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  • 2019-02-24 (xsd:date)
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  • Did N.J. Pass a Law Requiring President Trump to Release His Tax Returns? (en)
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  • One of the many controversial aspects of Donald Trump's political career has been his continued refusal to release his tax returns to the public, despite his having promised to do so multiple times (starting before he even announced his candidacy for the 2016 presidential campaign). Candidates for the office of President of the United States are required to file public financial disclosure reports with the Federal Election Commission (FEC). Although the FEC disclosure regulations don't specifically require candidates to make their tax returns public, every major party presidential nominee since 1976 has done so voluntarily (with the exception of Gerald Ford, who didn't release his actual tax returns in 1976 but did at least provide summary data about his federal taxes for the previous nine years). Some major party presidential nominees have released tax returns from multiple years, while others have released only a few years' worth, but Trump remains the only one in the last several decades who has not disclosed any tax returns at all. (A portion of Trump's 2005 federal tax return was leaked to the public.) Now, some individual states are making efforts to require presidential candidates to release their tax returns. On 21 February 2019, for example, the New Jersey state Senate passed a bill (S119) that would require candidates for President or Vice-President to provide the Division of Elections with copies of their federal income tax returns for the five most recent taxable years, and agree to disclose those returns to the public, as a condition of having their names listed on ballots. And, in order to preclude candidates from skirting that regulation through succeeding at write-in campaigns, that same bill would prohibit New Jersey electors from casting Electoral College ballots for any candidates for President or Vice-President who have not provided copies of their tax returns. Not surprisingly, reaction to the bill was divided along partisan lines: The New Jersey bill still needs to be passed by the state Assembly and signed by the governor before becoming law, and even then it would be subject to legal challenges. Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie vetoed a similar bill in 2017, declaring it to be clearly unconstitutional and a transparent political stunt masquerading as a bill. Likewise, the California state legislature passed a similar tax disclosure measure in 2017, but it was vetoed by Gov. Jerry Brown on the grounds that it may not be constitutional and would set a ‘slippery slope’ precedent. In 2018, the state Senates of Maryland and Rhode Island passed similar measures, but in both cases those bills failed to clear committee in the House. In 2019, the Judiciary Committees of the Hawaii state Senate and House of Representatives have both cleared bills requiring executive branch candidates to disclose their federal income tax returns, but neither body has put it to a floor vote yet. Even if the New Jersey bill were enacted, it is unlikely to sway the 2020 presidential election by denying President Trump a spot on the ballot, given that the state provides only 14 electoral votes and voted overwhelmingly Democratic in the 2016 election. But that handful of electoral votes could be the difference in a race as close as the one in 2000 was, and of course the effect would be magnified if other states enacted similar legislation prior to the election. (en)
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