Fox News was busy Monday covering for President Donald Trump in the wake of The New York Times’s report Sunday that he paid only $750 in income tax for the years 2016 and 2017and that he had “paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the previous 15 years — largely because he reported losing much more money than he made.”
The Times also reported that Trump paid $24.3 million in the alternative minimum tax — which is meant to catch up the very wealthy who claim exorbitant business deductions — during seven years between 2000 and 2017. “For 2015, he paid $641,931, his first payment of any federal income tax since 2010.”
Fox has not addressed any of the specific deductions that Trump has claimed, such as for the $70,000 paid to style his hair when he did the TV show The Apprentice or what the Times described as a write-off for “a mansion used as a family retreat.” And while Fox did mention the returns showing he is $300 million in debt, the network did not dwell at all on the potential ramifications this would have for the president of the United States, who might face personal pressure from his creditors.
Rather, Fox’s purported “news”-side anchors have been uncritically carrying denials from Trump aides without asking any follow-up questions, while discussing any implications for the campaign between Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden, rather than exploring the main thrust of the story itself.
Meanwhile, Fox’s pure opinion-based commentators are becoming especially strident in their reactions to this story.
Fox News host Steve Hilton opened Sunday night’s edition of The Next Revolution with Steve Hilton by declaring the Times article “an establishment hit job,” while he also posited that “this latest attack, orchestrated by The New York Times, CNN, and MSNBC, could be the moment the establishment handed the election to Donald Trump.”
Later in the program, Fox News contributor Kristen Soltis Anderson said the tax returns don’t matter as much as they might have in 2016, because Trump is already president. “So I think there is some risk because there may be a lot of Americans that go, ‘Wait a minute, I paid more than $750 in taxes last year,’ who are personally upset to hear that,” Anderson said. “But I do think it may have less of an effect because people are already judging President Trump's economic record on its own numbers rather than on it as a hypothetical thing based on Trump's business record.”
But the rhetorical crescendo reached its apex in a discussion with Trump campaign adviser Corey Lewandowski, when he and Hilton said that in avoiding paying taxes Trump was simply meeting his obligation to his family and his employees — and he has done the same for you, by cutting your taxes.