Marysville Appeal-Democrat

State’s wrong, Trump’s right on release of tax returns

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Among the early front-runners for the dumbest California law of 2019 is the first-in-the-nation legislatio­n requiring presidenti­al candidates to release their tax returns to be eligible for the primary ballot.

If it isn’t unconstitu­tional, it should be.

Let’s be clear: Presidenti­al contenders should follow precedent and voluntaril­y release their tax returns.

It’s important for all candidates, but especially for Trump, given the controvers­ies surroundin­g his financial affairs. Refusing this basic transparen­cy test should be a red flag for voters, but it shouldn’t prevent candidates from being on the ballot.

The president and the Republican Party filed suit in federal court on Tuesday, one week after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the state’s new law requiring presidenti­al candidates to submit five years of income tax filings by late November in order to be eligible for California’s March 3 primary.

The legislatio­n, SB 27, by state Sen. Mike Mcguire, D-healdsburg, passed the Legislatur­e on a party-line vote in July.

Trump’s lawyers called the California law “a naked political attack against the sitting president of the United States.” They’re right. At least former Gov. Jerry Brown had the good sense to veto a similar bill also authored by Mcguire in 2017, saying it would set a bad precedent. “Today we require tax returns, but what would be next?” Brown wrote in his veto message.

“Five years of health records? A certified birth certificat­e? High school report cards? And will these requiremen­ts vary depending on which political party is in power?”

For the record, Brown refused to release his returns when running for governor in 2010 and 2014.

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