US politics, policies & presidential election (news, events & articles)

homaie

Elite Member
Mar 1, 2003
5,061
1,218
NY/NJ in USA
#41
Trump paid no federal income tax in his last year as president
Former President Donald Trump reported a stunning reversal of fortune during the middle two years of his presidency that led to a considerable tax bill, according to a report from the Joint Committee on Taxation released Tuesday night.

The $1.1 million Trump paid in federal taxes in 2018 and 2019 stand in stark contrast to the $750 he paid in 2017 and $0 in 2020.

Trump’s tax bill grew substantially as his income surged in 2018 and 2019, according the report that included details on Trump’s tax returns from 2015 to 2020, ahead of the planned release of the returns themselves. For example, Trump reported a $22 million capital gain in 2018 and a $9 million gain in 2019 from asset sales, sending his income into the black following years of enormous losses.
In 2015 and 2016, Trump reported he lost more than $32 million each year. In 2017, Trump said he lost nearly $13 million. But he reported taxable income of $24 million in 2018 and more than $4 million in 2019, giving him a sizeable tax bill.

Trump has leveraged massive losses he accumulated over the years to zero out his tax liabilities, as previously shown by a New York Times investigation. For example, the JCT noted that Trump carried forward $105 million in losses on his 2015 return, $73 million in 2016, $45 million in 2017 and $23 million in 2018.

“It’s the 2,000-pound gorilla. … He still uses the net operating losses” to reduce his tax liability, said Steven M. Rosenthal, senior fellow in the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center at the Urban Institute.

And once again, in 2020, as the pandemic raged on, Trump reported a loss of nearly $5 million. He paid $0 in federal income taxes that year.
 

footy

Elite Member
Aug 28, 2019
4,142
841
Marina Dool Rey
#42
https://www.newsweek.com/real-lesson-speaker-chaos-that-trump-finished-gop-opinion-1771702


The 2022 midterms failed to produce the massive returns that many Republicans had believed were coming in part because of Trump's refusal to abandon election denialism.

And that's what's become clear this week: Many on the GOP's far right flank are beginning to see that Trump is much like McCarthy—an opportunist who is willing to oscillate between the far Right and the establishment based upon what nets him the most personal gain.


Thus, when Trump ordered Republicans to vote for Kevin McCarthy as Speaker of the House on Truth Social, he failed to move even a single vote.

 

footy

Elite Member
Aug 28, 2019
4,142
841
Marina Dool Rey
#47
Contrary it feels he's a viable choice for many. Aging egotesticles !!!

The End of Trump?
Rupert Murdoch may have pulled the plug on him for 2024, but it’s not clear yet if the rest of the G.O.P. will follow.

“Is losing really a bigger sin for Republicans than harassing women, blackmailing foreign leaders, or seeking to remain in power by calling forth an angry mob to attack Congress?”




Donald Trump is running again for President in 2024, as he announced from Mar-a-Lago last night, but some Republicans who were his biggest supporters are all but rejecting him this time around. In particular, platforms like Fox News and the New York Post, which once buttressed Trump and his false claims, have made a nearly hundred-and-eighty-degree turn. “Election denial, as the midterm results have just shown, is not a political winner,” Susan B. Glasser writes, and, since last week’s elections, “the Murdoch media empire has embarked on a remarkable we-told-you-so campaign hitting Trump.” But a divided Republican Party is exactly what brought Trump to power—should we assume this time will be different? As Glasser asks, “Is losing really a bigger sin for Republicans than harassing women, blackmailing foreign leaders, or seeking to remain in power by calling forth an angry mob to attack Congress?” It’s a chilling question.

https://www.newyorker.com/news/lett...70&esrc=growl2-regGate-0521&mbid=CRMNYR012019
 

footy

Elite Member
Aug 28, 2019
4,142
841
Marina Dool Rey
#48
Contrary it feels he's a viable choice for many. Aging egotesticles !!!

The End of Trump?
Rupert Murdoch may have pulled the plug on him for 2024, but it’s not clear yet if the rest of the G.O.P. will follow.

“Is losing really a bigger sin for Republicans than harassing women, blackmailing foreign leaders, or seeking to remain in power by calling forth an angry mob to attack Congress?”




Donald Trump is running again for President in 2024, as he announced from Mar-a-Lago last night, but some Republicans who were his biggest supporters are all but rejecting him this time around. In particular, platforms like Fox News and the New York Post, which once buttressed Trump and his false claims, have made a nearly hundred-and-eighty-degree turn. “Election denial, as the midterm results have just shown, is not a political winner,” Susan B. Glasser writes, and, since last week’s elections, “the Murdoch media empire has embarked on a remarkable we-told-you-so campaign hitting Trump.” But a divided Republican Party is exactly what brought Trump to power—should we assume this time will be different? As Glasser asks, “Is losing really a bigger sin for Republicans than harassing women, blackmailing foreign leaders, or seeking to remain in power by calling forth an angry mob to attack Congress?” It’s a chilling question.

https://www.newyorker.com/news/lett...70&esrc=growl2-regGate-0521&mbid=CRMNYR012019