Monday, 25 Nov 2024

Judge dismisses Trump?s latest bid to hide tax returns from House committee

Judge dismisses Trump’s latest bid to hide tax returns from House committee


Judge dismisses Trump?s latest bid to hide tax returns from House committee
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A federal judge has dismissed Donald Trump's latest effort to hide his tax returns from a House of Representatives committee, ruling that Congress' legislative interest outweighed any deference Trump should receive as a former president.

The US district judge Trevor McFadden said in his ruling that Trump was "wrong on the law" in seeking to block the House Ways and Means Committee from obtaining his tax returns.

McFadden also said it was within the power of the committee's chairman to publish the returns if he saw fit.

Trump was the first president in 40 years to not release his tax returns as he aimed to keep secret the details of his wealth and the activities of his family company, the Trump Organization.

The committee sued in 2019 to force disclosure of the tax returns and the dispute lingers nearly 11 months after Trump left office.

Patrick Strawbridge, a lawyer for Trump, told McFadden last month the committee had no legitimate reason to see the tax returns and had asked for them in the hope of uncovering information that could hurt Trump politically.

House Democrats have said they need Trump's tax returns to see if the Internal Revenue Service is properly auditing presidential returns in general and to assess whether new legislation is needed.

McFadden, a Trump appointee, said the committee would be able to accomplish its stated objective without publishing the returns.

He cautioned the panel's Democratic chairman, Representative Richard Neal, that while he has the right to do so, "anyone can see that publishing confidential tax information of a political rival is the type of move that will return to plague the inventor".

In a statement, Neal said the ruling "is no surprise" and that "the law is clearly on the committee's side".

Trump can still appeal the case. McFadden has put his ruling on hold for 14 days, allowing time for such an appeal.

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