Trump campaign defiant as tax questions swirl

Trump campaign defiant as tax questions swirl

October 04, 2016
A journalist records a video from screen as Republican US presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks during the first presidential debate with US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York, in this file photo. — Reuters
A journalist records a video from screen as Republican US presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks during the first presidential debate with US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York, in this file photo. — Reuters

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s campaign remained defiant on Monday as the Republican presidential candidate dodged questions that he may have paid no income tax for nearly 20 years.

Without admitting fault, Trump’s top allies praised their candidate’s business acumen following a bombshell report in The New York Times focusing on the real estate mogul’s massive 1995 losses and his clever use of the US tax code.

The report comes as Trump and his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, have just five more weeks of campaigning ahead of the November 8 presidential election.

If true, the report is proof of the tycoon’s “absolute genius,” said former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, a key Trump surrogate. “You have an obligation when you run a business to maximize the profits and if there is a tax law that says I can deduct this, you deduct it,” Giuliani told ABC News Sunday.

Bernie Sanders, Clinton’s vanquished Democratic presidential primary foe who now supports her, had a different view.

“If everybody in this country was a ‘genius,’” he told ABC, “we would not have a country.”

According to documents obtained by The New York Times, Trump declared a loss of nearly $1 billion on his 1995 income tax return, enabling him to legally avoid paying taxes for almost two decades.

Trump has refused to release his income tax returns, something US presidential candidates have done for four decades.

He has said the returns will be released after an ongoing federal tax authority audit is complete. Tax officials however say he is free to release the documents at any time.

While not admitting to paying little or nothing in taxes, Trump boasted on Twitter that he was an expert on tax law.

“I know our complex tax laws better than anyone who has ever run for president and am the only one who can fix them,” he wrote after The New York Times story appeared.

In the first presidential debate on September 26 Clinton suggested that Trump is hiding “something terrible” by failing to produce his tax returns, and suggested that he had not paid any federal income tax.

Trump’s answer: “That makes me smart.”

Trump used high-pressure tactics to convince officials in New York and elsewhere to give him tax breaks and special favorable conditions in his deals, according to numerous reports.

He also reportedly took massive — but legal — tax breaks on failing businesses, earning millions while shareholders and investors swallowed the losses and contractors went unpaid.

Democratic Senate minority leader Harry Reid called Trump a “billion-dollar loser,” and urged lawmakers to pass a bill mandating candidates to release their tax returns.

The tax scandal follows a terrible week for the bombastic billionaire, Clinton’s campaign manager Robby Mook said on Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

“Trump has had a really bad week: He failed in the debate,” Mook said, barely suppressing his glee.

“He has spun out of control subsequent to that,” he added, highlighting Trump’s pre-dawn Friday Twitter tirade against 1996 Miss Universe Alicia Machado.

Clinton mentioned during the debate that Trump — who owned the beauty pageant at the time — derided Machado as “Miss Piggy” when she gained weight, and “Miss Housekeeping” because of her Venezuelan heritage.

Clinton pointed to Trump’s anti-Machado tweets as proof that he is “temperamentally unfit” for the presidency.

In a boost for Clinton, an ABC News/Washington Post poll out Sunday said 53 percent of Americans saw Clinton as the debate winner, compared to 18 percent for Trump.

Nearly half of respondents said that Trump got facts wrong, and a third that he lied outright, while his unpopularity rating grew to 64 percent against 53 percent for Clinton.

The ex-secretary of state also received an endorsement from NBA basketball superstar LeBron James, who is a native of Ohio, a pivotal state in the upcoming election.

On Sunday Clinton campaigned in Charlotte, in the key state of North Carolina, where she focused on racism and gun violence.

Clinton said that as a grandmother of two she worries about safety amid America’s epidemic of gun violence.

But she added that because her grandchildren are white, “my worries are not the same as black grandmothers’.”

Clinton has frequently acknowledged the complaints of black Americans who accuse mainly white police departments of racism, brutality and disproportionate use of force.

Protests erupted in Charlotte over the September 20 killing of Keith Lamont Scott by police trying to serve an arrest warrant on a different person.


October 04, 2016
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