Robert Reich: Congress Must Reject Trump's IRS Audit Deal [View all]

Link:
https://robertreich.substack.com/p/congress-must-reject-trumps-irs-audit
The Senate is set to vote this afternoon on a motion to proceed to Trumps budget package. This will allow senators to vote against Trumps $1.8 billion payout slush fund, via amendments before final passage. Trump and his Justice Department have already dropped the slush fund, but that should be codified into law.
Congress must also vote against the part of the deal that releases Trump and members of his family from any pending or future prosecutions or investigations involving their tax returns. At a hearing yesterday, acting Attorney General Todd Blanche confirmed that this part of the settlement remains intact.
This protection for Trump and his family is unprecedented in its scope and form. It even extends to affiliates of the Trumps. Its potentially worth tens of millions of dollars. One estimate puts it at $100 million.
If its interpreted to mean that the Trumps are protected from future I.R.S. audits and you can bet that Trump and his family will argue that in court, should they ever be audited again all the self-dealing and the pay-to-play bribes that Trump and his family have collected will vanish. Previous standard I.R.S. procedure was to audit the president every year, rather than confer on him sweeping protection from scrutiny on tax returns.
Senate Republicans have protested the $1.8 billion fund but have looked the other way at the audit protection. I havent been focused on that to tell the truth, said Maines Republican Senator Susan Collins. Well, its time that she and other Republicans did focus on it.
Only one Senate Republican Thom Tillis of North Carolina, whos not running for reelection has been critical of the audit immunity. How can you not at least have them be subject to the same thing that Im subjected to, and every one of you? he asked yesterday.
Blanche has tried to cast the audit protections as a standard and typical outcome of litigation against the I.R.S. Like anytime the I.R.S. settles with an individual taxpayer or another company, as part of the settlement, its standard, its typical to get rid of past ongoing audits, he testified yesterday.
Bullsh*t. First, Trumps lawsuit against his own I.R.S. is hardly typical. No president has ever done this before.
Second, his lawsuit had nothing to do with an audit or tax issue. It focused on the leak of his tax returns by a former I.R.S. contractor during his first term.
Third, this settlement provision giving the Trumps protection against I.R.S. scrutiny directly violates a law barring the I.R.S. from dropping audits at the direction of the president or his aides.
Fourth, Blanche, the acting attorney general, doesnt even have authority to order the I.R.S. a separate agency thats part of the Treasury Department to stop civil tax audits.
- more at link -
My friends, Robert Reich knows his stuff when it comes to economic issues and the impact of tax revenues on the federal government. This is good information here. Please read the rest on Mr. Reich's substack (OP link.)