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csziggy

(34,189 posts)
23. "I am not a crook." was about Nixon's taxes!
Sun Apr 16, 2017, 11:10 AM
Apr 2017
Nixon's Failed Effort to Withhold His Tax Returns
Aug 2, 2016 3:04 PM EDT
By Stephen Mihm

In 1952, when he ran as Dwight D. Eisenhower’s vice-presidential candidate. Nixon, then a congressman, got into trouble for a secret campaign fund and divulged detailed information about his family’s finances in response.

In his famous "Checkers speech," in which he painted himself as an American everyman struggling to make ends meet, Nixon called on the Democratic candidates for president and vice president -- Adlai Stevenson and John Sparkman -- to “come before the American people, as I have, and make a complete financial statement as to their financial history." He added: "And if they don’t, it will be an admission that they have something to hide."

Stevenson and Sparkman matched Nixon’s disclosures, but upped the ante. They released 10 years of returns, far more information than Nixon provided, and demanded that the Republican candidates do the same. In response, Eisenhower grudgingly released a summary of his tax returns, but refused to release the actual forms. Nixon, however, refused to release anything related to his taxes, renewing suspicions.

<SNIP>

But then things unraveled. The best account of Nixon’s tax travails comes from the historian Joseph Thorndike. Thanks to a deposition in a civil suit connected to the Watergate burglary in 1973, reporters learned that Nixon had taken a rather unusual tax break in 1969.
https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2016-08-02/nixon-s-failed-effort-to-withhold-his-tax-returns


Thorndike's account:

JCT Investigation of Nixon’s Tax Returns
Joseph J. Thorndike
February 2016

<SNIP>

In the summer and fall of 1973, Nixon was engulfed by a controversy over his personal taxes. An outsize charitable donation was the proximate cause, but the scandal expanded to include numerous issues with the returns Nixon had filed between 1968 and 1972. The returns were private, of course, but a series of leaks, combined with informed speculation, gave critics plenty of ammunition. Nixon, it seemed, had played fast and loose with the revenue laws, exploiting his position to minimize taxes and avoid scrutiny from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

Nixon’s tax scandal actually prompted one of his most famous public statements, generally thought to refer to Wartergate. "People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook,” he told reporters in November 1973. “Well, I am not a crook."

<SNIP>

Swayed by such arguments, Congress had begun developing legislation in 1969 to limit the value of official paper donations. Attorneys for both Nixon and his predecessor, Lyndon Johnson, urged lawmakers to leave the window open just a bit longer. Nixon and Johnson even discussed the pending legislation directly with one another. Ultimately, however, the Tax Reform Act of 1969 nearly eliminated the deduction, providing specifically that donations made after July 25, 1969 would be limited to the cost of the paper on which the documents were produced.

As Congress moved toward limiting the deduction, Johnson chose not to make a gift before the deadline. Nixon, however, did rush one through. According to “a high White House official” speaking with The Washington Post
, the president had donated 1,176 boxes of papers on March 27, 1969. He subsequently claimed a deduction of “somewhat over $500,000” on his 1969 tax return.

The complete paper is at: http://uschs.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/USCHS-History-Role-Joint-Committee-Taxation-Thorndike.pdf


In the end it was determined that Nixon had not made a "valid gift before the July 25, 1969 deadline." The penalties and interest cost Nixon over half his net worth by the time he paid them.

Despite his own advice to politicians to be upfront with financial information, Nixon could not help but to be a crook.

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0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

There are 365 days in the yeear. I'm glad about the tax protests timed with tax day Tom Rinaldo Apr 2017 #1
IMPACT jodymarie aimee Apr 2017 #12
OFFS! Foamfollower Apr 2017 #2
The taxes are important as they would provide more information as to who pulls his strings SticksnStones Apr 2017 #3
I doubt many people in that era believed Nixon to be a Russian stooge. Vinnie From Indy Apr 2017 #4
Nailed it JustAnotherGen Apr 2017 #6
That is the difference! redstatebluegirl Apr 2017 #28
this right here. nt LaydeeBug Apr 2017 #39
That was then, this is now JustAnotherGen Apr 2017 #5
All of the above, plus: OilemFirchen Apr 2017 #7
His taxes are very important...while the past can educate us, Demsrule86 Apr 2017 #8
Nice story. Tommy_Carcetti Apr 2017 #9
We had much greater equality of income in 1969. delisen Apr 2017 #10
In 1973 Nixon was forced to release his tax returns Voltaire2 Apr 2017 #11
"I am not a crook." was about Nixon's taxes! csziggy Apr 2017 #23
yeah yeah we know that ..... jodymarie aimee Apr 2017 #33
But the anti-war movement did NOT get Nixon out csziggy Apr 2017 #40
ONE MORE TIME jodymarie aimee Apr 2017 #41
IMPACT - that anit-war demonstrations did not get Nixon out csziggy Apr 2017 #43
So let's normalize the fact that we have no idea where his conflicts of interest lie? Squinch Apr 2017 #13
Take the time to think about your post before writing it. It should make sense. n/t Judi Lynn Apr 2017 #14
thought about it all day yesterday when there was NO media coverage of protests jodymarie aimee Apr 2017 #17
Oh please. JTFrog Apr 2017 #21
But tax issues rid us of Agnew a few years later struggle4progress Apr 2017 #15
I agree. I wish he had released his taxes and I wish the voters had cared that he didn't do it, Midwestern Democrat Apr 2017 #16
All resistance is good resistance. Squinch Apr 2017 #18
Joy Ann Reid is on jodymarie aimee Apr 2017 #19
Yes, you are trying really hard to convince someone of that. JTFrog Apr 2017 #22
update jodymarie aimee Apr 2017 #30
Lol, ok. nt JTFrog Apr 2017 #20
I didn't even know there was a protest until I logged on to DU this morning. frankieallen Apr 2017 #24
Who cares BannonsLiver Apr 2017 #26
The 60's are over BannonsLiver Apr 2017 #25
As of 1969 there was no long-standing custom The Velveteen Ocelot Apr 2017 #27
People protested in 69 because their butts were at stake through the Draft n2doc Apr 2017 #29
Publishing your tax returns matters a lot when you're a self-proclaimed non-politician Mr. Ected Apr 2017 #31
Sadly, I agree with you. cwydro Apr 2017 #32
#1. If we get Congress in '18, it'll matter. #2. States can put laws saying candidates MUST KittyWampus Apr 2017 #34
I hope this will happen. cwydro Apr 2017 #42
Would it help if we put TAXES in all caps? johnp3907 Apr 2017 #35
Things change blogslut Apr 2017 #36
As I recall, it was mostly about the Vietnam War and later, Watergate. kentuck Apr 2017 #37
The more Trump resists showing his taxes rock Apr 2017 #38
Did the other side accuse the other side of being paid by billionaires like now? Initech Apr 2017 #44
The rallies and marches bothered Trump stage left Apr 2017 #45
Does he think they were paid by Soros? kentuck Apr 2017 #46
Dear Mr. Soros stage left May 2017 #49
We stopped a WAR jodymarie aimee Apr 2017 #48
this isn't 1969 and Nixon is not president JI7 Apr 2017 #47
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»1969 WAR protests, we did...»Reply #23