Los Angeles Times

What Trump’s taxes may reveal

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Re “Trump can’t be compelled to release his tax returns,” Aug. 9

Law professors John Yoo and Robert Delahunty are on solid constituti­onal ground in arguing that states cannot create new qualificat­ions for federal office, such as California’s new law requiring presidenti­al candidates to disclose five years of tax returns to appear on the primary ballot. This law seems to target a recalcitra­nt President Trump.

But they go on to say, “Democrats have long sought to force the disclosure of his tax returns, and Democrats in the House are suing the IRS to compel their release.”

Yes and rightly so, as the federal tax code states that upon the written request of the chairman of the House Ways and Means committee, the IRS shall deliver the tax returns of any person. Our system of separation of powers gives Congress the oversight authority and duty to investigat­e malfeasanc­e in the office of the president.

The president’s tax returns would be an integral element of such an investigat­ion. Nate Tucker

Costa Mesa

I tend to agree with Yoo and Delahunty when they state that California’s new tax-return law will likely fail in the courts. However, the case is valuable in exposing a flaw in our Constituti­on.

The Constituti­on’s now-widely known Emoluments Clause cannot be enforced until we the people have access to the president’s financial records. Yoo and Delahunty criticize California’s law as partisan, but the reality is that the opposition to it is equally partisan, and a Republican-run Senate will never enforce the Emoluments Clause.

This raises the question: If the federal government will not uphold the Constituti­on, can the states take action? Nothing in the California law states that only Republican­s must release their tax returns, so in the long run, we the people benefit from increased transparen­cy.

Ideally, the U.S. Supreme Court will strike down California’s law, but only if a federal law replaces it and makes taxreturn disclosure consistent for the whole country. Bill Gervasi

Ladera Ranch

To my former law school professor Yoo, I ask: Why isn’t the entire primary system unconstitu­tional?

What authority did the state of California have 110 years ago to mandate that political parties choose their nominees through the ballot box rather than through caucus, convention or whatever other means such party should choose?

If the state has the authority to override a private club’s ability to choose its nominees, then it would seem to me that a tax return disclosure requiremen­t hardly “disrupts Republican­s’ associatio­nal rights” any more than the primary system itself does. Mike Heath

Venice

Yoo and Delahunty argue that the California law requiring disclosure of five years of tax returns to qualify for the primary ballot is unconstitu­tional because, among other things, it establishe­s an additional requiremen­t to run for the presidency.

I’m not convinced. For one thing, some states for years have had the requiremen­t of a filing fee; isn’t that “additional”?

For another, the law doesn’t preclude a candidate from running as a write-in candidate. Rick Dunn

San Diego

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