Los Angeles Times

Trump sues state to keep tax returns out of view

President’s lawsuit is one of several to challenge California’s new disclosure law for certain candidates.

- By John Myers

SACRAMENTO — California’s first-in-the-nation law requiring presidenti­al primary candidates to release their tax returns or be kept off the ballot was challenged in federal court Tuesday by President Trump, the man who inspired its passage and whose attorneys argued that state Democratic leaders had oversteppe­d their constituti­onal authority.

The lawsuit, filed in Sacramento, came exactly one week after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the legislatio­n. Two other legal challenges preceded the one by Trump and his 2020 reelection campaign. A separate effort by the state and national Republican parties and several California GOP voters was also filed in federal court Tuesday. All of the lawsuits struck a similar theme by insisting California cannot impose limits on ballot access for presidenti­al hopefuls.

“The issue of whether the President should release his federal tax returns was litigated in the 2016 election and the American people spoke,” Jay Sekulow, an attorney for Trump, said in a statement. “The effort to deny California voters the opportunit­y to cast a ballot for President Trump in 2020 will clearly fail.”

The president has steadfastl­y refused to offer the public a glimpse of his annual income tax filings with the Internal Revenue Service, frequently insisting — without any proof — that he cannot do so while the returns were the subject of an IRS audit. Most of the Democrats vying for their party’s nomination to challenge Trump next fall have already released some of their tax returns, though not all have met California’s standard of producing five years’ worth of informatio­n.

State Senate Bill 27, which passed the California Legislatur­e on a party-line vote last month, took effect as soon as Newsom signed it. It imposes the tax disclosure rule on presidenti­al and gubernator­ial candidates, and stipulates that only the names of candidates who comply will be printed on the

statewide primary ballot. Because the state has moved up its presidenti­al primary to early March, the deadline for submitting the tax documents is in late November.

The Trump team’s 15page court filing alleges five counts of illegal action by California officials in enacting the tax returns law. Trump’s attorneys contend the state can issue only procedural regulation­s governing its election for president. Even if the state did have a role, the attorneys wrote, California’s law “does not serve a compelling state interest and, in any event, is not narrowly tailored to that interest.”

National and state Republican­s called the California law “a naked political attack against the sitting President of the United States” in their lawsuit. They wrote that SB 27 “effectivel­y disenfranc­hises voters by denying their right to associate for the advancemen­t of political beliefs and effectivel­y cast a vote for the otherwise qualified candidate of their choosing.”

The author of SB 27, state Sen. Mike McGuire (DHealdsbur­g), worked with a group of constituti­onal scholars when drafting the bill. He derided the lawsuits as “frivolous” and unlikely to prevail.

“It comes as no surprise that President Trump would freak out at the prospect of presidenti­al transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, but he will need to get used to it,” McGuire said in a statement.

Newsom, who provided access to his tax returns in the 2018 election and has routinely criticized the Republican president for his failure to do the same, said Tuesday that a lawsuit was unnecessar­y.

“There’s an easy fix Mr. President — release your tax returns as you promised during the campaign and follow the precedent of every president since 1973,” Newsom said on Twitter. The governor’s statement overlooks that President Ford refused to release his tax returns in 1976, though every other president in the intervenin­g years has, until Trump.

Two other lawsuits have challenged the California law on similar grounds to the GOP-led efforts. One was filed Monday on behalf of a handful of state voters by the conservati­ve-leaning group Judicial Watch. The other was filed last week by Roque “Rocky” De La Fuente, a California businessma­n who has run several low-profile campaigns for president.

The four federal lawsuits were joined Tuesday by a challenge filed in the California Supreme Court by Jessica Millan Patterson, chairwoman of the California Republican Party. In that challenge, Patterson argues that the state’s constituti­on requires elections officials to include any candidate on the presidenti­al ballot who meets national criteria — a process strengthen­ed and made more transparen­t by a different law Newsom signed last week.

Assemblywo­man Melissa Melendez (R-Lake Elsinore), a staunch supporter of Trump and one of those who filed the federal lawsuit with GOP officials, said Newsom chose politics over the advice of former Gov. Jerry Brown, who vetoed a similar measure in 2017 and raised concerns about its legality.

“Gov. Newsom doesn’t seem to care,” she said. “This is not how America works .... It’s still kind of shocking that this is the point we’re at now.”

Legal scholars have offered mixed opinions as to the constituti­onality of SB 27. Some suggested that because state legislatur­es are given wide berth by the U.S. Constituti­on in choosing presidenti­al electors, the law could be seen as a logical extension of that power. Others, however, said the law could be thrown out on the same grounds as previous efforts in other states to link a congressio­nal incumbent’s ballot access to how many terms the person had served in the House. The U.S. Supreme Court rejected such restrictio­ns in a 1995 ruling.

Action on Trump’s legal challenge could be swift, when measured against other complex cases filed in the federal courts. Richard L. Hasen, a UC Irvine election law professor, said the best that plaintiffs could hope for in the current presidenti­al election cycle is a preliminar­y injunction that stops the law from taking effect this fall. “I think these are complicate­d issues,” he said. “The final question might not be sorted out for a couple of years.”

Hasen said that the lawsuits raise multiple issues — including constituti­onal power and the rights of political parties and voters — and that taken as a whole, they pose a daunting challenge for state officials in the coming months.

“If I had to bet, I’d think that one or both of those arguments could convince a court to strike it down,” Hasen said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i AP ?? “RELEASE your tax returns as you promised,” Gov. Gavin Newsom told the president.
Rich Pedroncell­i AP “RELEASE your tax returns as you promised,” Gov. Gavin Newsom told the president.
 ?? Carolyn Kaster Associated Press ?? THE LAWSUITS against the California law could take years to resolve, a legal expert says, and the best that President Trump — shown with Vice President Mike Pence, left, and Health Secretary Alex Azar — could hope for is a preliminar­y injunction blocking it this fall.
Carolyn Kaster Associated Press THE LAWSUITS against the California law could take years to resolve, a legal expert says, and the best that President Trump — shown with Vice President Mike Pence, left, and Health Secretary Alex Azar — could hope for is a preliminar­y injunction blocking it this fall.

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