Last week, Donald Trump hired a new group of lawyers to do one very specific thing: keep the president’s tax returns secret. Yesterday, those attorneys sent a letter to the Treasury Department, which oversees the IRS, urging administration officials to look past the letter of the law.
President Trump’s personal lawyer on Monday urged the Treasury Department not to hand over Mr. Trump’s tax returns to House Democrats, warning that releasing the documents to lawmakers he accused of having a “radical view of unchecked congressional power” would turn the Internal Revenue Service into a political weapon. […]
Mr. Trump’s lawyer, William S. Consovoy, said on Monday that the legal rationale behind [House Ways & Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal’s] dismissal of the Treasury Department’s concerns was wrong.
As regular readers know, Richard Neal, exercising his authority under the law, formally told the Treasury Department two weeks ago that he’s demanding access to the president’s tax returns. The Massachusetts Democrat did so under a law that says the Treasury “shall furnish” the tax materials in response to a formal request from one of a handful of congressional lawmakers, including himself.
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), a member of the Ways and Means Committee, said in a written statement last week, “How many lawyers and how much time does it take for [Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin] to understand that ‘shall’ means ‘shall’?”
And yet, yesterday, Trump’s new private attorney told the Treasury that those pointing to the letter of the law are not making “a serious legal argument.”
The correspondence added that “no one actually believes” Richard Neal is interested in legitimate congressional oversight. To bolster the point, the president’s lawyer pointed to … wait for it … quotes from congressional Republicans.









