CA lawmakers pass bill requiring Trump, presidential candidates to release tax returns
Source: ABC News
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- California legislation that would require presidential and state gubernatorial candidates to release their tax returns in order to appear on the state's ballot cleared a significant hurdle, passing the State Assembly with an overwhelming majority vote.
SB 27, co-authored by Senators Mike McGuire and Scott Wiener, was approved by the State Assembly Monday with a 57-17 vote, according to McGuire's office. It will be heard again in the State Senate this week, and if approved, will head to Gov. Gavin Newsom for his signature.
"Presidential candidates need to put their own interests aside in the name of transparency," McGuire's office said in a written statement. "So far, our current President has done the opposite and it's time that President Trump steps up, stops with the obstruction, and follows through with 40 years of time-honored tradition that has made this nation's democracy stronger. This commonsense legislation applies equally to all candidates, from all political parties, including the Governor of California."
In May, McGuire and Wiener amended the legislation to extend the transparency rules to the office of the Governor of California, as well as presidential candidates.
Read more: https://abc7news.com/politics/ca-lawmakers-pass-bill-requiring-trump-to-release-tax-returns/5389210/
California has 55 Electoral Votes. That's huge.
msongs
(67,406 posts)stopbush
(24,396 posts)tRump will not be allowed on the ballot.
Polybius
(15,418 posts)He has no chance in CA anyway.
AlexSFCA
(6,137 posts)Yavin4
(35,439 posts)elections.
Retrograde
(10,136 posts)Funny how States' Rights arguments and rulings always seem to benefit the right wing.
Angleae
(4,482 posts)But yet the state can make you do so.
SHRED
(28,136 posts)RockRaven
(14,967 posts)he is likely to be quite the whining man-baby over this, and Repukes down-ballot are going to be super-sad.
SHRED
(28,136 posts)So happy right now.
I think the west coast needs to break away.
Form our own alliance.
The rest of the country hates us it seems.
Glad and thankful I live here.
sandensea
(21,635 posts)And doesn't this apply to next year's CA primary as well?
If so, that could give most of CA's GOP delegates to Bill Weld - plus those of all the other states that have passed similar requirements (or will soon).
This could get interesting.
Thekaspervote
(32,767 posts)Kind of Blue
(8,709 posts)Thanks for posting!
I think Maryland has done this, as well.
Scurrilous
(38,687 posts)Jake Stern
(3,145 posts)I Just dont see it surviving SCOTUS, at least for the part concerning candidates for president.
PSPS
(13,599 posts)tandem5
(2,072 posts)Court has no jurisdiction doesn't mean a corrupt majority won't interject just like Florida 2000.
PSPS
(13,599 posts)tandem5
(2,072 posts)talking about the specifics of ballot eligibility or Bush v. Gore. I was speaking to the fact that we have countless examples where people are ignoring the Constitution and the rule of law without any repercussions. Garland was ignored by the Republicans in the Senate, citing a non-existent "Biden Rule" while subverting their Constitutional duty to confirm a presidential nomination only to turn around and seat Kavanaugh instantly. So, yes, by the rule of law, by all the ways our government is structured and guided by founding principles, a state alone may determine who is eligible to be on its ballot. And further the state may appoint the electoral delegation however it sees fit even if it's not based on the plurality decision of the state's populous, but given the current climate and the extreme impropriety of the Supreme Court's involvement in Bush v. Gore I don't have the same faith as you that a corrupt majority on the bench will respect the explicit limitations of its jurisdiction.
Retrograde
(10,136 posts)The Supremes had no problem stepping into a purely state matter then.
PSPS
(13,599 posts)Retrograde
(10,136 posts)dlk
(11,566 posts)Response to George II (Original post)
Qutzupalotl This message was self-deleted by its author.
onenote
(42,703 posts)Not sure how many times that has to be pointed out.
Response to onenote (Reply #52)
Qutzupalotl This message was self-deleted by its author.
More_Cowbell
(2,191 posts)I assume that Gavin Newsome will sign it.
While there may be hurdles, that doesn't mean states shouldn't try to make candidates accountable.
onecaliberal
(32,861 posts)Kind of Blue
(8,709 posts)mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)My heart will always be in the Bay Area (as is most of my family) even though I'm physically only there every few months ...
GO CALI!!!
NBachers
(17,110 posts)tandem5
(2,072 posts)Trump could refuse to release his returns and be left off the ballot and then sue. As the lawsuit works its way to the Supreme Court he loses the election. The Supreme Court's "conservatives" who have promoted themselves as the guardians of state sovereignty quote some equal protections bullshit and order that California's electoral delegation not be counted.
ripcord
(5,402 posts)This might not work it's way through the court system in time to affect 2020.
NCjack
(10,279 posts)Trump will sue in Federal district court to be on the ballot. He will lose, but will be granted a pause while the issue works it way through appeal and on to the Supreme Court, i.e., Trump will be on the California ballot. The Supreme Court will either not receive it before the election or will delay in deciding until after the election. Trump will make his complete his run. Finally, the Supreme Court will refuse to hear the case or will decide in favor of California.
thesquanderer
(11,989 posts)No chance at those 55 EV anyway. But I worry about other implications... that the government can ever compel the public release of anyone's private tax returns (outside of perhaps a criminal matter?), since it has always been the case that tax returns are supposed to be kind of "walled off" from being used for other government purposes; and also that the party in power can come up with requirements for candidates that are essentially targeted at hurting the other party. So I'm ambivalent about this.
Sure, it's nice to poke at Trump in this way, but it doesn't really hurt him, because no state that he has a prayer of winning is going to make this a requirement for 2020.
Jake Stern
(3,145 posts)Especially the part about "also that the party in power can come up with requirements for candidates that are essentially targeted at hurting the other party."
I remember the whole kerluffle over Obama's school records and birth certificate. If this is upheld then what is to stop a Republican state from requiring a candidate to produce an original long form birth certificate and school records?
watoos
(7,142 posts)the SC just opened the door to allowing states to draw districts based on voter eligibility. So the SC is allowing states free rein to gerrymander districts but then they will turn around and say that states are forbidden to require tax returns? If the SC is going to be lenient with how states run their elections and draw up their districts then the SC needs to bug off California.
pecosbob
(7,538 posts)You can't rule it's okay to intervene to disallow the California amendment and then rule it's not okay for the government to demand motor-voter in all fifty states, for example.
hlthe2b
(102,278 posts)George II
(67,782 posts)Yavin4
(35,439 posts)Which will make it more difficult for congressional Republicans to win.
24601
(3,962 posts)they do release their tax returns?
Brother Buzz
(36,434 posts)Jake Stern
(3,145 posts)Last edited Fri Jul 12, 2019, 03:40 PM - Edit history (1)
A successful defense of this law by California at SCOTUS would be a birther's dream come true. That will open the door for Republican led states to require all kinds of records for ballot access.
Just wait until Republican controlled purple states start requiring long form birth certificates and school records or proof that a candidate's parents were lawfully present in the country at the time of their birth.
DVRacer
(707 posts)Reminds me of when I spoke out about Harry Reid and his nuclear option for judges. I was lambasted at the time. Now we have seen how that was twisted in so many ways to bludgeon us and allowed the cons to pack the courts.
This too will be twisted in ways we havent even considered yet and ways such as you listed.
lindysalsagal
(20,686 posts)Reason to hope.
Polybius
(15,418 posts)But none of them go to Republicans anyway, so they won't care.
George II
(67,782 posts)jgmiller
(394 posts)On the surface it's great but as others have said it can open a can of worms.
On the bright side if he chooses to challenge this he can't use the DOJ. He's a potential candidate in this case not a president so he would need to use his own lawyers and not rely on Barr. Also while of course any judge (including SCOTUS) can come up with any reason to strike this down I think it would be a bit hard to do. Different states have different deadlines, signature requirements etc to appear on a ballot and if they struck this down they would be opening holes there too.
onenote
(42,703 posts)It only applies to the primary not the general election. It isn't even clear that the repubs will have a primary in California and even if they do, Trump could simply choose to sit it out since he'll have the nomination secured long before that primary (as was the case in 2016).
Whether he's on the ballot for the primary has no impact on his presence on the general election ballot: per California election law, the nominees of the national parties get to be on the ballot.
In short, it is a meaningless, symbolic action.
ck4829
(35,077 posts)onenote
(42,703 posts)It only applies to the primary election.
It's not clear the repubs will have a primary in California or if Trump would have an opponent. He can (and if he has to) sit out the California primary. By the time it's held he will have wrapped up the nomination and under California law, as the Republican party nominee, he will automatically qualify for a spot on the ballot.
In other words, this is a symbolic waste of time that seems to have gotten folks excited for nothing.