It’s not just what’s in Mitt Romney’s tax returns; it’s the very fact that he flatly refuses to release them. That’s what had legendary investigative journalist Carl Bernstein so livid on Wednesday’s Morning Joe.
“This is an extraordinary moment,” he said. “How can we have a candidate for the presidency of the United States who is unwilling to share his tax returns with the people of the country? I think that most reasonable people are going to say—who have an open mind—are going to say, we don’t want this. Almost anything but this. It’s wrong. It’s simply wrong.”
But while Romney’s refusal to release more than two years of his tax returns may be unusual from a historical perspective, it’s far from an isolated incident in this campaign season. Romney and Obama are arguably running the least transparent presidential campaigns of any major party candidates in modern American history.
Though the president has released his tax returns for the last 12 years, both his campaign and Romney’s have adopted an extraordinary practice: granting certain interviews only on the condition that they can review and even edit quotes before they get published. On Monday, The New York Times reported:








