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Reports

Tax Day: Will Romney Make April Fools of Republicans?

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Posted on Jan 20, 2012

By Joe Conason

Mitt Romney’s latest flip-flop is almost complete. Having vowed a month ago not to release his federal income tax returns, the Republican presidential front-runner conceded during Saturday night’s debate that he would “probably” release his returns, and then on Tuesday afternoon finally said he will do so—in April, long after he is likely to have secured his party’s nomination. With characteristic arrogance, he excused the delay by suggesting that April 15 is the traditional date when public officials supply this information, which is certainly true if you’re already president.

Even more galling was Romney’s suggestion that he will reveal only his 2011 return, which would allow him to control the narrative, of course, by paying a higher rate this year than in years past. Having admitted that he pays as little as 15 percent—or around the same effective rate as a family earning $60,000 a year.

Who does Romney think he is fooling with this charade? Republicans are rightly concerned that his sense of entitlement, symbolized by the tax question, will damage their party’s chances next fall. Determined though he is now to withhold his tax history, Romney is likely to be forced to surrender all of the financial information that President Obama disclosed long ago. Perhaps someone ought to remind him now that when Bill Clinton ran for president in 1992, he and his wife released all of their tax returns dating back to 1980. (And when Hillary Rodham Clinton resisted releasing their returns during the 2008 presidential primaries, the Wall Street Journal editorial page excoriated her, demanding immediate full disclosure.)

As recently as Dec. 21, Romney seemed to believe that he could evade the release of his personal tax information. Asked by MSNBC’s Chuck Todd whether he will release his returns, the former Massachusetts governor replied: “I don’t intend to release the tax returns. I don’t.” Luckily for him, Todd didn’t air that portion of the interview on “The Daily Rundown,” his widely followed political broadcast. Romney’s remarks were picked up from the transcript in a New York Times blog post, but the issue didn’t blow up until after New Hampshire. Under increasing pressure from his opponents and the media—and swiftly turning into a parody of buccaneering late capitalism—Romney is now trying to quell the problem without solving it.

When Romney said that his effective tax rate is “probably” around 15 percent, he could have been gaming media expectations. Playing the expectations game would also be served by restricting disclosure to his 2011 return next April, since that document can easily be manipulated over the next few months to let him pay a higher rate. What he may well fear, if politics eventually requires him to give up his tax returns from the past decade or so, is the public’s discovery that he used offshore investments, trusts and other accounting tricks to pay even less (like the 7,000 millionaires who paid zero income tax last year). The more he resists disclosure, the more voters will suspect him of such elite chicanery.

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Joe Conason is the editor in chief of NationalMemo.com.

© 2011 Creators.com


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By felicity, January 22, 2012 at 3:06 pm Link to this comment

Wait a minute.  Isn’t, and hasn’t it been, a fact
that Republicans have been screaming “No Taxes” for
years?  They should support Romney (and vote for him)
for figuring out how to pay little or no taxes.  So
why aren’t they. 


I suspect that Mitt’s dilly-dallying-delaying
publication of his tax returns is because his
committee of tax consultants has taken a while to
hide the unseemly stuff.  Apparently, given the
extraordinary amount of time this task has taken
(leaving Mitt blowing in the wind) has been because
there’s a lot to hide and there aren’t many hiding
places available.

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By mrfreeze, January 21, 2012 at 1:14 pm Link to this comment

Blueboy1938 - Here’s Paul Krugman’s take on the Romney tax issue. I think you and he are on to something:

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2017293202_krugman22.html

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By bpawk, January 21, 2012 at 11:35 am Link to this comment

Don’t blame the recipient of the tax laws - blame the tax law makers! This writer isn’t bright enough to realize this - even Dems take advantage of unfair tax laws too.
Could Truthdig please publish public records on how the candidates have voted on the issues in the past. That way people will get the best idea of how the candidate is going to run the government. If you publish their record on a particular issue, then have someone argue for or against it.

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By Blueboy1938, January 20, 2012 at 9:44 pm Link to this comment

Oh, please!  Romney is not committing “chicanery” if what he pays - or doesn’t pay - conforms to the current tax laws.  I don’t hear any news of an indictment for tax fraud, so I have to assume that to be the case.  The problem is the tax code and the loopholes inserted that benefit those who can afford to have tax services that help him take advantage of those provisions.  If he’s paying what he legally owes, then no one can fault him for it.  Of course, they will, as Mr. Conason has done here.  The other candidates are getting milage now out of demanding a reveal, so it doesn’t really even matter to them if, or when, he releases his tax returns or what’s in them.

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By Ted Whitney, January 20, 2012 at 3:02 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Can someone please define the word “incollectivistical” as used by balkas? 
Sometimes, when I encounter political debate in this country, I feel as though I am
deciphering a foreign language.  When did they stop teaching the English language
in the United States?

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By Rodney, January 20, 2012 at 2:13 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Republicans are afraid that Americans will find out
how rich Americans sham the system to avoid paying
taxes. They will find out that the system is go
rigged in favor of the rich , that many of them will
lose reelection just for supporting the rich. They
will find out that the most unpatriotic people in
America are the rich. The election of Mitt Romney
will expose tax loopholes,outsourcing of jobs,and the
chicken hawks who send other children off to die in
wars while their own children are away at college
partying. It will expose the two America’s that John
Edwards talked about. It will expose the false
patriotism of the Koch Brothers,Rush Limbaugh,Sean
Hannity ,and all of the sham artist’s who use race
religion bigotry to divide this great nation so that
the rich and continue to rob and steal America’s
wealth, by not paying their fair share in taxes and
wages to hard working American’s.

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By balkas, January 20, 2012 at 7:41 am Link to this comment

as expected, conason, too, is beyond all rhyme and reason, utterly incollectivistical
in this piece. he mentions romney about 7 times and tells us what he thinks,
proposes, etc.

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