Daily
Comment
Donald Trump Barely Pays Any Taxes: Will Anyone
Care?
By David
Remnick
September
28, 2020
https://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/donald-trump-tax-returns-irs-750-dollars
For years, Trump has advertised himself as a populist,
and yet pretends to be the champion of the working and middle
Three
enterprising reporters for the New York Times published a bombshell report Sunday
evening on Donald Trump’s financial life, making it clear that the President of
the United States is a desperate, cash-hungry grifter who paid no federal
income taxes at all in ten of the fifteen years leading up to his run for
office and has, in his frenzied quest to stay afloat, “propped up his sagging
bottom line” by exploiting his office.
Readers
learn that Trump, who inherited an immense fortune from his father, found
countless ways to squander his capital. And, like his old man, he also found
countless ways to short the government, including, according to the Times,
paying his daughter Ivanka legally dubious consulting fees. At the same time,
Trump has accumulated hundreds of millions of dollars in debt that he must soon
repay. He is an almost comically inept businessman; he is the sum of his debt
and bankruptcies. Nearly everything he touches turns to lead. Were it not for
his investments in Trump Tower, “The Apprentice,” and little else—and were it
not for the tireless ministrations of his accountants—he would likely be on his
back. The question is: Will anyone care?
Readers
inclined to think of Trump as a liar and threat to national well-being will
doubtless relish every detail in the Times report, not least because it
confirms, with documentary evidence, what so many have always suspected and
what reporters like Wayne Barrett and Tim O’Brien were writing decades ago:
that Trump is a shady and conniving operator whose practices betray contempt
for everyone from his contractors and employees to the federal government. The
Times article is hardly the first to provide evidence of Trump’s grift, but its
details are particularly numerous and galling. Moreover, it comes two days
before Trump’s first debate with Joe Biden and five weeks before the election.
Are there undecided voters in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida, Georgia, Wisconsin,
and beyond who will come upon this new information and finally say to
themselves, “This is too much. No more,” and not vote for Trump? It’s hard to
know.
The
President’s reaction to the story was entirely predictable: deny, deflect, and
cast blame elsewhere. Accompanied by his lawyer Rudy Giuliani, he came to the
White House press room shortly after the story dropped and attacked the Times
(“Everything was wrong; they are so bad”) and the Internal Revenue Service. The
Twitter storm saying that he was only playing by the rules of the game is sure
to follow.
Trump has
long been convinced, as he so memorably put it, four years ago, that “I could
stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any
voters, O.K.?” And it is probably true, that for many of his supporters, his
character—the dishonesty, the bigotry, the lying, the incompetence—is a given.
It’s “baked in,” as the Washington cliché has it. No matter what Trump does, no
matter what journalists go on revealing, he has, for the “base,” delivered on
his promise to upend “the system” and inflame the élites. Some supporters
believe that he has lowered their taxes (he hasn’t), defanged North Korea (he
hasn’t), and ironed out the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (he hasn’t). For the
Republican leadership, Trump remains tolerable because he appoints right-wing
judges and cossets corporate interests.
A reader of
the Times bombshell, then, can reasonably ask, how is this different from the
last bombshell? How is it different from the memoirs by Mary Trump and Michael
Cohen? From calling fallen U.S. soldiers “suckers” and “losers”? From all the
generals, intelligence officers, and government officials telling Bob Woodward
in “Rage” that Trump poses a threat to national security that is even more
grave than anyone imagines? Four years ago, Tony Schwartz, Trump’s ghostwriter
for “The Art of the Deal,” told The New Yorker’s Jane Mayer, “I genuinely
believe that if Trump wins and gets the nuclear codes there is an excellent
possibility it will lead to the end of civilization.” This might have seemed
overheated at the time—the result of a former collaborator’s guilty
conscience—and yet, in Woodward’s new book, we read of Secretary of Defense
James Mattis sleeping in his clothes at night for fear that he’ll have to race
back to the office because the needless war of words between two erratic
leaders, Trump and Kim Jong Un, might lead to an unspeakable conflagration.
The Times
story does not make for breezy reading, particularly for a reader without a
legal or accounting degree. This is hardly the fault of its authors. It is, by
nature, a knotty unloading of many years of murky tax schemes, byzantine
business deals, devious agreements with foreign partners, and complex legal
maneuvers. And yet the reporters, Russ Buettner, Susanne Craig, and Mike
McIntire, begin with a memorably simple first paragraph:
Donald J.
Trump paid $750 in federal income taxes the year he won the presidency. In his
first year in the White House, he paid another $750.
The second
paragraph is similarly terse: “He had paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the
previous 15 years—largely because he reported losing much more money than he
made.”
For years,
Trump has advertised himself as a sui generis brand of populist—the kind who
somehow has golden bathroom fixtures, mansions, and private aircraft—and yet
pretends to be the champion of the working and middle classes. Perhaps it is
also “baked in” that many of his admirers enjoy his sense of spectacle and
contradiction. It is hard to imagine, though, that every Trumpist—or, more
importantly, every undecided voter in the swing states—will relish hearing that
he paid, while in office, seven hundred and fifty dollars in federal income
taxes. That is a stark number. How many teachers, nurses, grocery clerks,
farmers, factory workers, bus drivers, truck drivers, and countless others will
find that acceptable? How many will fail to compare it to their own tax bill?
Trump knows
that he has certain factors on his side. As a demagogue, he is a master. He
also operates in a modern information universe in which long, complex
investigative articles are often ignored, distorted, or turned on their head.
On Sunday night, while Anderson Cooper was talking with a panel on CNN about
the details in the Times, Mark Levin, on Fox News, was interviewing Mike Pompeo
about the many-splendored wonders of Trump’s foreign policy. The Fox News Web
site responded to the Times article with the headline “Everything Was
Wrong”—that is, for millions of readers and viewers, the news was not the
evidence or the charge; the news was the dismissive reaction of the autocrat.
So who
cares? How much do these near-daily bombshells change anything? The election is
the only way to know. Trump, whose shame knows no limits, seems intent on
distorting that process as well.
David Remnick has been editor of The New Yorker since 1998 and a staff writer since 1992. He is the author of “The Bridge: The Life and Rise of Barack Obama.”
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