Six key findings from the New York Times' Trump
taxes bombshell
- Trump pays little tax
- A long audit – with potentially hefty costs
- Ivanka helps reduce Trump’s tax burden
- Trump businesses lose money
- Trump has a big bill to pay
- Trump businesses profit from his presidency
The president pays little, faces hefty audit costs as
well as loans coming due soon, and Ivanka is not in the clear
Report: NYT
publishes Trump tax returns
Guardian
staff
Mon 28 Sep
2020 00.04 BSTLast modified on Mon 28 Sep 2020 00.25 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/27/new-york-times-trump-tax-returns-key-findings
The
publication of Donald Trump’s records by the New York Times is one of the
biggest bombshells to hit an unprecedented 2020 election campaign already been
hit by a litany of scandals, a bitter fight over a supreme court nomination and
a pandemic in which 7m Americans have been infected and more than 200,000 have
died, during a bungled federal response.
The
president’s taxes have long been the great white whale of political reporters
in America as well as prosecutors keen to find evidence of wrongdoing.
Democrats too were eager to seize on them as a potentially game-changing stick
with which to beat the Trump campaign.
The Times,
with its shock report published on Sunday evening, appears to have won the
race. Its publication of details from the documents could send shock waves
through the campaign as the key first debate between Trump and challenger Joe
Biden looms, in Ohio on Tuesday night.
Here are
some of its key findings:
Trump pays little tax
The Times
reported that Trump paid no federal income taxes in 11 of 18 years the newspaper
looked at. In 2017, after he became president, his tax bill was only $750. This
is despite Trump often railing against taxes in America and ushering through a
series of tax cuts that critics say mostly helps the rich and big business.
Barack Obama and George W Bush each regularly
paid more than $100,000 a year
The Times
said of Trump’s immediate predecessors: “Barack Obama and George W Bush each
regularly paid more than $100,000 a year.”
A long audit – with potentially hefty costs
Trump is
involved in a decade-long audit with the Internal Revenue Service over a $72.9m
tax refund he claimed, and received, after declaring huge losses. A ruling
against him could cost him more than $100m, the Times reported.
It added:
“In 2011, the IRS began an audit reviewing the legitimacy of the refund. Almost
a decade later, the case remains unresolved, for unknown reasons, and could
ultimately end up in federal court, where it could become a matter of public
record.”
Ivanka helps reduce Trump’s tax burden
The
president’s oldest daughter, while working as an employee of the Trump
Organization, appears to have received “consulting fees” that helped reduce the
family’s tax bill, the Times said. Such a revelation might further tarnish the
reputation of Ivanka, a senior White House adviser married to another, Jared
Kushner, who often tries to distance herself from some of the biggest scandals
of her father’s administration. She is widely believed to harbor political
ambitions of her own after Trump leaves office.
The Times
reported: “Trump’s private records show that his company once paid $747,622 in
fees to an unnamed consultant for hotel projects in Hawaii and Vancouver,
British Columbia. Ivanka Trump’s public disclosure forms – which she filed when
joining the White House staff in 2017 – show that she had received an identical
amount through a consulting company she co-owned.”
His lenders could be placed in the
unprecedented position of weighing whether to foreclose on a sitting president
Trump businesses lose money
The Times
was brutal in its assessment of Trump’s businesses, about which he often boasts
and on the back of which he sought to promote a carefully curated image as a
master businessman. “Trump’s core enterprises – from his constellation of golf
courses to his conservative-magnet hotel in Washington – report losing
millions, if not tens of millions, of dollars year after year,” the newspaper
said.
It detailed
how since 2000, Trump has reported losing more than $315m at his golf courses,
with much of that coming from Trump National Doral in Florida. His Washington
hotel, which opened in 2016 and has been the subject of much speculation regarding
federal ethics laws, has lost more than $55m.
Trump has a big bill to pay
The
newspaper also reported that Trump is facing a major financial bill, as within
the next four years, hundreds of millions of dollars in loans will come due.
The paper said Trump is personally responsible for many of those obligations.
The paper
reported: “In the 1990s, Mr Trump nearly ruined himself by personally
guaranteeing hundreds of millions of dollars in loans, and he has since said
that he regretted doing so. But he has taken the same step again, his tax
records show. He appears to be responsible for loans totaling $421m, most of
which is coming due within four years.”
In a blunt
summary of the problem, the Times speculated: “Should he win re-election, his
lenders could be placed in the unprecedented position of weighing whether to
foreclose on a sitting president.”
Trump businesses profit from his presidency
The issue
of whether Trump’s businesses benefit from his position in the White House has
been one of the long-running themes of reporting on the Trump presidency. The
global nature of the Trump Organization and its portfolio of hotels, resorts
and other interests has left Trump open to speculation that lobbyists, business
leaders and foreign powers could spend money in them to try and peddle
influence in the US.
The Times
report on his tax returns is clear that Trump’s businesses have indeed
benefited from his political career.
“Since he
became a leading presidential candidate, he has received large amounts of money
from lobbyists, politicians and foreign officials who pay to stay at his
properties or join his clubs,” the newspaper reported, before detailing monies
paid at his Mar-a-Largo resort in Florida, his Washington hotel and other
locations.
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