House Dems vote to make Trump tax returns public
After an hourslong debate behind closed doors on Tuesday, the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee voted 24-16 along party lines to publicly release six years of former President Donald Trump’s tax returns.
Democrats on the committee supported sending a panel report related to Trump’s tax documents from 2015 to 2020 to the full chamber and published the document online after the Tuesday hearing.
Congressman Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), one of the panel members who voted to release the information, told NBC News that “the actual returns themselves will also be transmitted to the full House and become public, but I was told it will take a few days to a week in order to redact some info that needs to be redacted.”
Americans for Tax Fairness executive director Frank Clemente had urged the panel to release the records to “the American people, the final arbiters of what is acceptable behavior by our elected leaders,” arguing Tuesday that “since Trump is running again for president, it’s especially important for voters to know whether he complies with tax law and to learn about his complex finances and how they interact with potential public duties.”
“Tax fairness starts at the top: If the president is not paying his fair share or is otherwise abusing the tax laws, the American people have the right to know,” Clemente continued, adding that the committee’s chair, Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.), and other Democrats “deserve congratulations for their dogged pursuit of this important information.”
The committee received the tax documents from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) earlier this month after years of court battles—and a week after the U.S. Supreme Court, to which Trump appointed three justices, rejected his attempt to block the panel from acquiring the records.
As The New York Times’ Charlie Savage noted: “After the vote, House Democrats revealed that the materials they obtained showed that the IRS had failed to audit Trump’s tax filings during his first two years in office, despite having a program that purportedly mandates the auditing of sitting presidents. The agency launched an audit only after Richard Neal requested Trump’s taxes in 2019 in the name of assessing that auditing program, they said—and it has yet to complete it.”
Neal has put forth the Presidential Tax Filings and Audit Transparency Act to address issues at the IRS that his panel uncovered.
Some of Trump’s tax history is already public thanks to reporting by the Times, which revealed in September 2020 that he did not pay any federal income taxes in 10 of the 15 years before his White House victory and paid just $750 in 2016 and 2017.
Originally published at Commondreams.org.