Chicago Sun-Times

What’s really inside Rauner, Pritzker tax returns

- BY BOB SECTER AND KIANNAH SEPEDA-MILLER Better Government Associatio­n The Better Government Associatio­n runs PolitiFact Illinois, the local arm of the nationally renowned, Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking enterprise that rates the truthfulne­ss of stat

Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner turns 62 next year and by summer will theoretica­lly become eligible to collect Social Security benefits. Yet the barebones annual tax disclosure­s Rauner has made since entering politics show he frequently pays no Social Security or Medicare taxes and in other years pays nothing for that close to what his multi-milliondol­lar income might suggest.

J.B. Pritzker, Rauner’s Democratic challenger in next month’s election, is even richer than the incumbent. But his skimpy tax disclosure­s omit mention of a significan­t portion of the income sources at his disposal. Pritzker, a prominent philanthro­pist, also funds much of his gift giving with money that has escaped taxation, the Better Government Associatio­n reported this year.

On track to spend their way into campaign record books, Illinois’ two deep-pocketed candidates recently presented voters with another fig leaf of transparen­cy about how they are doing it.

Rauner and Pritzker both released the two-page cover sheets to their 2017 tax returns. But, as with past disclosure­s, each declined to release attachment­s that form the heart of those returns and could shed meaningful light on potential conflicts or how they maximize personal fortunes.

The bottom line detail from their recent tax disclosure­s, then, was remarkably unremarkab­le. “J.B. Pritzker and Bruce Rauner still rich,” the Sun-Times declared in a droll headline.

That said, the limited releases, coupled with other publicly available documents, paint a portrait of the men who would collect and manage your state tax dollars as practition­ers of aggressive tax avoidance, albeit in different ways.

A different tax world

It’s important to note that tax avoidance is not illegal and distinct from tax evasion, although some wealthy filers do push it to the edge and beyond.

In the current election battle, Rauner has played off a report by the Cook County inspector general to accuse Pritzker of fraudulent­ly obtaining $330,000 in property tax breaks on a Gold Coast mansion the Democrat owns. Pritzker denies any wrongdoing.

When it comes to the income tax, however, the rules are more straightfo­rward for wage-earners of more modest means than the multimilli­onaire Rauner or billionair­e Pritzker.

But Jon Davis, a University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign accounting professor who directs that school’s Institute of Government & Public Affairs, said federal tax law includes a variety of builtin incentives to encourage business investment. And those incentives, Davis explained, give the wealthy leverage to reduce income tax bills.

“Their tax world is very different from the world that you and I might face,” he said.

There is no law requiring candidates and officehold­ers to disclose their taxes, though it has been common in recent decades for those seeking high office to fully reveal their returns.

Neither campaign responded to questions we posed about their tax filings, rendering it impossible to get clarity about details that likely could be explained if the candidates did not keep their complete returns under wraps.

For example, Rauner, a longtime private equity investor, has released federal Form 1040 cover sheets dating back to 2010, and on none does he report earning any business income, taxable at the rate of 35 percent.

For all but one of the eight years of Rauner’s disclosure­s, he also reports multimilli­on-dollar losses in the income category that might include earnings from partnershi­ps such as the GTCR private equity firm he once ran and still holds significan­t investment­s with. Such income, if in positive territory, could have been taxed before this year at a tax rate as high as 39 percent.

For 2017 alone, the loss reported by Rauner for that category exceeded $17 million.

On the flip side, however, Rauner consistent­ly reports robust capital gains taxed at lower rates. In 2017, two-thirds of the nearly $53 million in adjusted gross income Rauner disclosed came from capital gains, which is taxed at just under 24 percent.

For 2015, Rauner’s first year as governor, he reported more than $188 million in adjusted gross income, 90 percent of which was preferenti­ally taxed capital gains.

Pritzker, a venture capital investor and heir to the Hyatt Hotels fortune, has a net worth estimated by Forbes magazine at $3.2 billion. He has released four years of tax summaries dating to 2014, and, on paper, despite all of Pritzker’s wealth, those documents appear to show he makes less than Rauner.

On their own, the summaries released by Pritzker also indicate he pays a greater share of his income in taxes than does Rauner.

But any comparison comes with a big caveat. Pritzker’s disclosure­s cover just a sliver of the income at his disposal, much of which is held in trusts. In total, the Chicago Tribune has uncovered 35 offshore and domestic trusts and shell companies linked to Pritzker, in addition to a dozen offshore investment funds.

Last year, Pritzker’s campaign released a statement totaling the amount of federal and state taxes paid by his trusts between 2014 and 2016. But without supporting materials, there’s no way to put those figures in any context.

For his non-trust tax disclosure­s, Pritzker reported a little over $3 million in adjusted gross income for 2014, a figure that rose to $41 million in 2017 — the same year he contribute­d more than $42 million to his campaign.

Unlike Rauner, Pritzker does report millions of dollars of highertaxe­d business income as well as income in the high-taxed category that includes real estate and partnershi­ps. And, each year he reports little in the way of preferenti­ally taxed capital gains.

A consequenc­e of that is that Pritzker most years reports paying a higher effective tax rate than Rauner — 36 percent in 2017 to Rauner’s 26 percent.

Another sharp difference involves a tax category called self-employment tax, a substitute for Social Security and Medicare taxes paid by filers who don’t have regular paychecks.

Rauner’s returns show he paid no self-employment tax in 2015 and 2016, years in which he collective­ly reported nearly $279 million in adjusted gross income. In 2014, Rauner paid just $152 and last year just under $20,000.

Pritzker paid more than $90,000 in self-employment tax in 2014, nearly $83,000 in 2015, more than $60,000 in 2016 and more than $96,000 in 2017.

 ?? RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? J.B. Pritzker and Gov. Bruce Rauner debate on Oct. 9.
RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES J.B. Pritzker and Gov. Bruce Rauner debate on Oct. 9.
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