In the same week a secret video exposed him saying 47% of “dependent, entitled” Americans don’t pay income taxes, Mitt Romney disclosed a relatively small amount of information about his own taxes— that he paid 14.1% in 2011. That’s about half the percentage of what an average worker earning $60,000 annually would pay.
Romney’s disclosure of his 2011 returns didn’t do much for Rev. Al Sharpton, who told PoliticsNation viewers: “The question remains. What is in [the rest of] his tax returns is he afraid of showing the public?”
The Romneys have said many times they will release no more than two years of returns. However, their accountant/trustee Brad Malt wrote a press release-style letter on Friday addressing the issue, going a step further and releasing a certified summary of his tax returns over a two-decade period preceding 2010. According to the letter, from 1990-2009 the Romneys paid an average of 20.20% in income taxes and the lowest they ever paid was 13.6%.
Former Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell told Rev. Sharpton that math doesn’t logically explain Romney’s refusal to answer to the 63% of Americans who want to see more returns:








