Albuquerque Journal

Trump’s income tax returns to remain private

Nondisclos­ure tied to ongoing audit

- TRIBUNE WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s new campaign manager said Sunday that the GOP nominee will not release his income tax returns to the public until an Internal Revenue Service audit is complete.

It was a reversal for Kellyanne Conway, who was named Trump’s campaign manager on Wednesday. Earlier this year, the Republican pollster and strategist had urged Trump to release his tax returns.

“I’ve learned since being on the inside that this audit is a serious matter and that he has said that when the audit is complete, he will release his tax returns,” Conway said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”

No law prevents Trump from releasing his returns during an audit, which could take years.

His returns would show voters for the first time how much he pays in taxes, how much he gives to charity, and provide a guide to his assets and investment­s.

A New York Times investigat­ion into Trump’s vast real estate holdings concluded that companies he owns in the United States have at least $650 million in debt, far more than he has publicly acknowledg­ed.

Every major party presidenti­al candidate since the 1970s has released tax returns.

Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, has released returns for several decades, including her 2015 return, and has pressed Trump to release his.

Representa­tives for Trump have said the IRS is auditing his tax returns filed since 2009 and that returns from 2002 to 2008 are no longer being audited.

Conway told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that she doesn’t think Trump should release the earlier returns either.

“This entire tax return debate is somewhat confoundin­g to me, in the following sense: I don’t think that it creates one job, gets one more individual who does not have health insurance covered by health insurance, particular­ly under the disaster that has been Obamacare with these private insurers pulling out (of) exchanges now and reporting billions of dollars of losses,” Conway said.

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