The Guardian (USA)

California governor signs law that would require Trump to release tax returns

- Associated Press

California’s governor has signed a law requiring presidenti­al candidates to release their tax returns before they can be listed on the state’s primary ballot.

The measure signed Tuesday by the Democratic governor Gavin Newsom is aimed at Donald Trump, who has refused to release his tax returns. Trump has said his returns are being audited.

The action further escalates California’s feud with the president.

The law will likely face legal action and Trump could avoid the requiremen­t by deciding not to compete in California’s primary. With no credible GOP challenger at this point, he likely won’t need California’s delegates to win the Republican nomination.

The new law requires candidates for president and governor to submit their tax returns to California’s secretary of state at least 98 days before the primary. The returns will then be posted online.

“As one of the largest economies in the world and home to one in nine Americans eligible to vote, California has a special responsibi­lity to require this informatio­n of presidenti­al and gubernator­ial candidates,” Newsom said.

“These are extraordin­ary times and states have a legal and moral duty to do everything in their power to ensure leaders seeking the highest offices meet minimal standards, and to restore public confidence.”

The Trump campaign called the bill “unconstitu­tional”, saying there were good reasons why California’s former Democratic governor Jerry Brown vetoed a similar proposal last year.

“What’s next, five years of health records?” said Tim Murtaugh, communicat­ions director for Trump’s campaign.

Newsom’s message to state lawmakers on Tuesday said the law is constituti­onal because “the United States constituti­on grants states the authority to determine how their electors are chosen”.

But Murtaugh said the law violates first amendment right of associatio­n “since California can’t tell political parties which candidates their members can or cannot vote for in a primary election”.

While states have authority over how candidates can access the ballot, the US constituti­on lays out a limited set of qualificat­ions someone needs to meet to run for president, said Rick Hasen, a professor specializi­ng in election law at the University of California Irvine School of Law. Those qualificat­ions include the requiremen­t that presidenti­al candidates be over age 35.

The US supreme court has previously stopped state efforts to add requiremen­ts on congressio­nal candidates through ballot access rules.

New York has passed a law giving congressio­nal committees access to Trump’s state tax returns. But efforts to pry loose his tax returns have floundered in other states.

Although California’s law is aimed at Trump, it would apply to all presidenti­al contenders and candidates for governor.

The major Democratic 2020 contenders have already released tax returns for roughly the past decade. Trump has bucked decades of precedent by refusing to release his. Tax returns show income, charitable giving and business dealings, all of which Democratic state lawmakers say voters are entitled to know about.

Candidates will be required to submit tax returns for the most recent five years to California’s secretary of state at least 98 days before the primary. They will then be posed online for the public to view, with certain personal informatio­n redacted.

California is holding next year’s primary on 3 March, known as Super Tuesday because of the high number of states with nominating contests that day.

 ??  ?? Protestors participat­e in the Tax March in Los Angeles. Photograph: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images
Protestors participat­e in the Tax March in Los Angeles. Photograph: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images

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