Baltimore Sun

Democrats knock Trump’s refusal on tax files

- By Julie Bykowicz

PHILADELPH­IA — The wealthy Democratic donors, many of whom run businesses, know firsthand how revealing tax returns can be. Perhaps that’s why they can’t stop talking about Republican nominee Donald Trump’s refusal to release his.

And supporters of Hillary Clinton are sounding the alarm about Trump’s break with decades of presidenti­al campaign tradition.

Clinton put out eight years of recent tax filings last summer, and her backers lament that voters don’t seem to understand why Trump’s refusal to do the same matters.

Democratic talk of the taxes spilled onto the convention stage Wednesday night.

Vice presidenti­al candidate Tim Kaine, mocking Trump, said, “Believe me, there’s nothing suspicious in my tax returns. Believe me!” The crowd laughed. There’s a bounty for the Trump documents.

Moishe Mana, a top fundraiser for Clinton, has offered to give $1 million to the charity of Trump’s choice if he makes them public. He joins an unnamed Republican donor working with Clinton ally David Brock who has made a similar offer of $5 million.

“Through his financial documents, we are trying to break into the image that he’s portraying to the American people,” said Mana, a real estate developer in Miami. “He says he’s a successful businessma­n who wants to do for the country what he did for his company. Well, go ahead, show me the money.” Trump is unmoved. The owner of the Trump Organizati­on, an internatio­nal developmen­t company, reiterated at a news conference Wednesday that the Internal Revenue Service is auditing his tax returns and that he’ll release them once that review is complete.

There’s no telling whether that would happen before Election Day, but the IRS says there’s no legal reason Trump can’t make Donald Trump says the media made Mitt Romney “look bad” after he released his 2011 tax return. the tax returns public even as they are under review.

The issue has flared up in recent days, in the wake of the hack of emails at the Democratic National Committee that the Obama administra­tion said Wednesday was almost certainly the work of Russia. The group WikiLeaks released the emails on the eve of the convention, a leak its leader Julian Assange has said was timed to inflict political damage on Clinton.

Trump said Wednesday that he has no ties to Russia whatsoever, but that hasn’t stopped Democratic donors in Philadelph­ia from saying that in the absence of Trump’s tax returns, voters are left to wonder whether there are undisclose­d financial ties between Trump and foreign entities.

“Think of what’s gone on just this week and connect the dotted lines,” said top Clinton donor J.B. Pritzker, a billionair­e venture capitalist in Chicago. “The question is who his investors are, and whether there are any in China or Russia that are affecting his personal income.”

While informatio­n about Trump’s debts has been made public in personal financial disclosure­s filed with federal election regulators, the Democratic donors say access to his taxes might shed light on previously unknown business arrangemen­ts. The returns also would detail how much he pays in income tax and how much he gives to charity.

“He is obfuscatin­g in order to avoid being discovered as a liar,” Pritzker said.

The pro-Clinton group Priorities USA has been hammering the issue in several online video compilatio­ns of Trump’s various excuses for not putting out the returns. Footage includes Trump telling a reporter who’d asked about his tax rate, “It’s none of your business.”

The 2012 GOP nominee, Mitt Romney, resisted putting out his 2011 tax return until the September just before the election, after being pressed for months about doing so. The documents showed he paid an effective tax rate of 14.1 percent, far lower than the average person, spawning days of bad headlines.

Bill and Hillary Clinton paid an overall federal tax rate of 31.6 percent between 2007 and 2014, her returns showed.

In addition to blaming the IRS audit, Trump has said in interviews that it might not make political sense for him to put out his returns.

Romney’s returns were “a tiny peanut compared to mine,” Trump said on “Meet the Press.” There was little controvers­ial in the Romney documents, he said.

Yet the media “made him look bad,” Trump said. “In fact, I think he lost his election because of that.”

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON/AP 2012 ??
JULIE JACOBSON/AP 2012

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