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Politics

Democrats outraged, Republicans silent over Trump taxes

September 28, 2020

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Donald Trump's debts were a "national security" issue, while Joe Biden's campaign criticized the US tax system. But high-ranking Republicans did not comment on the revelations.

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Donald Trump
Image: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

US Democrats went on the attack on Monday after a report by The New York Times (NYT) revealed that President Donald Trump paid little to no income tax in recent years and held large amounts of debt.

House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi told MSNBC the US public deserves to know to whom he owes money. If it involved different countries, she said, they could hold leverage over the president.

"To me this is a national security question," she said. "It's so strange that in 2017, the president paid $750 in federal taxes, and he paid over $300,000 in taxes to other countries."

Trump dismissed the NYT report as "fake news" and tweeted that he had paid "many millions of dollars in taxes" but was entitled to depreciation and tax credits and was "extremely under-leveraged" in terms of his debt and assets.

'Corrupt, unequal system'

Democrats blasted Trump's alleged tax evasion, but also took aim at the US tax system and the need for reform. 

Senator Elizabeth Warren, who ran in the Democratic primary on an anti-corruption message, said the NYT report was about "more than one man's personal tax scams."

"Donald Trump is a liar, a cheater, and a crooked businessman, yes. But he's also taking advantage of a broken, corrupt, and unequal system that's built for people like him to do what he did," Warren tweeted.

Jared Bernstein, one of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden's top economic advisers, said the report highlighted the need to simplify the tax code and make people like Trump pay their fair share.

"The vast majority of us pay taxes and get on with life. But the richer you are, the more tax lawyers you employ, the more complex you can make your holdings — all of this can, as the piece shows reduce your tax liability to zero," Bernstein said.

Read more: Joe Biden's economic plan: Will it convince American voters?

Republicans silent

While Trump defended himself and White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany described the report as a hit job, no major Republican leaders had addressed the revelations as of Monday. 

But Donald Trump Jr. took to broadcaster Fox News, a network that is often sympathetic to the president, to defend his father. 

"Of course the New York Times does this, they put out a selective picture of all of these things the day before the debate to try to give someone like Joe Biden an attack line," Donald Trump Jr. said, in reference to Tuesday's first debate between the president and Joe Biden.

DW analyst Peter Rölle-Dahl said the report could hurt the image and brand that Trump has built for himself of a successful businessman and a very skilled deal maker.

"It also confirms a lot of the rumors and the reporting that we actually have been seeing for the past couple of years that he may not have been as successful and wealthy as he claimed," Rölle-Dahl added.

But the revelations are not likely to dent support from his core base. DW Washington correspondent Carolina Chimoy said that while the report would damage any presidential candidate, the US remains a deeply polarized country and neither supporters nor opponents of the president are likely to change sides.

"The reaction of Donald Trump that was saying that this was totally fake news, this is his killing argument always and this is what his supporters believe," Chimoy said.

"He said the IRS is against him, the agency in charge of checking and reporting the federal taxes, that they are conspiring against him and his supporters do believe this," she added.

jcg/rt (dpa, Reuters)