U.S. House committee to release redacted Trump tax filings
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[December 21, 2022]
By Moira Warburton and Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. House of Representatives committee voted
on Tuesday to release partially redacted tax filings from former
President Donald Trump and said tax authorities had failed to properly
scrutinize his returns while he was in office.
The House Ways and Means Committee voted to release a summary of Trump's
tax returns between 2015 and 2021, the years when he was running for
president and serving in the White House, panel members said.
That could lead to more unwelcome scrutiny for the former president as
he mounts another White House bid.
But the committee also said the U.S. Internal Revenue Service did not
follow its own rules when it failed to audit Trump's tax returns during
three of his four years in office. Members said Congress should pass a
law to strengthen the presidential audit program.
"What people will likely be surprised about is the extent to which the
IRS was not conforming to their own rules," Democratic Representative
Dan Kildee told reporters.
The IRS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Committee chairman Richard Neal, a Democrat, said a redacted summary of
Trump's tax returns would be released within days. Democrats have little
time to act, as Republicans are due to take control of the House in
January.
It was not clear whether the material would shed light on potential
conflicts between Trump's real-estate holdings and his actions as
president, or how much tax he paid on the hundreds of millions of
dollars his businesses earned while he was president. Lawmakers said the
returns were scant on details.
"I think you'll be surprised by how little there is," Democratic
Representative Lloyd Doggett told CNN.
Kevin Brady, the panel's top Republican, told reporters that some of
those returns were still being audited, so it was not clear how much tax
Trump owed. Like other committee Republicans, he voted against their
release on the grounds that it could set a bad precedent.
Two reports will be released later on Tuesday night, committee members
said - one from the committee itself and one from the Joint Committee on
Taxation, a nonpartisan body that analyzes impacts of tax provisions in
legislation. They will include a memo from Neal on the purpose of the
original request for Trump's tax returns, the audit notes and proposals
for legislation to codify the presidential audit program into law,
committee members said on Tuesday night.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump
announces that he will once again run for president in the 2024
election during an event at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach,
Florida, U.S. November 15, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Trump, unlike previous presidential candidates, refused to make his
tax returns public as he sought to keep secret the details of his
wealth and the activities of his real estate company, the Trump
Organization, and he fought Democrats' efforts to get access to
them.
Trump has said that he cannot release his tax returns because they
were being examined by the IRS. Tax experts have said that is not a
valid excuse.
Neal declined to comment on whether Trump was being truthful or not.
Candidates are not required by law to release their tax returns, but
previous presidential hopefuls of both parties have voluntarily done
so for several decades.
Democrats on the committee said they need to see those records to
assess whether the Internal Revenue Service is properly auditing
presidential tax returns, and to gauge whether new legislation is
needed.
Another House committee on Monday asked federal prosecutors to
prosecute Trump for sparking the deadly Capitol attack on Jan. 6,
2021. Republicans are expected to dissolve or redirect that panel
when they take control of the chamber.
Trump, who served as president from 2017 to 2021, reported heavy
losses from his business enterprises over several years to offset
hundreds of millions of dollars in income, according to news media
reporting and trial testimony about his finances. That allowed him
to pay very little in taxes.
The Trump Organization was found guilty on Dec. 6 in New York of
carrying out a 15-year criminal scheme to defraud tax authorities.
The company faces up to $1.6 million in fines, though Trump himself
is not personally liable. He has said the case was politically
motivated and the company plans to appeal.
He also faces a separate fraud suit in New York that accuses him of
artificially inflating the value of his assets.
During his presidency, he faced persistent questions about conflicts
of interest, as foreign dignitaries and Republican Party officials
spent money in his luxury hotels.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton and Andy Sullivan; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman and Christopher Cushing)
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