Chattanooga Times Free Press

REMEMBER THE MASS HYSTERIA OVER TRUMP’S TAX RETURNS?

- ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATIO­N

On Dec. 30, as Washington shut down for the Christmas-New Year holidays and Republican­s prepared to take over the House of Representa­tives, Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee, in their final days of power, released copies of former President Donald Trump’s tax returns from 2015 through 2020.

Democratic lawmakers had fought for years to get the documents. They claimed they needed them not for partisan political reasons but in order to oversee the Internal Revenue Service more effectivel­y. The “legislativ­e purpose” rationale was always a joke; everyone knew that, once they had the returns, Democrats would release them to the public in hopes of setting off a wave of negative stories about Trump. And that is exactly what they did.

Now, with the returns public, it is worth recalling the years of anticipati­on and sensationa­l theorizing that defined the effort to pry loose Trump’s tax records.

There are many examples, but to take just one: In July 2018, Trump traveled to Helsinki, where he met with Russian President Vladimir Putin. In a joint news conference, Trump refused to accept the American intelligen­ce community’s assessment that Russia tried to interfere with the 2016 U.S. election. It was an appalling moment; investigat­ors ranging from former Republican House Intelligen­ce Committee chairman Devin Nunes to former Trump-Russia special counsel Robert Mueller had by that time concluded that Russia did, indeed, try to interfere. It is just a fact.

But of course Trump’s adversarie­s had taken the story another step to accuse Trump of colluding with Russia. That is what the Mueller investigat­ion was about. And after a long probe, Mueller could never establish that collusion took place, much less who might have been involved in it. Trump had been unfairly accused and was in a state of perpetual resentment about it.

That was the story behind the scene at the Trump-Putin newser. And in the way those things worked, it led to even more accusation­s of collusion: Putin must have something on Trump. And some of the most feverish theorizers believed the answer would lie in … the tax returns.

“The president has refused to release his tax returns, but these bizarre actions that he has taken, which seem to indicate that President Putin has something over President Trump, something personal, and it might be financial,” said Sen. Charles Schumer, then the Senate minority leader. “We need to see the tax returns.”

The day after the news conference, a top anti-Trump theorist, MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell, interviewe­d another anti Trump theorist, a writer named Tim O’Brien. O’Brien’s claim to fame is that 18 years ago, he wrote a book about Trump. Trump sued him, and as part of the litigation, O’Brien was allowed to see some of Trump’s tax returns. But he was not allowed to make public any of the details.

It was no surprise that O’Brien jumped on the Helsinki story with a column headlined, “A New Reason for Trump to Release His Tax Returns: Helsinki.” “Putin might have informatio­n about Trump’s finances that the president would rather keep under wraps,” O’Brien wrote. “Imagine if Trump were acquiescen­t to Putin because financial favors were exchanged, for example, for policy reversals involving the lifting of economic sanctions on Russia or supporting Russia’s military annexation of parts of Ukraine. In that context, Trump’s finances … touch on national security and the public interest.”

That evening, O’Donnell teased the O’Brien interview by saying “the reporter who has seen Donald Trump’s tax returns” would explain that “how much control Vladimir Putin actually has over Donald Trump might all be described in the Trump tax returns.” The theorizing went on from there.

That was then. Fast-forward to today. Trump’s tax returns are now public. And do they reveal a secret relationsh­ip with Putin? The short answer is no.

First, it’s important to remember that two years after that MSNBC program, in September 2020, the New York Times received a huge trove of Trump tax informatio­n and reported that it did not “reveal any previously unreported connection­s to Russia.” So now, the House Ways and Means Committee has released an enormous pile of tax returns, officially received from the IRS, and you can read one media report after another and never see the word “Russia” or the name “Putin.”

The returns show how Trump reported huge losses over many years, how one year he could pay $1 million in federal income tax and the next year $0. They show he had a lot of foreign bank accounts, including one in China — but not in Russia. They show Trump aggressive­ly used loopholes in the tax code created by Congress to benefit real-estate developers. They show, in short, that Trump did what he said he did, which was to use every possible benefit in the tax laws to minimize the amount of tax he had to pay.

But what about the big reveal? What about the secrets of Trump and Putin hidden deep inside the tax returns? What about the national security implicatio­ns of Trump’s relationsh­ip with Russia? What about all the fevered speculatio­n about Trump and Russia that would be confirmed?

Two words: Never mind.

 ?? ?? Byron York
Byron York

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