WASHINGTON
(AP) — A watchdog has found that the Treasury Department appropriately
handled Congress’ request for President Donald Trump’s tax returns,
which Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has refused to provide.
But
the acting inspector general for Treasury, Rich Delmar, also said he
had no opinion on whether the advice Mnuchin followed — which came from
Justice Department attorneys — was itself well-founded. In refusing to
hand over the returns, Mnuchin decided he was legally bound to comply
with that advice, Delmar noted in a letter Wednesday to senior House
lawmakers.
The
Justice Department legal opinion backed Mnuchin’s refusal, saying that
Neal’s request lacked a legitimate legislative purpose and was an
“unprecedented” use of congressional authority.
The
argument is the same one Trump has used in refusing other demands from
Democrats in Congress for financial records from banks and accountants
that have had business with Trump and his family. Lawsuits over those
records were filed in federal courts in Washington and New York.
Rep.
Richard Neal, the Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the House Ways and
Means Committee, asked Delmar last fall to probe how Treasury received,
assessed and responded to Neal’s earlier request for six years of
Trump’s tax returns.
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Delmar
found that Treasury processed the request properly, sought legal
guidance from the Justice Department, determined that it was bound by
that guidance and, based on that advice, decided not to provide the tax
information.
Hie letter went to Neal and Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, the senior Republican on the tax-writing Ways and Means panel.
In
the long-running legal battle over Trump’s records, Neal cited a 1924
law that says the Treasury secretary “shall furnish” tax returns to any
of the three congressional officers empowered to obtain them, one of
whom is the Ways and Means Committee chairman.
Neal
has said the records are needed because the committee is looking into
the effectiveness of IRS mandatory audits of all sitting presidents.
The
fight between Democrats and Trump dates back to the 2016 election
campaign, when Trump claimed that he couldn’t release them because he
was under IRS audit. The records hold the promise of information that
Trump has carefully guarded from public view, including details of his
business entanglements, relations with foreign creditors and
governments, and the value of his assets.
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