Tipsheet

The Twitter Thread That Explains Everything You Need to Know About the NYT Tax Returns Story

President Trump and a lawyer for the Trump Organization denied claims in The New York Times’ report on his tax returns, which were illegally leaked to the paper, calling them “fake news.”

The paper alleges he paid no federal income taxes for 10 out of the past 15 years due to reporting losses greater than what he made, and that he only paid $750 to the federal government “the year he won the presidency” and “in his first year in the White House.”

During a press briefing on Sunday, Trump, who has refused to release his tax filings, said the claims were “totally made up.”


“Everything was wrong, they are so bad,” he added. “I’ve paid a lot and I’ve paid a lot of state income taxes too.”

Trump said he will be "proud to show you" his returns when they are not "under audit" by the IRS. “It’ll all be revealed. It’s all going to come out.” 

Alan Garten, a Trump Organization attorney, also denied the allegations that Trump paid so little in taxes, saying in a statement that  he "has paid tens of millions of dollars in personal taxes to the federal government, including paying millions in personal taxes since announcing his candidacy in 2015.”

“The New York Times’ story is riddled with gross inaccuracies.  Over the past decade the President has paid tens of millions of dollars in personal taxes to the federal government," Garten said, reports Fox News. "While we tried to explain this to the Times, they refused to listen and rejected our repeated request that they show us any of the documentation they purport to be relying on to substantiate their claims."

The paper refuses to show the documents to protect their sources. 

"Obviously this is just part of the Times’ ongoing smear campaign in the run up to the election,” Garten added. 

Ryan Ellis, tax expert and president of the Center for a Free Economy, gave his take on the story in a Twitter thread, arguing it's "nothing more than the 'Orange Man Bad' version of 'gotcha' pieces liberal journalists routinely run about how big companies don’t pay taxes."