WASHINGTON -- Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Tuesday the department intends to "follow the law" and is reviewing a request by a top House Democrat to provide President Donald Trump's tax returns to lawmakers.
But in Capitol Hill appearances Tuesday, Mnuchin dodged answering whether he would comply with the request to supply Trump's tax returns by today, and he also said he has not promised to authorize the IRS to supply the returns.
"I have said we will comply with the law," Mnuchin told the House Financial Services Committee. "I have not made a comment one way or the other on whether we will provide the tax returns."
The head of the IRS, meanwhile, agreed with Democrats it's primarily his decision to make -- though he reports to Mnuchin. IRS commissioner Charles Rettig told lawmakers "we're working on" a response to a request from Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal.
"The decision is mine with the supervision of Treasury," Rettig said, adding he and Mnuchin have discussed who would handle the response but haven't reached a conclusion.
Mnuchin also revealed Treasury Department lawyers have talked to the White House counsel's office about the question of releasing Trump's returns, telling lawmakers the consultations occurred before the request arrived last week. Mnuchin said the conversations were "purely informational," and he has not been briefed on their content.
Mnuchin told a House panel he personally has not had any communications with the president or his top staff about the department's decision on whether to provide Trump's tax returns under a nearly century-old law stating the Treasury Department "shall furnish" them when requested by top lawmakers.
"I have had no direction conversations with the president or anybody else" at the White House, Mnuchin told the Financial Service panel Tuesday afternoon. He said members of Treasury's legal team had had consultations on the matter before the tax return request was made but the Treasury officials had not sought any type of permission to release the returns.
"We would never ask for the White House's permission on this," Mnuchin said.
"It is our intent to follow the law and that is in the process of being reviewed," Mnuchin told a House Appropriations subcommittee with responsibility for his budget.
Neal, D-Mass., requested the returns last week in a letter to Mnuchin and set a deadline of today to provide them. Mnuchin said he "looks forward to responding," but it appears clear Treasury won't meet the deadline and actually produce the returns.
Acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said on Sunday lawmakers will "never" see Trump's returns. But the White House is supposed to stay out of the decision, and Rettig said he's had no contact with anyone there.
Financial Services Chairwoman Maxine Waters, D-Calif., citing a long list of Trump administration officials who have departed, pressed Mnuchin on whether he was worried about being fired if he complied with the request.
"I am not afraid of being fired at all," Mnuchin said. "I want to be clear that we will follow the law."
Neal requested six years of Trump's personal and business returns, relying on a 1924 statute stating the Treasury Department "shall furnish" them when requested. The IRS is part of Treasury.
Trump has broken with tradition by not voluntarily releasing his tax returns. He routinely says -- as he did Friday -- he's under audit and therefore won't release his returns. But Rettig reiterated there's no rule prohibiting taxpayers under audit from releasing their returns.
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