Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Voters deserve the returns

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After a Supreme Court ruling, the House Ways and Means Committee will at long last get former president Donald Trump’s tax returns, nearly 1,400 days since the panel started asking for them.

Alas, the court’s decision does not assure that Mr. Trump’s tax records will ever become public or that future presidents—or presidenti­al candidates—will not follow his lead in refusing to voluntaril­y disclose their own.

Restoring the norm under which presidenti­al contenders voluntaril­y disclose their tax returns—followed by nearly every major-party nominee since Nixon—is important. Voters should expect to know what financial conflicts of interest they might bring to the job.

And in Mr. Trump’s case, those records were especially relevant, given that he headed a sprawling and secretive privately held business. In addition to his tax records, he should have provided a detailed accounting of his holdings and interests. His refusal to do so became glaring as Mr. Trump pressed to reform the tax code in 2017. Americans could only guess how its provisions might personally enrich the president and his family.

If presidenti­al candidates do not voluntaril­y share their returns, Congress might try to impose new rules. So could state lawmakers. In response to the Trump tax return saga, for example, New York legislator­s passed a law in 2019 allowing state officials to give congressio­nal investigat­ors the tax informatio­n they have on file.

State lawmakers could also write laws that mandate the automatic release of candidates’ state tax returns after they claim major-party presidenti­al nomination­s.

But it should not come to that. It would be healthier for the country to see candidates once again perform essential acts of honesty and transparen­cy, not because they have to but because voters deserve it.

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