New Jersey's Christie vetoes bill seeking
Trump's tax returns
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[May 02, 2017]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - New Jersey Governor Chris
Christie on Monday vetoed a bill that would have required President
Donald Trump to release his tax returns in order to run for re-election
in the state, calling it "politics at its worst."
The Democrat-controlled state legislature had passed the bill in March
in response to Trump's refusal to make public his tax returns when he
ran for president as a Republican last year. Under the law, any
candidate for president or vice president could not appear on the ballot
without releasing at least five years of returns.
Before Trump, every major presidential candidate had done so voluntarily
since the 1970s.
Christie, who became one of Trump's earliest high-profile backers after
his own White House run fizzled and served on Trump's transition team,
said the legislation was an unconstitutional "form of therapy" for
Democrats unwilling to accept Trump's win over Democrat Hillary Clinton.
"The hypocrisy and false outrage underlying this bill is stunning - even
by Trenton standards," he said in a statement accompanying the veto.
New Jersey was the first of at least 20 states considering similar
legislation to send a bill to its governor's desk for consideration.
The chairman of the state assembly's judiciary committee, Democrat John
McKeon, called Christie's comments "grandstanding and childish
rhetoric."
"This much is clear – Governor Christie is obsessed with protecting and
showing allegiance to President Trump," McKeon added in a statement.
"Sad!"
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New Jersey Governor Chris Christie reacts to a question during a
news conference in Trenton, New Jersey, U.S. on March 28, 2014.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
The state Senate majority leader, Democrat Loretta Weinberg, said
voters "deserve to know what financial ties and interests candidates
for the presidency and vice presidency have, including with other
countries."
Trump's critics have said his tax returns represent the only way to
assess any potential conflicts of interest related to his sprawling
business empire. Democrats have also suggested the returns could
reveal politically damaging information, such as Trump's possible
use of loopholes to avoid paying income taxes.
During the campaign, Trump said he would not release the returns
because he was being audited, and the White House has made it clear
he has no intention of doing so after winning the election.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax in New York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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