Donald Trump released new information about his finances this week — but not the information his critics on the right and left are demanding.
On Wednesday, the Federal Election Commission made public the presumptive Republican nominee’s latest personal financial disclosure, a required form that lists his assets and a broad estimate of their values.
What the disclosure doesn’t do, though, is shine the kind of light on his finances that Trump’s tax returns would provide. Trump has refused to release his most recent returns — which every major party nominee since 1976 has made public — citing an ongoing audit by the IRS. The IRS, for their part, confirmed months ago that there is nothing legally preventing Trump from making them public in the interim.
Trump’s personal financial disclosure (PFD) and his returns are designed to accomplish two very different things: One is about giving a picture of the candidate’s assets in order to allow the public to determine whether an elected official has any potential conflicts of interest. The other is about determining Trump’s income for the specific legal purpose of calculating his tax payment.
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Thanks to the PFD, if a lawmaker declares a large stake in a fishing company, for instance, and then starts negotiating legislation to water down regulations on fishing boats, the public can ask whether those holdings compromise that official’s neutrality.
The actual dollar numbers on what candidate’s holdings are worth are pretty vague, though, since they’re mostly incidental to the above goal. In Trump’s PFD, his most valuable 24 entities are valued at “over $50,000,000” each, but that’s as specific as the form requires.
“It has less to do with showing us the exact dollar amounts of your incomes and assets and a lot more with showing when you have different kind of public policy decisions, how personally invested you are in the outcomes of those decisions,” Joseph Birkenstock, an attorney who specializes in campaign finance law, told MSNBC.
Tax returns are another story, though. Because they’re used to legally determine his tax bill for the year, the dollar amounts on his income are far more specific, the type of information is different, and the requirements to get the values right are more aggressively enforced.
Only Trump’s tax returns will reveal information such as his gross income and what kind of business expenses and deductions he used to determine how much of his earnings were subject to taxation.
This question of Trump’s income and taxes are also loaded politically, because Trump is running on an estimated $9.5 trillion tax cut that would dramatically reduce rates for ultra-wealthy filers. If he released his taxes, voters would not only know his tax rate — and how it compares to that of average Americans — but how much he would save under his proposed changes.
Another question experts have raised about Trump’s taxes are his charitable donations, which would show up as deductions in his returns. The Washington Post noted in April that Trump’s campaign has listed thousands of charitable donations it’s made over the years, but they tended to be non-cash contributions like free use of properties for charity events.
For what its worth, Trump’s campaign seems to have a nuanced view of the importance of a candidate’s tax returns. A senior campaign source told NBC New reporter Katy Tur on Wednesday that they were requesting tax returns from potential vice presidential candidates as part of their vetting process. When Tur asked whether this was hypocritical, the source countered, “Trump’s not running for Vice President.”
An additional challenge for Trump is that his goals in filing his taxes are at direct odds with his branding strategy, which is characterized by a continuous effort to highlight the superior size of his assets.









