency nonprofit Sunlight Foundation.
The decision to not release
his tax returns, against his promise to do so, has already angered Trump’s allies at WikiLeaks.
Trump’s returns would
help answer numerous questions about how much he has paid in taxes ― which the
public knows little about ― and his currently obscure business ties and
debts.
The New York Times reported before the election
that Trump claimed a $916 million loss in 1995. When used as a tax deduction,
this declared loss could have meant that Trump did not pay taxes for 18 years.
At the moment, the
public has almost no information regarding how much the president of the United
States has in debts to banks, either foreign or domestic.
The personal financial
disclosure Trump is required to file under the Ethics in Government Act is
woefully inadequate in helping to explain Trump’s business debts. The
disclosure law only requires the filer to list debts they personally owe and
not debts held by corporate entities to which they are beneficiaries. Trump’s
wealth is largely tied up in an interlocking set of privately held limited
liability companies, many of which hold large, undisclosed debts.
In addition, there is
limited information about where Trump is engaged in business. His tax returns
could detail what other countries he has sought business in recently or what
assets he claims that are not listed on his mandatory but less transparent
financial disclosure.
Trump has avoided
talking about his numerous conflicts of interest and refused to divest himself from his business empire.
Instead, he put his two adult sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, in charge of the Trump
Organization while failing to file the proper paperwork to give
them control of the company. He will still benefit financially from every
action his two sons take while he sits in the Oval Office.
Both Donald Jr. and
Eric were appointed to the executive committee of their father’s presidential
transition team.
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