Posted on 01/23/2018 4:39:34 PM PST by jazusamo
Donald Trump was the first presidential candidate since Richard Nixon not to reveal his federal income tax return. Some Oregon Democrats want to try to make him the last.
A bill introduced Monday in Salem would require candidates for president and vice president to give a copy of their most recent tax return to the Oregon Secretary of State with written permission that the document can be made public. Alternatively, the candidate could fill out Oregons standard income disclosure form for public officials.
The requirement would apply to candidates on primary and general election ballots and those wishing to be in the voters pamphlet.
At least one political bigwig is already on board: Gov. Kate Brown.
Governor Brown supports the principle of a financial disclosure requirement for presidential candidates, said Bryan Hockaday, a spokesman for the governor.
Senate Majority Leader Ginny Burdick is the author of the bill introduced Monday. She said releasing tax returns is a time-honored tradition of transparency among presidential candidates. Trump changed everything, she said.
He really challenged the custom and I think we need to take a fresh look at it, Burdick said in a phone interview.
Burdick chairs the Senate Rules Committee, where Mondays bill was introduced. She sponsored a similar bill last year and testified at its hearing that it would affirm a long-standing tradition of financial disclosure among presidential candidates. Most candidates for high office, including president, governor and members of Congress, voluntarily release their tax returns.
Without this vital information, Oregon voters cannot accurately assess whether a conflict exists between a candidates financial interests and duties of the president or vice president of the United States, Burdick testified.
The bill died in committee without a vote. Burdick said she thinks the chances are pretty good that her rewritten bill can pass with the requirement that, at a minimum, candidates must fill out an economic disclosure. Keeping the wording that would force candidates to reveal their tax returns is a heavier lift, she said.
Burdick added, Its hard to say where the discussion will lead.
The Democrat-controlled Oregon Legislature could face legal troubles if it does pass an income tax disclosure requirement.
Former Sen. Ted Ferrioli, the Senate Minority Leader at the time a similar bill was debated last year, submitted as testimony an opinion from the Legislatures legal office saying the concept raises serious constitutional questions that do not have clear answers.
Its unclear how much power states have to regulate when presidential candidates can appear on ballots, a legislative attorney said in the opinion. A court could strike down Oregons attempt to change the rules, they cautioned.
Sal Peralta, secretary of the Independent Party of Oregon, testified on last years bill that it is unlikely that states can add conditions to running for president. The U.S. Constitution lists three requirements to run for president: be at least 35 years old, have lived in the United States for 14 years and be a natural born citizen.
Burdick said she does not think her bill would run into constitutional problems because it does not technically redefine the qualifications for president.
It just applies to the people that the secretary of state can put on the ballot, she said.
At least 23 states have introduced similar bills similar to the one Oregon has considered. New Jersey became the first to pass one, in 2017.
Last year, the California Legislature passed a forced-disclosure bill. But Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed it. At the time, he said the bill went too far despite its political attractiveness.
Brown said there are political perils to states regulating what presidential candidates must disclose to appear on ballots.
Today we require tax returns, but what would be next? Five years of health records? A certified birth certificate? High school report cards? And will these requirements vary depending on which political party is in power?" Brown said in a veto message in October 2017.
That Trump did not make public his tax information has rankled his critics, some of whom suspect the documents would show that the president is not as wealthy as he portends, or that he has financial ties which leave him vulnerable to blackmail.
As a candidate, Trump said he would release his return when he is no longer under IRS audit. As president, he has said he might release the documents once he is no longer in office.
Oregon must be a TERRIBLE place to live with all these Leftists in charge.
...and a bit of faggotry, methinks
I think their “Anus” hats are on too tight.
If you would like more information about what's happening in Oregon, please FReepmail me.
“Demonstrably unconstitutional as it establishes an additional test for the office of President.”
yep.
Trump wasn’t really on the OR ballot, his slate of electors were.
I would prefer that the return must also show that they actually paid taxes in order to vote. If your refunds were greater than your withholding -- no ballot for you.
Nah; everybody loses Oregon in my book, just don’t count their ballots as legal for any federal level office.
For Oregon:
No Congressman elected from that state shall be seated.
No Senator from that state shall be seated.
No Electoral Vote from that state shall be counted.
What goes around comes around c@cksuckers.
Then require all voters to prove citizenship and residency to be sure they are eligible to vote....
States do that all the time. Most states have a minimum standard candidates must meet in order to be on the ballot, usually a specific number of signatures or something like that. That's why some fringe candidates for presidents can be on the ballot in some states and not in others. No court I'm aware of has ruled that to be an additional test for president.
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