Dayton Daily News

Pick to lead IRS says he’ll work for all taxpayers

- By Marcy Gordon

“I will work ... to take on challenges with the impact on taxpayers in mind,” Charles Rettig said at his confirmati­on hearing.

Under sharp WASHINGTON — questionin­g from some Democratic senators, President Donald Trump’s choice to head the IRS promised Thursday to work for the benefit of ordinary taxpayers in administer­ing the massive new tax law.

Charles Rettig is a Beverly Hills tax lawyer who has represente­d thousands of individual­s and companies in civil and criminal tax matters before the agency and against it in court. He also defended Trump’s decision to break with tradition by refusing to release his personal tax filings during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

At his confirmati­on hearing by the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, Rettig was asked whether, given his experience representi­ng wealthy individual­s in tax-avoidance cases, he would work for ordinary taxpayers.

“I have seen the difficulti­es faced by taxpayers of all kinds,” Rettig said. “I will work ... to take on challenges with the impact on taxpayers in mind.”

Rettig, if confirmed by the Senate as Internal Revenue Service commission­er, will face a colossal challenge in administer­ing and enforcing the new law, the most sweeping overhaul of the U.S. tax code in 30 years. The complex, $1.5 trillion package was muscled through Congress by the majority Republican­s late last year with Democrats unanimousl­y voting against it.

The new law, Trump’s signature legislativ­e achievemen­t, provides generous tax cuts for corporatio­ns and the wealthiest Americans, and more modest reductions for middle- and low-income individual­s and families. Starting early this year, millions of working Americans saw increases in their paychecks with less tax withheld.

Rettig, 61, has worked at his Beverly Hills, California, law firm, Hochman, Salkin, Rettig, Toscher & Perez, for more than 35 years.

His clients have included affluent taxpayers seeking to strike deals with the IRS to turn over informatio­n on offshore bank accounts in exchange for reduced penalties. He has sued the IRS on behalf of clients seeking to reduce their tax penalties and chaired the IRS advisory council, which acts as a public forum for discussing tax issues with agency officials.

Rettig also pledged at the hearing to uphold the political independen­ce of the IRS. He had defended Trump’s refusal to release his tax returns, writing Trump was facing the IRS “Wealth Squad.” Trump has accused the IRS of unfairly harassing him with audits and cited the IRS’ ongoing audit of his returns as the reason for his refusal.

“Mr. Rettig ... needs to demonstrat­e that he will maintain independen­ce from the Trump White House,” said Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the committee’s senior Democrat.

Rettig said he expects taxpayers “will see me as staunchly independen­t or more so.”

The quality of service provided by the agency for taxpayers is a primary issue. Rettig would take over an agency that has been pummeled for years by Republican lawmakers and has seen its funding slashed by 20 percent since 2010. His vetting comes as the independen­t IRS watchdog warned Congress in a report that funding cuts have eroded the agency’s ability to provide high-quality service to taxpayers and to upgrade its aging technology.

“Some of the IRS’ informatio­n technology dates back to the Kennedy administra­tion,” said the Finance Committee chairman, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. “I expect Mr. Rettig to work with Congress to modernize the IRS’ infrastruc­ture and technology to bring the agency into the 21st century.”

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 ?? AARON P. BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Charles Rettig, who is nominated to head the IRS, testifies during his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Finance Committee on Thursday. Rettig is a prominent tax attorney based in Los Angeles.
AARON P. BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES Charles Rettig, who is nominated to head the IRS, testifies during his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Finance Committee on Thursday. Rettig is a prominent tax attorney based in Los Angeles.

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