September 22, 2009 11:08 AM

Daschle's Duplicity

By
CBSNews
(Weekly Standard)  This column was written by Meghan Clyne.

At least Tom Daschle still has his friends. Hardly had the would-be Health and Human Services secretary exited stage left before his Washington defenders got to work. A former HHS secretary went on TV lauding Daschle as "honorable." Members of the Senate praised their former colleague as "a great leader" and "a class act." The president himself showed empathy and forgiveness, describing Daschle's failure to pay more than $130,000 in federal taxes as an "honest" and "unintentional mistake."

Really? Had these Daschle stalwarts paid attention to widely available press reports and public information dating back five years, they might have seen how these recent transgressions fit into a larger pattern of behavior. And they would have discovered a sad truth: Be the tax dodges large or small, Thomas Daschle has loved them all.

Rewind to autumn 2004, when Daschle's Senate re-election campaign was in full swing. I and others reported on an eyebrow-raising property-tax break Daschle and his wife, Linda, had been receiving on their Washington home. Located at 2830 Foxhall Road NW, the brick mansion has seven bedrooms, six-and-a-half bathrooms, four fireplaces, and a current assessed value of nearly $2.9 million.

When the Daschles bought the home for $1.9 million in April 2003, they filed for the District of Columbia's "homestead deduction" on their property taxes. To receive the break, Daschle had to affirm that the house met the eligibility standards under D.C. code--namely, that it was "the principal place of residence within the District of an individual, shareholder, or member, who is domiciled in the District."

In Washington the word "domiciled" has a particular meaning, defined by the Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Murphy. According to the 1941 decision, "persons are domiciled here who live here and have no fixed and definite intent to return and make their homes where they were formerly domiciled."

Try to reconcile that with the laws of South Dakota, where Daschle was a resident, voter, and Senator. State code spells out clearly the criteria for determining voter residence: "For the purposes of this title, the term, residence, means the place in which a person has fixed his or her habitation and to which the person, whenever absent, intends to return. If a person moves to another state, or to any of the other territories, with the intention of making it his or her permanent home, the person thereby loses residence in this state."

Hardly the best situation to be in if you're trying to get re-elected to the Senate--especially given those pesky residency requirements in the Constitution: "No Person shall be a Senator who . . . shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen."

Despite the contradictions, for months Daschle had his tax break and ate it too. For nearly a year and a half, he received the homestead deduction as a Washingtonian--and during that time, according to records on file with the Brown County Auditor, voted as a South Dakotan.

By fall 2004, however, something had changed--and Daschle stopped receiving the Washington property-tax break. Two employees of the D.C. Office of Tax and Revenue independently confirm that the homestead deduction was "retroactively reversed" to April 2003, the date the Daschles bought their home. According to the tax office, this means the home was never eligible to receive the deduction--and files show that the Daschles have, in their subsequent assessments, paid the back taxes.

The result of the "retroactive reversal" is that the Daschles' D.C. records show them as having, in effect, never taken a property-tax deduction to which they were not entitled. And they are now in the good graces of the District of Columbia Office of Tax and Revenue. Strangely enough, files show that the "retroactive reversal" that made this magic possible took place on September 29, 2004. It was the same day the tax office received a Freedom of Information Act request from a reporter sniffing around the story in the heat of Daschle's Senate campaign.

So five years ago, Tom Daschle conveniently avoided taxes until the non-payment put his career ambitions in danger. Then he took steps to make amends, pay the back taxes, and move on. Sound familiar?

On one hand, the 2004 mess is tiny compared to Daschle's current woes. Far from an attempt to pocket $130,000 owed to the feds, Daschle's D.C. homestead deduction saved him just under $300 (roughly the value of one-third of one square foot of his Foxhall mansion) in 2003. On the other hand, the 2004 episode suggests tax avoidance more determined and unscrupulous than his recent trip-up. Hardly an understandable error of omission, applying for the homestead deduction required Daschle to sign and affirm--under penalty of a $1,000 fine or 100 days' imprisonment for knowingly swearing to false information--that he was eligible for a tax break which, it turns out, he was not.

Those of us who have overpaid local levies fearing the wrath of the tax man curse the Daschle double-standard. Yet in a twist, it's a double-standard that may ultimately have served Daschle his just deserts. As his nomination sank, understandable questions were raised about the White House vetting process. A simple Google or Nexis search--usually a must for anyone being considered for mention in a presidential speech, let alone a Cabinet post--would have turned up the 2004 property-tax matter. (It would have been a useful clue, perhaps, for the people who are now so surprised by Daschle's "mistake.") If the Obama team had followed the Bush administration's practice of asking all nominees to undergo IRS background checks, anything as small as a late payment would have been flagged. And if the Obama people had just given Daschle their own vaunted seven-page questionnaire for prospective staff, it's unlikely Daschle's back taxes would have escaped notice.

Did Obama's vetters fail to subject Daschle to the same scrutiny they would apply to little people because of his Democratic star power and friends in high places? Or did they know Daschle had tax problems and figured he'd get away with it because of his Democratic star power and friends in high places? In either case, they forgot the perils of Cabinet nominees who come only with star power and friends in high places (see Kerik, Bernard).

President Obama promised to govern competently and transparently, and to be a 21st-century leader prepared to harness the power of the information age. The failure to uncover Daschle's years'-long record of tax avoidance begins to suggest otherwise. In light of Obama's two other tax-dodging nominees, his critics are starting to grow a little louder and little bolder. And unless the new president begins learning from these hard lessons, he may soon find himself quite unhappy in his own District of Columbia property--the 11-bedroom, 35-bathroom, 28-fireplace, $308 million mansion at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

Meghan Clyne is writer in Washington, D.C.

By Meghan Clyne
Reprinted with permission from The Weekly Standard

Weekly Standard
Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by vanys-2009 February 8, 2009 9:09 AM EST
investors = money changers. Who did Jesus run out of the temple?

Investors are dependent on credit business. It is "unamerican" to not be soaked in debt. We are lead to believe that our success is measured by our "credit rating" not our ability to survive without "credit".

Ponzi is admired and copied by investors. For as long as we are duped into believing we should borrow to live beyond our means, the investors will continue to flourish.

If our economic system is to rely on supply and demand, businesses should supply products and services we need to live comfortably.

How much different from investors are our leaders who continue to tax working people who are already soaked by debt?

We are more educated now than ever before. Now is a good time for our national leaders to fashion a tax system that will eliminate the phrase "tax cheat".

If our government is to serve the people it should provide products and services we need to live comfortably with taxes we are willing to pay!

Reply to this comment
by nearl4511 February 7, 2009 10:42 PM EST
There was no one talented and as well suited for the poistions that Tom wss to work....and he knew how to get legislation passed.

Wow what a boring scandal. Hewas found not tohavepaid his taxes and then PAID them. Whooppee all ye neocons, big fickin whooooopeee.
Reply to this comment
by exusmcsgt February 7, 2009 8:58 PM EST
WASHINGTON - Michael S. Steele, the newly elected chairman of the Republican National Committee, arranged for his 2006 Senate campaign to pay a defunct company run by his sister for services that were never performed, his finance chairman from that campaign has told federal prosecutors.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29066465/
Reply to this comment
by cameraphone February 6, 2009 10:58 PM EST
The confirmation process is exposing several nominees as having tax problems and issues, but taken as a percentage indicates this is probably a wider problem among all of our elected government officials.
Reply to this comment
by msay3 February 6, 2009 7:53 PM EST
We as a nation must raise the bar for those who wish to represent us. Integrity must be in the forefront.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by cbs_tom at 10:27 AM : Feb 06, 2009
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In sports as well...Most everyone thinks that Michael Phelps did no wrong getting photographed taking a hit off of a bong, but I beg to differ....He put himself in a position as a role model, and for that, he must be made accountable.....
Reply to this comment
by jimmyc1955 February 6, 2009 4:23 PM EST
The glaring omision in much of these comments is that Mr. Daschel was deliberatly ignoring the residency requirements of his own state in order to avoid property taxes on his then $2MILLION dollar home in Washington.

So he didn''t want to pay his fair share, applied for and exemption meant to encourge home ownership for lower income residents and chose to ingore his residentail requirements in South Dakota.

That all reeks of a man who expects a privlidged position and opportunities. A person who feels he is above the normal ethical behavior and laws of the land.

From that elevated, privildged he would dictate to others what they should and will have to do while he views himself above those same laws and regulations.

Folks - if we don''t call our senators, congressmen, send them emails and let them know we are watching what do we expect?
Reply to this comment
by vranger February 6, 2009 2:51 PM EST
What is amazing is that if this story were about a Repblican leader (current or former), the apologists below would have been all over him with hateful rhetoric. Evidently Democrat crooks are loveable, forgiveable, and commit ''honest crimes'', while Republican crooks are despicable, evil warmongers.

Yeah .... right. ROFL
Reply to this comment
by cbs_tom February 6, 2009 1:27 PM EST
It amazes me that there are those out there that will defend his actions. He did wrong and he knows it. He was trying to get nominated to an important position within the administration that declared that paying taxes is patriotic. We as a nation must raise the bar for those who wish to represent us. Integrity must be in the forefront.
Reply to this comment
by bobs1066 February 6, 2009 1:22 PM EST
You''re doing a heck of a job, Barry!
Reply to this comment
by au_fait February 6, 2009 11:21 AM EST
how many out there have squeaky clean returns?
thats what I thought.
I thought republicans hated taxes
that ought to make daschle these hypocrites hero.

Posted by ainttaken

Maybe our government officials should be held to a higher level. they are chosen to represent us and to make our laws. if they are not going to serve those laws then they should not serve us.
Reply to this comment
See all 17 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook