Houston Chronicle

Mnuchin: Trump has ‘no intention’ of releasing tax returns

- By Julie Bykowicz and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump “has no intention” of releasing his tax returns to the public, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Wednesday, asserting Americans have “plenty of informatio­n” about the president’s financial matters.

For decades, presidents have released their tax returns. But Trump has so far refused, saying that he would share the tax documents only after the Internal Revenue Service completes an “audit” of them.

He’s never disclosed proof of an audit and tax lawyers say there’s nothing preventing him from releasing his returns if he’s under one.

Trump said before he launched his campaign that he’d release them if he ever ran for office.

“If I decide to run for office, I’ll produce my tax returns, absolutely,” he told an Irish television station in 2014. “And I would love to do that.”

Mnuchin appeared to close the door completely Wednesday.

“The president has no intention. The president has released plenty of informatio­n and I think has given more financial disclosure than anybody else. I think the American population has plenty of informatio­n,” he said, inaccurate­ly characteri­zing the president’s disclosure­s.

The comment came as the secretary briefed reporters on the president’s new proposal to overhaul taxes. Democrats have sought to use the tax debate to pressure Trump to release his returns, arguing the informatio­n is necessary to evaluate how Trump’s tax proposals would affect his personal wealth.

Mnuchin declined to comment on how Trump would benefit from his proposals. He and other administra­tion officials left the room as reporters shouted questions about how the plan would affect the Trump family.

Trump, a billionair­e, owns a global real estate, marketing and property management company, which at the start of his presidency he placed in a trust that he can revoke at any time.

Trump officials have offered varying explanatio­ns for why the president does not disclosure his returns.

White House senior counselor Kellyanne Conway said in a television interview in January that the fact that he won the election without putting out the informatio­n shows that “people didn’t care” about it.

Even with Mnuchin’s seemingly definitive answer, the issue of Trump’s tax returns isn’t likely to go away. Democrats have threatened to hold up his tax proposals until they see the returns.

Democrats also have been pushing for a vote on a bill that would require the president and all major-party nominees to publicly disclose their previous three years of tax returns with the Office of Government Ethics or the Federal Election Commission.

On Wednesday, Democratic members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform sent a letter to Chairman Jason Chaffetz requesting that he allow a vote on the Presidenti­al Tax Transparen­cy Act.

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