Key takeaways from six years of Donald Trump’s federal tax returns
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Six years of Donald Trump’s
federal tax returns released on Friday show the former president paid very
little in federal income taxes the first and last year of his presidency,
claiming huge losses that helped limit his tax bill, among other revelations.
The returns, long shrouded in
secrecy, were released to the public on Friday by the House Ways and Means
Committee, the culmination of a battle over their disclosure that went to the
Supreme Court.
They confirm a report issued from
the Joint Committee on Taxation that Trump claimed large losses before and
throughout his presidency that he carried forward to reduce or practically
eliminate his tax burden.
For example, his returns show
that he carried forward a $105 million loss in 2015 and $73 million in 2016.
The thousands of pages of
documents from the former president’s personal and business federal tax returns
– which spanned the years 2015 through 2020 – provide a complex web of raw data
about Trump’s finances, offering up many questions about his wealth and income
that could be pursued both by auditors and Trump’s political opponents.
Here are key takeaways from the
documents reviewed by CNN:
Trump’s returns also show the
former president made several claims that auditors may question.
The Joint Committee on Taxation,
which reviewed the returns, flagged that Trump claimed a large number of
questionable items on his tax returns, including eyebrow-raising amounts of
interest he claims to have received from loans to his children that the
bipartisan committee said could indicate Trump was disguising gifts.
The JCT argued that an auditor
should investigate the loan agreements Trump made with his children, including
the interest rates.
If the interest Trump claims to
have charged his children was not at market rate, for example, it could be
considered a gift for tax purposes, requiring him to pay a higher tax rate on
the money.
In each year of his presidency,
for example, Trump claimed he received exactly $18,000 in interest on a loan he
said he gave his daughter Ivanka Trump and $8,715 in interest from his son
Donald Trump, Jr.. In 2017 to 2019, Trump said he received exactly $24,000 from
his son Eric Trump, and Eric paid him $19,605 in interest in 2020.
That raises the question of
whether “the loans were bona fide arm’s length transactions, or whether the
transfers were disguised gifts that could trigger gift tax and a disallowance
of interest deductions by the related borrowers,” the JCT said in its report.
“It’s unusual to have interest in
round numbers – very rare,” said Martin Sheil, former supervisory special agent
for IRS’ Criminal Investigation unit.
“An auditor would want to see payments, loan agreements and interest rates.”
There are also questions about
Trump’s returns listing an identical amount of company expenses and income.
For example, in 2017, Trump
claimed his business DJT Aerospace LLC, which operates Trump’s personal
helicopter, claimed $42,965 in income.
It also claimed the exact same
amount – $42,965 – in expenses. In other words, every single dollar – to the
dollar – that the company earned was negated by the company’s expenses, such as
payroll, fuel and other items. That left the company with zero income – and
nothing to tax.
“Total expenses equaling total
income is a statistical impossibility,” said Shiel, who added that the figures
are not evidence something illegal was done. “It just doesn’t happen.”
The JCT in its report raised
several similar questions. For example, it noted IRS auditors were
investigating multiple so-called large unusual questionable items on Trump’s
tax returns for which the regulator wanted Trump to provide supporting evidence
to back up his claims.
The returns were obtained by the
Democratic-run Ways and Means Committee only a few weeks ago after a protracted
legal battle that lasted nearly four years.
The committee voted last week to
release the tax returns, but their release was delayed to redact sensitive
personal information like Social Security numbers.
The release of the tax returns
follows a pursuit for the documents that had typically been made public
voluntarily by past US presidents.
Trump and his legal team
continuously sought to keep his returns secret, arguing that Congress had never
wielded its legislative powers to demand a president’s tax returns, which Trump
said could have far-reaching implications.
“The Democrats should have never
done it, the Supreme Court should have never approved it, and it’s going to
lead to horrible things for so many people,” Trump said in a statement
following the release.
“The ‘Trump’ tax returns once
again show how proudly successful I have been and how I have been able to use
depreciation and various other tax deductions as an incentive for creating
thousands of jobs and magnificent structures and enterprises.”
Other Republicans also criticized
Democrats’ efforts in pursuit of the tax returns as political, with Texas Rep.
Kevin Brady – the committee’s top conservative – saying the release would
amount to “a dangerous new political weapon that reaches far beyond the former
president and overturns decades of privacy protections for average Americans
that have existed since the Watergate reform.”
During the committee’s closed-door meeting last week, Republicans warned that the release of Trump’s tax returns by Democrats could prompt retribution once Republicans control the House next year – like going after the taxes of President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden.
“I had countless people tell me
of things that they were concerned with President Biden’s family dealings and
how they believed that him and his family is enriched because of his political
power. And they are begging for oversight and accountability on that,” said
Rep. Jason Smith, a Missouri Republican, according to excerpts the GOP released
from the meeting. “Do we need to go down all that? Is that what you all are
wishing to do?”
Trump reported having foreign
bank accounts between 2015 and 2020, including a bank account in China between
2015 and 2017, his tax returns show.
Trump was required to report the
accounts to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). The filings show
that the former president maintained foreign bank accounts in countries such as
the United Kingdom, Ireland and China.
The China bank account, which was
reported by The New York Times in 2020, was tied to Trump International Hotels
Management’s business push in the country, Trump Organization lawyer Alan
Garten said at the time.
The 2020 disclosure of business
dealings in China came as the Trump campaign sought to portray Biden as a
“puppet” of China.
Biden’s income tax returns and
financial disclosures showed no business dealings or income from China.
The returns also show that Trump
paid more in foreign taxes than in US federal income taxes in 2017, the first
year of his presidency.
In 2017, Trump paid just $750 in
US federal income taxes because of large carry-forward losses that he claimed
in prior years, negating virtually all of his American tax liability. Yet Trump
paid nearly $1 million in taxes to foreign countries that year.
The fact that Trump paid foreign
taxes isn’t in itself surprising, but it shows how Trump’s companies and
businesses interests span the globe, and how those businesses are subject to local
tax laws and regulations.
On his tax return, Trump listed
business income, taxes, expenses or other notable financial items in
Azerbaijan, Panama, Canada, India, Qatar, South Korea, the United Kingdom,
China, the Dominican Republic, United Arab Emirates, the Philippines, Grenada,
US territory Puerto Rico, Georgia, Israel, Brazil, St. Maarten, Mexico,
Indonesia, Ireland, Turkey, and St. Vincent.
During his presidency, Trump
pledged he would donate the entirety of his $400,000 salary to charity each
year.
He frequently boasted about
donating parts of his quarterly paycheck to various government agencies.
“While the press doesn’t like writing about it, nor do I need them to, I donate my yearly Presidential salary of $400,000.00 to different agencies throughout the year,” Trump tweeted in March 2019.
If he donated his 2020 salary, he
didn’t claim it on his taxes. Among the six years of tax returns the House Ways
and Means Committee released, 2020 was the sole year in which Trump listed no
donations to charity.
Trump’s finances took a sizable
hit in 2020, probably as a result of the pandemic and the lack of demand for
vacations and lodging in his hotels.
Trump reported large donations to
charity in 2018 and 2019, helping reduce the amount he owed on millions of
dollars in income he reported in those years.
But Trump posted a massive $4.8
million adjusted loss in 2020, a year, which alone wiped out his federal income
tax obligation. Trump paid $0 in federal income taxes in 2020.
The Joint Committee on Taxation
raised questions about the accuracy of some enormous charitable deductions
Trump claimed in previous years’ tax returns, including large and
unsubstantiated cash gifts.
Trump also claimed a $21.1
million deduction in 2015 for donating 158 acres of his 212-acre property called
Seven Springs in North Castle, New York. That donation, which was made to a
land trust, is a focus of the Manhattan district attorney’s criminal
investigation of the Trump Organization’s finances.
Trump’s own 2017 tax law appears
to have reduced the amount he was able to deduct from tax bill
Trump claimed that the 2017
Republican tax plan he championed and signed would cost him and his family “a
fortune.”
It’s not clear that it did, but
it does appear to have limited the amount that he could claim in one part of
his complex tax return.
The 2017 tax law capped the state
and local tax deduction, known as SALT, at $10,000 a year. In previous years,
tax filers were allowed to deduct more of their SALT payments. Although the law
was passed in 2017, it didn’t apply until the 2018 tax year.
In 2018, Trump listed $10.5
million in state and local taxes, but could deduct just $10,000 of that from
his taxes. In 2019, Trump paid $8.4 million in SALT but was capped at $10,000.
And in 2020, Trump said he paid
$8.5 million in SALT but claimed the maximum allowable $10,000.
By comparison, in 2016 and 2017,
Trump was able to deduct significantly more from state and local taxes. For
example, in 2016 and 2017, he deducted $5.2 million each year in SALT payments.
Some Democrats criticized the
2017 tax law’s SALT cap for taking aim at residents in the Northeast and the
West who have some of the highest property taxes in the country.
The Tax Foundation found that property tax deductions capped in 2017 had previously accounted for about a third of all state and local tax deductions. But Trump defended the provision, saying the cap was necessary even if it would hurt his own finances.
It’s not clear how much the SALT
cap hurt Trump, however. Although that particular deduction was capped, Trump
claimed many other deductions that limited the amount of federal income taxes
he had to pay.
The Ways and Means Committee,
which is responsible for overseeing the IRS and writing tax policy, requested
the returns under the authority of section 6103 of the US tax code.
Their report focused primarily on
whether Trump’s tax returns during his time in office were properly audited
under the IRS’ mandatory audit program for US presidents.
The committee found that the IRS
opened only one “mandatory” audit during Trump’s term – for his 2016 tax
return.
And that didn’t take place until
the fall of 2019, after Chairman Richard Neal, a Massachusetts Democrat, first
sent a letter asking the IRS for Trump’s returns and tax information. The
report characterizes the presidential audit program as “dormant.”
“The research that was done as it
relates to the mandatory audit program was nonexistent,” Neal said last week
following the committee vote.
Republicans on the committee
argued that Democrats acknowledged it was “not necessary to publicly release
the private tax information to change requirements on the presidential audit
program.”
A Republican dissent issued
Friday warned that, “Democrats’ dangerous precedent will lead the American
public to demand other people’s tax returns to be released.”
Last week, the House passed a
bill that would reform the presidential audit process in a largely symbolic
vote before Republicans take the majority in the new Congress.
The legislation is not expected
to be taken up by the Senate before the new Congress is sworn in.


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