The Day

Democrats give Trump tax deadline

- By ANDREW TAYLOR

Washington — A top House Democrat on Saturday ratcheted up his demand for access to President Donald Trump’s tax returns, telling the IRS that the law clearly gives Congress a right to them. The government’s failure to respond by an April 23 deadline could send the dispute into federal court.

Trump’s treasury chief, who oversees the IRS, cited “complicate­d legal issues” and bemoaned “an arbitrary deadline” set by Congress, while saying he would answer in that time frame.

A new letter by Rep. Richard Neal, the House Ways and Means Committee chairman, comes after the Trump administra­tion asked for more time to consider his initial request last week. Neal had requested six years of Trump’s personal and business tax returns.

Neal, D-Mass., argues that a 1920era law saying the IRS “shall furnish” any tax return requested by Congress “is unambiguou­s and raises no complicate­d legal issues” and that the Treasury Department’s objections lack merit.

The letter to IRS Commission­er Charles Rettig is the latest exchange in a tug of war over Trump’s returns, which would give lawmakers far greater insight into the president’s business dealings and potential conflicts of interest as it exercises its oversight role.

Asked about the letter Saturday, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said he would respond to it within the new deadline set by Neal but he did not promise to produce Trump’s tax returns by that time. Mnuchin is the Cabinet secretary that oversees the IRS.

Mnuchin took issue with Neal’s characteri­zation of the dispute as a straightfo­rward issue in light of the law governing the matter.

“These are complicate­d legal issues and I think it is more important to the American taxpayers that we get this right than we hit an arbitrary deadline,” Mnuchin told reporters. “I would just emphasize this is a decision that has enormous precedence in terms of potentiall­y weaponizin­g the IRS.”

Mnuchin said that Treasury Department lawyers have been working “diligently” to research the issues involved and have been in contact with Justice Department attorneys. But he said he has not personally discussed the issue with Attorney General William Barr.

Mnuchin said he thought Neal was just picking an arbitrary deadline and he refused to speculate how the administra­tion would proceed if the issue goes to court.

Trump declined to provide his tax informatio­n as a candidate in 2016 and as president, something party nominees have traditiona­lly done in the name of transparen­cy. By withholdin­g his tax returns, Trump has not followed the standard followed by presidents since Richard Nixon started the practice in 1969.

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