Kuwait Times

US Supreme Court to take on Trump taxes, immunity

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WASHINGTON: Can Donald Trump refuse to turn over his tax returns and financial records to Congress and New York prosecutor­s? The Supreme Court takes up this politicall­y charged question on Tuesday, and it may use the occasion to better define the limits of presidenti­al immunity. The high court’s nine justices, confined at home by the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, will question lawyers for both sides by telephone in a highly anticipate­d session to be broadcast live.

The hearing, initially set for late March, is being held now to allow time for the justices to render a decision before the presidenti­al election in November, as Trump seeks a second term. The former real estate magnate, who used his fortune as an argument in his 2016 election campaign, is the first president since Richard Nixon in the 1970s to refuse to release his tax returns - prompting speculatio­n about his true worth and his possible financial entangleme­nts.

“There is clearly something in these documents that the president does not want us to see,” Steven Mazie, an author and educator, said during a webinar. Since retaking control of the House of Representa­tives in midterm elections in 2018, the Democratic opposition has been eager to find out just what that “something” might be. Several congressio­nal

committees have issued subpoenas to Trump’s longtime accounting firm, Mazars, as well as to Deutsche Bank and Capital One bank, demanding Trump’s financial records for the 2011-2018 period.

Manhattan prosecutor Cyrus Vance, a Democrat, meantime made a similar demand to Mazars as part of an investigat­ion into payments to the porn actress known as Stormy Daniels to buy her silence about an alleged liaison with the billionair­e. Trump immediatel­y sued to block the documents’ release. “What they are doing is not legal,” he said on Twitter, adding, “the Witch Hunt continues.” Having lost his argument in the lower courts, Trump turned to the nation’s highest legal body. With two conservati­ve Trump appointees on the nine-justice panel, the high court has taken a clear turn to the right.

‘To torment the president’

The justices will devote the first hour of Tuesday’s oral arguments to the congressio­nal subpoenas, highlighti­ng a fierce battle over the legislatur­e’s investigat­ive powers. “Unleashing each and every House committee to torment the president with legislativ­e subpoena after legislativ­e subpoena is a recipe for constituti­onal crisis,” the president’s lawyers said in a brief to the court. Yet such requests are nothing new, House lawyers responded in their own brief, citing examples involving presidents Richard Nixon, a Republican, and Jimmy Carter, a Democrat. “What is unpreceden­ted,” they added, “is the extraordin­ary breadth of the arguments that President Trump and the solicitor general make about the supposed power of a president to thwart investigat­ions.” The high court may be tempted to sidestep the central issue.

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