Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mnuchin rejects House panel subpoena

Request for Trump tax returns ‘lacks a legitimate legislativ­e purpose,’ he states

- JEFF STEIN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by JM Rieger of The Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Friday rejected a subpoena from House Democrats demanding copies of President Donald Trump’s tax returns, setting the stage for a court battle over the documents.

Mnuchin said the House Ways and Means Committee’s request “lacks a legitimate legislativ­e purpose,” citing the legal advice of the Department of Justice, and said he was not authorized to hand over the returns.

“We are unable to provide the requested informatio­n in response to the Committee’s subpoena,” Mnuchin wrote.

Last week, Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Mass., issued subpoenas that gave Mnuchin and Internal Revenue Service Commission­er Charles Rettig until 5 p.m. Friday to turn over Trump’s financial records. House Democrats have expressed confidence that the law requires the IRS to permit them to access the document.

The denial is expected to be one of the last steps before a federal court fight over Trump’s financial records, the source of significan­t speculatio­n since Trump refused to release them during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign in a break with decades of precedent. Neal is likely to sue the administra­tion in federal court to enforce the subpoenas, and Mnuchin told a Senate panel he was glad the judiciary would be responsibl­e for mediating the dispute between Congress and the administra­tion.

“A lawsuit is the next step. There’s no negotiatio­n here,” said Steve Rosenthal, an expert at the Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisa­n think tank.

The expected court battle is part of the broader clash between House Democrats and the White House over a range of oversight issues, as Democrats on the intelligen­ce and judiciary committees have pushed for many documents, particular­ly related to the special counsel investigat­ion, that the Trump administra­tion has refused to release.

Mnuchin and congressio­nal Republican­s have cited concerns over taxpayer privacy in denying the request, accusing Democrats of seeking to “weaponize” the IRS.

“This has a very big impact on every single taxpayer,” Mnuchin said. “This will go to the third branch of government to be resolved.”

Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, suggested in an interview that Mnuchin may be subject to a fine, a contempt vote, or even possibly jail time for ignoring what he said was the clear intent of the law.

Neal first demanded six years of Trump’s personal and business returns, from 2013 to 2018, in letters to the administra­tion last month.

Neal’s subpoenas demanded that for these years Mnuchin and Rettig turn over Trump’s individual income tax returns, all “administra­tive files” such as affidavits for those income tax returns, and income tax returns for a number of Trump’s business holdings such as the Donald J. Trump Revocable Trust, an umbrella entity that controls dozens of other businesses including the Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida.

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