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View Full Version : Who's Job Is It To Spread This?



Kathianne
07-18-2012, 09:24 PM
Posted on Wed, Jul. 18, 2012

http://www.kansascity.com/2012/07/18/3712169/most-members-of-congress-keep.html#



Most members of Congress keep their tax returns secret By KEVIN G. HALL AND DAVID LIGHTMAN
McClatchy Newspapers

Rep. Nancy Pelosi was emphatic. Mitt Romney's refusal to release more than two years of his personal tax returns, she said, makes him unfit to win confirmation as a member of the president's Cabinet, let alone to hold the high office himself.


Sen. Harry Reid went further: Romney's refusal to make public more of his tax records makes him unfit to be a dogcatcher.


They do not, however, think that standard of transparency should apply to them. The two Democratic leaders of the Senate and the House of Representatives are among hundreds of senators and representatives from both parties who refused to release their tax records. Just 17 out of the 535 members of Congress released their most recent tax forms or provided some similar documentation of their tax liabilities in response to requests from McClatchy Newspapers over the last three months. Another 19 replied that they wouldn't release the information, and the remainder never responded to the query.


The widespread secrecy in one branch of the government suggests a self-imposed double standard. Yet while American politics has come to expect candidates for the presidency to release their tax returns, the president isn't alone in having a say over the nation's tax laws. Congress also stands to gain or lose by the very tax policies it enacts, and tax records - more than any broad financial disclosure rules now in place - offer the chance to see whether the leaders of the government stand to benefit from their own actions.


"Senior public officials, especially members of Congress and presidential candidates, should be required to disclose their tax returns so that the public can monitor potential conflicts of interest," said Craig Holman, government affairs lobbyist for Public Citizen, a nonpartisan watchdog group.


The question of taxes is particularly pressing this year, as Congress debates whether to extend all or some of the Bush-era tax cuts that are set to expire Dec. 31. At the same time, tax returns reveal assets and investments.



Absent tax information, members of Congress aren't fully transparent, said Daniel Auble, who heads the personal finance project for the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks financial disclosures by members of Congress and appointees confirmed by Congress.


"Having a clearer picture of lawmakers' interests ... is definitely important in making available to the public what possible influence there could be," he said. "In terms of transparency, it would be helpful to have more information."

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Anton Chigurh
07-18-2012, 09:29 PM
Do as we say, not as we do.

gabosaurus
07-18-2012, 09:30 PM
This was printed in the "liberal media?" I am shocked! SHOCKED, I tell you! :eek:

The whole tax return bit is a bunch of BFD, Perhaps the Dems response to the lame "birth certificate" garbage.
Few politicians will disclose their financial information because it would prove they are all a bunch of crooks. Politicians (both sides) have to be elected. To be elected, they need money. After they are elected, they are in a position to make more money.
Politics is a dirty game.