The Arizona Republic

House panel files lawsuit over Trump’s tax returns

It says administra­tion is shielding president

- Jessica Gresko Contributi­ng: Nicholas Wu, USA TODAY

The House Ways and Means Committee set up a legal battle on Tuesday by suing in federal court for access to President Donald Trump’s tax returns.

WASHINGTON – A House committee sued the Trump administra­tion in federal court Tuesday for access to President Donald Trump’s tax returns, setting up a legal showdown over the records.

The House Ways and Means Committee said it needs the documents for an investigat­ion into tax law compliance by the president, among other things. It asked the court to order the administra­tion to turn over the documents.

The committee originally demanded six years of Trump’s tax records in early April under a law that says the Internal Revenue Service “shall furnish” the returns of any taxpayer to a handful of top lawmakers. But Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told the committee in May that he wouldn’t be turning over the returns to the Democratic-controlled House.

Mnuchin concluded that the Treasury Department is “not authorized to disclose the requested returns and return informatio­n.” The Justice Department in a legal opinion backed Mnuchin’s position, saying the request lacked a legitimate legislativ­e purpose and was an “unpreceden­ted” use of congressio­nal authority.

The argument is the same one the administra­tion has used in refusing other demands from Congress for financial records from accountant­s and banks Trump and his family have done business with. Lawsuits over those records were filed in federal courts in Washington and New York, and Trump has lost in those lawsuits’ opening rounds.

In its lawsuit Tuesday, the committee said the administra­tion has refused to turn over the documents “in order to shield President Trump’s tax return informatio­n from Congressio­nal scrutiny.”

The committee said it’s not required to explain to the Treasury Department its reasons for seeking the tax return informatio­n but that in this case the committee’s need is “evident.”

“Without reviewing the requested return materials, the Committee cannot ensure that the IRS’s audit process is functionin­g fairly and effectivel­y, understand how provisions of the tax code are impacted by President Trump’s returns or exercise its legislativ­e judgment to determine whether changes to the code may be warranted,” the lawsuit said.

The president has “declined to follow the practice of every elected President since Richard Nixon of voluntaril­y disclosing their tax returns,” the lawsuit said.

Kevin Brady, the lead Republican on the Ways and Means Committee, contended that “this not only weaponizes the tax code and puts every taxpayer at risk, this lawsuit goes further and – for the first time – circumvent­s America’s democratic process by replacing the U.S. House’s voice with Nancy Pelosi’s voice.”

 ??  ?? The House Ways and Means Committee originally demanded six years of President Donald Trump’s tax records in early April. CORY MORSE/AP
The House Ways and Means Committee originally demanded six years of President Donald Trump’s tax records in early April. CORY MORSE/AP

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