Release of Trump's returns for 2015 to 2020 will cap a multi-year
battle between the former Republican president and Democratic
lawmakers.
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal requested the
returns in 2019, arguing that Congress needed to see them to
determine if legislation on presidential returns was needed.
Trump, who took office in 2017, was the first presidential candidate
in decades who did not release his taxes, and he sued the committee
in an effort to keep them private. The Supreme Court ruled in
November in the committee's favor.
In a report last week, the committee outlined its findings from its
examination of the documents, saying the IRS broke its own rules by
not auditing Trump for three out of four years while he was
president.Details released by the panel showed Trump paid no income
tax in 2020, his final full year in office, despite millions of
dollars in earnings from his sprawling business empire.
The records show Trump's income and tax liability fluctuated
dramatically from 2015 through 2020, during his first presidential
bid and subsequent term in office. They show that Trump and his wife
Melania claimed large deductions and losses and paid little or no
income tax in several of those years.
Democrats were on a tight timeline to find a way to handle the
returns once they obtained them, given that Republicans will take
control of the House on Jan. 3 after winning a slim margin in
November's midterm elections.
Republicans have decried the quest for the tax returns as
politically motivated.
The Democrat-controlled House passed a bill before it left on its
winter recess that would mandate the IRS to complete audits of
presidents' tax filings within 90 days of their inauguration.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Vancouver; Editing by Tim Ahmann
and David Gregorio)
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