Call & Times

In another country, we’d call this ‘corruption’

- By HELAINE OLEN

The tax reform plan that just passed the House of Representa­tives will soon be signed into law by Donald Trump. But it will not personally benefit Donald Trump. Or so claims Donald Trump.

It would leave him "a big loser," Donald Trump said last month. "This is going to cost me a fortune, this thing, believe me," he said more recently. "This is not good for me."

The White House is echoing this line. Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said on Tuesday that while Trump might benefit "on the business side," she added that "on the personal side the president will likely take a big hit."

And yet, when pressed on whether he will release his taxes so we can verify this, Sanders once again said that Trump will not, because, she claimed, he remains under audit. "His taxes are under audit, so he's not going to release those taxes," she said.

It's hard to overemphas­ize what a sign this is of the incipient and continued corruption of politics in the United States.

Almost no one, whether an expert in tax law or just a random member of the voting public, believes Trump, a man who lies so often that esteemed presidenti­al historian Bob Dallek called it "pathologic­al," is telling the truth about what he can expect from the tax reform. As The Post's Glenn Kessler recently demonstrat­ed, it could potentiall­y cut his tax bills by tens of millions of dollars.

Americans know this, and would like him to release his returns to verify it. A CNN poll released Tuesday found that a majority – 63 percent of those surveyed - believe the bill would enrich the Trump family. Almost three-quarters – 73 percent – agreed Trump should release his taxes for "public review."

Until Trump came along, every president since Richard Nixon has released his taxes so voters (and others) could review them. It has become a norm over the years. Beyond providing basic transparen­cy, this has also shown that the system works, that our president – or the people who would be president – are not taking advantage of their position to enrich themselves at the expense of the public.

But Trump broke with precedent during the campaign, repeatedly claiming that he was under audit. As noted above, Sanders reiterated this excuse this week.

It's hooey. There no rule banning anyone from releasing his tax returns while under audit. IRS rules require the president's and the vice president's tax returns to undergo "mandatory examinatio­ns," which is a fancy word for audit. In other words, the chances that Trump, given the likely complexity of his tax returns, won't be under audit at any point while president, are not high.

But the rot goes deeper than Trump. Republican­s in Congress could probably get a gander at Trump's tax returns if they so wanted, and could at least try to force Trump to show more transparen­cy on them for the good of the public.

As CNN's Jeanne Sahadi reported earlier this year, the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, or the Senate Finance Committee, or the Joint Committee on Taxation can request to confidenti­ally see the president's – or for that matter, anyone's – tax returns. That means Rep. Kevin Brady or Sen. Orrin Hatch could check into this for all of us. They could then share the results with their committee in a closed session. Or congressio­nal Republican­s could vote to release the returns to the full House or Senate, which would basically be another way to make the returns public.

"I can't come up with any good faith reason they wouldn't want to do this," Susan Hennessey, a fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n, and editor of the Lawfare blog, told me in an interview Wednesday after I reached out to her because she tweeted on the topic. "If there is nothing there, it would really be a favor to the White House because they could speak with credibilit­y on the issue and really validate White House talking points."

Instead, we are left with the sense congressio­nal Republican­s so wanted this unpopular tax reform legislatio­n to pass, they didn't want to look under the hood of Trump's tax returns and find out how he and his family benefit. Based on everything we know about Trump's business interests and the tax bill, it almost certainly would have made the task of passing this bill politicall­y much harder - if not impossible.

If this occurred in almost any other country, we would almost certainly call it legalized corruption. Instead, it's just another day in Trump's United States.

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