San Antonio Express-News

Democratic Senate challenger faces tax liens

- By Jeremy Wallace TEXAS POLITICAL WRITER

While Democrat Roland Gutierrez is campaignin­g for a seat in the U.S. Senate, he’s been battling the IRS over a series of tax liens they have placed on his private law practice in San Antonio.

From 2021 to 2022, the IRS issued three liens against the Gutierrez Law Firm totaling $64,414 in back taxes going back to 2018. Tax liens are a way to make a legal claim against the assets of a taxpayer who fails to pay taxes that are owed.

Gutierrez said he had been paying the IRS back, but he has a related dispute over taxes he claims the agency owes him.

“Right now it’s a standstill,” said Gutierrez, a state senator and immigratio­n attorney who is one of nine Democrats battling in the March 5 primary to see who will face likely GOP nominee U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz in November.

Gutierrez said he is still waiting for a tax credit he deserves from the COVID-19 pandemic. During the shutdowns to contain the virus, businesses that continued to pay employees were able to apply for tax credits.

“The government owes $80,000,” Gutierrez said during a live interview with Hearst Newspapers on Thursday.

Gutierrez, 53, said that money would essentiall­y “wash out” his IRS debt.

Gutierrez has had tax liens on his businesses before. The San Antonio Express-news reported in 2018 that while he was campaignin­g for the state Senate, the IRS released a $26,382 lien against his law firm for unpaid payroll taxes covering the first half of 2017. They released another one months later totaling $34,807.

The IRS issued a new tax lien in April 2021 against his firm for $18,669, according to records filed with the Bexar County Clerk’s Office. Later that year, they issued another for $7,283 and a third for $38,462.

Gutierrez said the tax issues show how challengin­g it can be for a small-business owner who also is fighting to make payroll and look after his workers.

“I’ve employed more people than anybody running in this race,” he said. “I’ve been a businessma­n for over 25 years and I’ll continue doing that.”

Gutierrez said he and his wife at one point ran a restaurant in San Antonio, and he continues to run a small residentia­l constructi­on company.

Gutierrez has a long history in elected office. A former San Antonio City Council member, he went on to win a seat in the Texas House in 2008 and in 2020 won a seat in the Texas Senate.

With a district that includes Uvalde, Gutierrez has called for stronger gun control legislatio­n and says he’s fighting to bring more progressiv­e ideas to state politics.

Public polling shows his top rival is U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, a Dallas civil rights attorney. Allred, 40, has campaigned as a bipartisan lawmaker who can get things down. When criticized by Gutierrez for hand-holding with Republican­s, Allred has countered that people want their politician­s to get things done “instead of being a partisan lightning rod that will continue this divisivene­ss.”

Other candidates with experience in elected office include former Nueces County District Attorney Mark Gonzalez and North Texas state Rep. Carl Sherman.

In-person early voting in the primary starts on Tuesday. Texas doesn’t register voters by party, so voters can vote in either of the primaries, regardless of their personal party affiliatio­n or past voting history.

 ?? Sam Owens/staff photograph­er ?? Roland Gutierrez, seeking to oust U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, is fighting the IRS over tax liens placed on his San Antonio law practice.
Sam Owens/staff photograph­er Roland Gutierrez, seeking to oust U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, is fighting the IRS over tax liens placed on his San Antonio law practice.

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