Trump's taxes released after years-long effort

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Donald TrumpImage source, Getty Images

By Kayla Epstein

BBC News, New York

Former President Donald Trump's tax returns have been released, ending a colourful six-year long battle to gain greater insights into his finances.

Ever since his entry into politics, critics have been keen to get Mr Trump - whose foundational pitch to voters had been that his money kept him immune to the special interests and bribes that make politicians dirty - to show what that wealth actually looked like.

He had steadfastly refused.

The returns stretch from 2015 through 2020, covering Mr Trump's candidacy and time in the White House.

Here's what it took to get to the disclosures made public on Friday.

Trump defies tradition

For decades, presidential candidates and officeholders have released their tax returns to the public in the interest of transparency and accountability.

The longstanding tradition is "mainly about trying to ensure the public that the president is operating free of conflicts and entanglements, and taxes are sort of the window into the financial soul of someone," said Steve Rosenthal, senior fellow at the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center.

But Mr Trump "crashed all the norms," Mr Rosenthal said, by refusing to release his tax returns as a candidate when he ran for office in the 2016 presidential election.

His fierce insistence on the matter invited scrutiny and speculation among critics that he had something to hide - could it be that Mr Trump was not as rich as he claimed, some asked, or that he had paid less tax than he should?

Supporters, meanwhile, backed his right to his privacy. After all, there is no legal requirement for a candidate to release their tax returns.

New York Times investigations

But over the course of his presidency and afterward, the public has gradually come to gain some insight into Mr Trump's personal tax history.

A great deal of those revelations come from a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation published by the New York Times in 2020, which obtained two decades of Mr Trump's tax returns from before his time in office. The documents gave unprecedented insight into Mr Trump's businesses.

They revealed he paid little to no federal income taxes over that period, and that Mr Trump had reported in his tax filings that his businesses lost significant amounts of money - despite his public boasts of financial success. In 2017, the Times reported, Trump paid just $750 (£623) in federal income tax despite being a billionaire.

The New York Times reporting "calls into question whether he's a billionaire, or is there some trick he uses to avoid pay taxes, legal or not," Mr Rosenthal said.

Taking the fight to the Supreme Court

Meanwhile, in Washington, Democrats began using their powers to conduct oversight of Mr Trump once they gained control of the House of Representatives in early 2019.

The Ways and Means Committee fought for three years to obtain Mr Trump's tax returns.

The fight went all the way to the US Supreme Court this year, and in November, the justices refused to block the release of Mr Trump's tax returns to the committee, thereby paving the way for their release.

On 21 December, the committee voted to release the tax returns they had obtained to the public, with the vote splitting along party lines.

Friday's release of the tax documents come mere days before Republicans are set to take over control of the House of Representatives, potentially signalling the end of any continued pursuit of looking into Mr Trump's finances for the foreseeable future.

It is possible that the US Senate, which is controlled by Democrats, could continue investigations.

Oversight or political game?

While Democrats have insisted that they are carrying out necessary oversight functions, Mr Trump and his Republican supporters in Congress have slammed the release of his tax returns.

In a statement to the Washington Post, Mr Trump's camp called the planned release an "unprecedented leak by lame-duck Democrats" and warned that if "this injustice can happen to President Trump, it can happen to all Americans without cause."

Representative Kevin Brady, a Texas Republican, warned that the disclosure "unleashes a dangerous new political weapon that reaches far beyond the former president."

But government ethics watchdogs said that requiring presidential candidates and public officials like Mr Trump was essential for maintaining the public's faith in their leaders and institutions.

"We can't just have voters getting cherry-picked information based on how amenable a candidate is to disclosing information," said Delaney Marsco, senior legal counsel for ethics at the Campaign Legal Center, a non-profit. "It's a bad system for the voter, it's a bad system for public trust."

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