Trump’s tax troubles couldn’t have come at a
worse time
And Biden's team is lapping it up.
By NATASHA
KORECKI and NANCY COOK
09/28/2020
07:51 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/09/28/trump-tax-troubles-elections-422780
The
explosive news that President Donald Trump paid no federal income taxes for a
decade — and only $750 the year he ran for office and his first year in the
White House — hands Joe Biden a powerful cudgel just in time for the first
presidential debate on Tuesday.
Trump was
expected to spend part of the debate laying into Biden’s son, Hunter, accusing
him of making millions off of foreign business while his father was vice
president.
But Biden
allies and aides say the fact that Trump didn’t pay taxes for years, and to
this day remains at loggerheads with the IRS over a $73 million refund he
received, would obliterate any attempt at framing Biden and his family as
creatures of the D.C. swamp.
The report
by The New York Times also showed Trump will owe money on loans of more than
$400 million over the next four years, when he’d still be in office if he wins
reelection.
“It’s hard
to even have words for that argument,” Delaware Sen. Chris Coons said of
Trump’s attempts to cast Hunter Biden as milking the system when his father was
vice president. “This makes it abundantly clear that the person who most
benefited from the tax system and gaming it for his own benefit was our
president.”
Trump aides
and allies dismissed the Times report as more old news: Democrats, they said,
have been crying foul over his tax returns since 2016. Even the worst newspaper
story, Inspector General report or impeachment hearing does nothing to dent his
image, at least among his core fans, his brain trust has long argued.
The
president’s top aides made the same hopeful assessment on Monday, saying his
base will shrug off the news as they have so many other seemingly damaging
stories. Besides, Trump already acknowledged paying little federal income tax
during a 2016 debate against Hillary Clinton, one adviser said.
“Everything
is baked in” with his supporters already, said one former senior administration
official still who remains plugged in with Trump’s inner circle.
The person
noted how stable polls have remained over the last several weeks: Nine out of
10 voters have told pollsters they’ve already made up their minds about
supporting a candidate, according to a recent ABC News/Washington Post poll.
Biden's
campaign pounces
Biden’s
advisers went on cable TV Monday to amplify the Times bombshell. And the
campaign immediately cut a 30-second digital ad comparing Trump’s $750 tax bill
to the thousands in taxes paid by nurses, teachers and construction workers.
They also released a Trump tax “calculator” that allows people to compare what
they paid in taxes with what Trump did.
Democratic
presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden gives a speech on the
Supreme Court at The Queen Theater in Wilmington, Del., Sunday, Sept. 27, 2020.
| AP Photo/Andrew Harnik
Biden’s
campaign has been pushing “Park Avenue vs. Scranton” messaging in recent weeks
— the idea that Trump gives tax breaks to the wealthy and was set up for life
by a wealthy father, while Biden grew up in an average middle-class household.
“You have
in Donald Trump a president who spends his time thinking about how he can work
his way out of paying taxes, of meeting the obligation that every other working
person in this country meets every year,” Deputy Campaign Manager Kate
Bedingfield said on CNN Sunday. “With Joe Biden, you have somebody who has a
completely different perspective on what it means to be a working family in
this country.”
Biden has
released two decades worth of income taxes — although he has not yet released
his 2019 tax returns. He hasn’t personally said anything about the Times
report, though that’s unlikely to last once the two meet face-to-face on the
debate stage.
Trump's
dissonant response
Trump and
his aides spent the day vacillating between opposing messages — that he paid
millions of dollars in taxes and that his low tax bill was the mark of a smart
businessman.
Trump
himself seemed less blasé about the tax exposé than his aides, who have
weathered crisis after crisis in this White House and become relatively inured
it all.
The
president blasted the Times story three times on Twitter Monday morning. Unlike
his aides and allies, he argued that he had paid “many millions of dollars in
taxes but was entitled, like everyone else, to depreciation & tax credits.”
He also falsely claimed he was the first president in history to give up his
presidential salary.
Trump
campaign’s top spokesperson Tim Murtaugh called the Times story “inaccurate as
the President has paid tens of millions of dollars in taxes.
“This is a
big nothingburger and a pre-debate attack intended solely to help Joe Biden,”
Murtaugh said. “It ought to be reported as an in-kind contribution to the Biden
campaign. Predictably, the media chooses to focus on this instead of asking why
Hunter Biden received a $3.5 million wire transfer from the Putin-connected
billionaire wife of the former mayor of Moscow while his father was the sitting
vice president.”
Many
Republicans viewed the back-and-forth as the latest instance of Trump being
diverted from any kind of cohesive campaign message, whether it’s attacking
Biden, making the case for his Supreme Court pick or courting voters in
battleground states. It’s been a constant struggle for the GOP the last several
months — let alone the past several years — but the problem is pronounced by
the dwindling number of days until the election.
Just as
polls have shown Biden with a steady lead in the presidential race, Trump’s
core base mostly remains with him — even amid the coronavirus outbreak,
recession and ongoing social unrest.
"The
problem is he’s just going to lie about it, deny it and call it fake
news," Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.), a top Biden surrogate, said of the
tax issue. "That is the challenge."
Still,
while both sides agreed a polarized electorate will retreat to their corners,
they also said the fight is over the small slice of persuadable voters now
tuning in.
“Trump will
never lose a true believer, but he will lose the election," said Anthony
Scaramucci, the short-lived former White House communications director.
"It always comes down to death and taxes, and not paying taxes will be the
death of his political career.”
Daniel
Lippman and Meridith McGraw contributed reporting.
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