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szdaily -> World -> 
‘Trump paid no income taxes for 10 yrs’
    2020-09-29  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

U.S. President Donald Trump did not pay any federal income tax in 10 out of the 15 years before he was elected president in 2016, which was made possible because he reported substantial net losses from his business enterprises, the New York Times reported Sunday.

Through the two years following that, the tax-return data obtained by the Times showed Trump paid only US$750 in federal income taxes, despite receiving hundreds of millions dollars in revenue from his entertainment businesses as well as other deals.

The Times report revealed meticulously the details of more than two decades of Trump’s tax information, which it said painted him as “a businessman who takes in hundreds of millions of dollars a year yet racks up chronic losses that he aggressively employs to avoid paying taxes.”

In response to the Times’ account, Trump dismissed it as “fake news” and claimed he pays “a lot” in both state and federal income taxes.

Alan Garten, a lawyer for the Trump Organization, claimed the Times’ findings were “mostly, if not all, inaccurate.”

“Over the past decade, President Trump has paid tens of millions of dollars in personal taxes to the federal government, including paying millions in personal taxes since announcing his candidacy in 2015,” Garten said in a statement.

According to the report, Trump used the US$427.4 million he was paid for a reality TV program to fund his other businesses, mostly his golf courses, and was taking out less cash than he was putting in businesses.

The former businessman failed to release his tax returns when he was running for president and has consistently refused to give in even when political pressure heaped on him, which constitutes a full departure from common practice by U.S. presidential nominees.

Defending those decisions, the president said an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) audit on his finances is preventing him from doing so. Once the agency is off his back, he will no longer keep his records private, Trump added. However, being subject to audit does not oblige one to hold tax returns, despite Trump’s repeated claims otherwise.

At the center of the decade-long IRS investigation is a US$72.9 million tax refund that Trump claimed and received after declaring huge losses, the Times reported, adding that if the audit is to determine that his claim for the refund was not legitimate, it would cost him more than US$100 million .

(CGTN)

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