The 2012 Republican presidential nominee, former Massachusetts
Governor Mitt Romney, has been scathing in his criticism of Trump and
said this week it was "disqualifying" for a nominee to refuse to make
his tax returns public.
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump
pushed back on Friday against renewed calls for him to release his tax
returns before the election, saying the rate that he pays is "none of your business."
Trump,
who has all but locked up the Republican Party's nomination for the
Nov. 8 presidential election, has said the Internal Revenue Service is
auditing his returns and he wants to wait until the review is over
before making them public.
"It should be and I hope it's before the election," Trump told ABC's "Good Morning America."
Trump,
a billionaire real estate developer who has boasted of his wealth
during the campaign, was asked why he had been willing in the past to
release his taxes to Pennsylvania and New Jersey officials when seeking
casino licenses, even though he was being audited IRS.
"At the time it didn't make any difference to me. Now it does," Trump said.
Pressed on what tax rate he pays, Trump refused to say.
"It's none of your business," he said. "Before 1976, people didn't do it. It used to be a secret thing," he added.
U.S. presidential nominees have voluntarily released their tax returns for decades.
Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton and her rival, Bernie Sanders,
have both released their returns. Clinton began calling this week on
Trump to do the same. Sanders released his 2014 return in April, while
former first lady Clinton posted the past eight years of her and her
husband's tax returns on her website in August.
Trump
has said there is nothing voters can learn from his tax filing. Tax
filings show sources of income, both from within the United States and
other countries, as well as charitable giving, investments, deductions
and other financial information.
Trump said his company was "clean."
"I don't have Swiss Bank accounts, I don't have offshore" accounts," he said.
The 2012 Republican presidential nominee, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney,
has been scathing in his criticism of Trump and said this week it was
"disqualifying" for a nominee to refuse to make his tax returns public.
"There is only one logical explanation for Mr. Trump's refusal to release his returns: there is a bombshell in them," Romney said in a Facebook post on Wednesday.
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