WASHINGTON — A Democratic-led House committee now has access to six years of former President Donald Trump’s tax returns after a multi-year court fight.
The Treasury Department said Wednesday it had complied with last week’s Supreme Court decision that cleared the way for the returns to be turned over to the House Ways and Means Committee.
The committee did not immediately respond to a request for comment. CNN first reported that the committee had received the tax returns.
Although the Treasury Department said it complied with the court’s decision, it’s unclear if anyone on the committee has seen the tax returns at this point or what the process will be for accessing them.
A Treasury spokesman declined to say whether the committee had accessed the documents.
Members of the Ways and Means Committee will meet on Thursday and lawmakers hope to get more information on Trump’s taxes at that time, a Democrat on the panel said.
“I’m still not sure if we’ll see your taxes at that point or if you’ll just walk us through them,” the lawmaker said.
It’s unclear what House Democrats plan to do with the documents, especially as they face a GOP takeover of the House in January. Republicans have made it clear that they are not interested in or concerned about Trump’s tax records.
When asked Wednesday about the next steps, committee chairman Richard Neal said: “I can’t talk about it.”
Neal, D-Mass., also noted that he was legally bound not to reveal much about Trump’s handling of the records.
“I will have better answers [after meeting] with the lawyers,” he said.
Bill Pascrell, DN.J., a member of the Ways and Means Committee and an early advocate of pushing for Trump’s tax returns, said Wednesday that the panel “will make a deliberate decision [on Trump’s tax records] by January 3,” when Republicans officially take control of the House.
Asked if he would consider making the tax returns public, Pascrell said: “I would.”
The records were transferred shortly after the Supreme Court rejected Trump’s last-minute request to block their release to House Democrats, just weeks before Republicans won a majority.
Chief Justice John Roberts temporarily blocked the Ways and Means Committee from accessing Trump’s tax records this month while the court decided how to act on Trump’s request.
Unlike other recent presidents, Trump has refused to release his tax returns amid scrutiny of his business affairs, repeatedly claiming that the IRS is auditing him.
Democrats have been demanding to see the records since the 2016 presidential campaign. But the legal battle began in April 2019, shortly after Democrats took control of the House, when Neal asked for statements from Trump and those of business entities. related. He said he sought the information as part of the committee’s investigations into whether to amend the tax law relating to presidents.
The Treasury Department refused to comply with Neal’s request during the Trump presidency, saying in May 2019 that it had no valid legislative purpose for obtaining the documents. The committee sued two months later in what would become a long battle to secure the returns.
For years, top tax analysts have said the records must be turned over to Congress because, under federal law, if the chairs of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, the Senate Finance Committee, or the Joint Committee on Taxation formally request tax returns, a person’s taxes, Treasury Department officials “shall” deliver the documents.
sahil kapur Y jonathan allen contributed.