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Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden released his 2019 tax returns hours before the first debate with President Donald Trump, showing that he paid $299,346 in income taxes in 2019.
September 30 -
Deductions for haircuts, consulting fee write-offs, a family estate that is treated as a business property and an aggressive refund claim could open President Donald Trump to legal risks once he’s out of office.
September 29 -
A New York Times story based on Donald Trump’s long-sought-after tax data shows he avoided paying income taxes for most of the past two decades and paid only $750 the year he was elected president.
September 29 -
The details published about Donald Trump’s tax returns were a revelation to the public but not to a small group of attorneys who work for a little-known congressional panel.
September 29 -
The president deemed the report "fake news," and said he had paid "a lot."
September 28 -
Regardless of their voting intentions, they overwhelmingly expect things to improve after Nov. 3.
September 27 -
Lawyers for Donald Trump were met with skepticism from federal appeals court judges as they made their latest attempt to block New York prosecutors from getting their hands on his tax filings and other financial documents through a grand jury subpoena.
September 25 -
The Manhattan district attorney said press reports suggesting potential misdeeds by President Donald Trump and his company could justify a grand jury subpoena of the president’s taxes and other financial records.
September 22 -
The U.S. Senate and Supreme Court are joining the House in not implementing President Donald Trump’s order allowing employers to defer payroll taxes owed by workers.
September 16 -
The U.S. House of Representatives won’t implement President Donald Trump’s order allowing employers to defer payroll taxes owed by workers, joining major companies in rejecting the option.
September 14 -
A month after President Donald Trump moved to shore up workers’ incomes by giving employers the option of deferring payroll taxes, the effort has failed to energize a U.S. economy still reeling from the coronavirus pandemic.
September 11 -
But enough issues remain that employers are not over-enthusiastic about the option, experts say.
September 10 -
The Democratic presidential nominee is proposing a 10 percent tax penalty on companies that move operations overseas and a 10 percent tax credit for companies that create jobs in the U.S.
September 9 -
A federal appeals court granted President Donald Trump an order delaying enforcement of the Manhattan district attorney’s subpoena for his tax returns while it considers his latest legal challenge but may rule quickly in the matter.
September 1 -
The Internal Revenue Service issued some eagerly anticipated guidance on President Trump's executive order.
August 28 -
The administration wants employers, not employees, to be responsible for paying back the Social Security levies when they come due next year.
August 27 -
The Trump administration’s signature tax break to help poor communities may or may not be working.
August 27 -
The U.S. Treasury Department still has yet to tell companies how to handle President Donald Trump’s order delaying the due date for employee payroll taxes, leaving major employers like Walmart Inc. in the lurch.
August 26 -
Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. agreed to delay enforcement of a subpoena for President Donald Trump’s tax and financial records until after a federal appeals court decides whether or not to put the request on ice for even longer.
August 25 -
New York is investigating whether President Donald Trump’s company falsely reported the value of his assets to secure loans and get tax benefits as claimed last year by Trump’s former personal lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, who has fallen out with his ex-boss.
August 25

















