President Trump took to Twitter late Monday to call
out The Washington Post and asked if Amazon’s billionaire-owner Jeff
Bezos is using the paper as a “lobbyist weapon against Congress.”
“Is Fake News Washington Post being
used as a lobbyist weapon against Congress to keep Politicians from
looking into Amazon no-tax monopoly?” Trump tweeted.
Bezos bought the paper in 2013. He made the purchase as an individual and Amazon.com Inc. was not involved.
Trump was apparently upset with the paper's report on Syria.
Amazon.com collects state sales taxes in all 45
states with a sales tax and the District of Columbia, according to their
website. State governments have sought to capture sales taxes lost to
internet retailers, though they have struggled with a 1992 Supreme Court
ruling that retailers must have a physical presence in a state before
officials can make them collect sales tax.
This is not the first time that Trump has taken aim
at the website’s use of the tax system. In June, Trump took to Twitter
and blasted the “#AmazonWashingtonPost, sometimes referred to as the
guardian of Amazon not paying internet takes (which they should).”
Both Amazon and The Post, in June, did not respond to Trump’s tweet.
Kim Ruebin, a senior fellow in the Urban-Brookings
Tax Policy Center, told CBS’ MoneyWatch at the time, "They're (Amazon)
being good citizens, and they're collecting the taxes and remitting it. …
If you want more and more of your deliveries to be done in a day or
two, you actually need warehouses and physical presence in places to get
your goods to other places."
Bezos was one of a number of technology executives
who visited the White House recently for a strategy session on
modernizing government.
In 2015, he wrote that Bezos bought the Post “for
purposes of keeping taxes down at his no profit company, @amazon.” He
added that “If @amazon ever had to pay fair taxes, its stock would crash
and it would crumble like a paper bag. The @washingtonpost scam is
saving it!”