Four Pinocchios for Harry Reid’s claim about Mitt Romney’s taxes
doofiegirl POTL~PWCM~JLA
2012/08/07 17:04:53
Reid has generated a lot of controversy with his claim that presumptive GOP nominee did not pay any taxes for 10 years. He originally told the Huffington Post that a person who had invested with Bain Capital had called his office and told him this. Then, he told reporters in Nevada that “I have had a number of people tell me that.”
Reid has refused to identify his source (or sources). Romney and his campaign aides have emphatically denied the charge but Reid has stood firm. “I don’t think the burden should be on me,” he said. “The burden should be on him. He’s the one I’ve alleged has not paid any taxes.”
This whole exchange poses a fact-checking conundrum. Generally, we maintain that the person or the campaign making the charge must back it up. Reid has refused to provide any evidence, except for the (unproven) fact that someone called him up and told him something that may be true — or simply a rumor.
The Pinocchio Test
We use a reasonable person standard here. Without seeing Romney’s taxes, we cannot definitively prove Reid incorrect. But tax experts say his claim is highly improbable. Reid also has made no effort to explain why his unnamed source would be credible. So, in the absence of more information, it appears he has no basis to make his incendiary claim.
Moreover, Reid holds a position of great authority in the U.S. Congress. He should hold himself to a high standard of accuracy when making claims about political opponents.
Four Pinocchios Continue Reading on www.washingtonpost.com ... http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/post/four-pi... But Romney’s 2010 return and his estimated 2011 return do show that he paid substantial taxes in those years. In 2010, he earned nearly $22 million, including $3 million in taxable interest, nearly $5 million in dividends and more than $12 million in capital gains. He reduced his taxes by giving $3 million in charitable contributions (much of it in appreciated stock, which shielded him from paying additional capital gains.)
In other words, this tax return shows a portfolio that is not structured to yield zero taxes. We spoke to a number of tax experts, all of whom said that, given Romney’s current portfolio, it was highly improbable for Romney to have had 10 years with tax-free returns — though there could have been one or two years with little or no taxes. Again, Four Pinocchios for a feckless unsubstantiated lie from a man who Should know better!
Read More: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/p...
Top Opinion
-
BrianD3 2012/08/07 18:07:15





















Not believing for a moment that either Reid or any staff member listens to Rush Limbaughs broadcast, I must conclude that Reid was acting on advice from an unknown source which was never revealed, and that Harry Reid, D NV, Senate Majority Leader, has a bad habbit of picking fights and making public statements based on unrevealable sources.
Do our country a favor and quit running for President...loooser!!!