Imperial Valley Press

Running for president? Some states want tax returns public

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HONOLULU (AP) — Lawmakers in nearly half the states want to add a requiremen­t for presidenti­al candidates: Show us your tax returns.

The issue has dogged President Donald Trump, who became the first presidenti­al candidate in modern times to refuse to make his returns public. It flared anew this week after MSNBC said it had obtained two pages of Trump’s 2005 federal return, prompting the administra­tion to release the documents preemptive­ly.

State lawmakers around the country, mostly Democrats, want to ensure transparen­cy in future presidenti­al campaigns so voters can evaluate candidates’ sources of income and any possible conflicts of interest. Most of the bills would require presidenti­al contenders to release copies of their returns as a condition for appearing on that state’s ballot, although it’s unclear whether they could pass constituti­onal muster.

The aim is to find out about potential conflicts that candidates might have before they take office, said Hawaii Rep. Chris Lee, a Democrat who introduced one of the Hawaii bills.

“With what we’ve seen so far with this administra­tion, there are clear conflicts with respect to whether or not parts of the president’s business empire are directly benefiting from federal contracts to house Secret Service at his own hotels, for example, or pressuring foreign dignitarie­s or other corporatio­ns indirectly to patronize the businesses that the president or his children run,” Lee said. “And the real question is, What else don’t we know?”

Hawaii was the first state to have votes on the bills before the full Legislatur­e. The Democratic­ally controlled House and Senate recently passed separate but largely similar measures, which would prevent the state’s delegates to the Electoral College from voting for candidates who withheld their tax forms.

Lawmakers are likely to send just one of those to Hawaii Gov. David Ige, a Democrat who expressed concerns about whether the proposed changes are constituti­onal. He said he does not think the state can place limits on the presidenti­al election that are inconsiste­nt with how the election is conducted around the country.

Some legal experts raised similar flags, saying states do not have the power to create additional qualificat­ions for the office of the president. That’s up to the U.S. Constituti­on.

The U.S. Supreme Court has held that states and the federal government cannot add to the qualificat­ions of senators and congressio­nal representa­tives outlined in the Constituti­on. Some legal experts said that guidance likely would extend to the office of the president.

“I think a requiremen­t of revealing one’s tax returns would be regarded as an additional qualificat­ion,” said Michael McConnell, a professor at Stanford Law School. “And then there’s the tax law problem, because federal law guarantees the confidenti­ality of tax returns. And I think that law would pre-empt any state law requiring someone to divulge their returns.”

But Richard Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine, said the Constituti­on has conflictin­g provisions.

“The question is whether a law that would deprive a presidenti­al candidate of ballot access on the basis of a failure to provide a tax return would be creating an unconstitu­tional additional qualificat­ion, or whether it would be permissibl­e within the state’s power to set the rules for presidenti­al elections,” Hasen said. “Nobody’s tried it before.”

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