Civics: ProPublica Donors Absent From Bombshell Report on Billionaire Tax Dodgers

Joseph Simonson:

ProPublica made waves after it obtained thousands of private tax documents for the country’s wealthiest citizens and published a scathing investigation centered on the tax rates of Warren Buffett, Jeff Bezos, and Michael Bloomberg, among others. Absent from the report: any of the publication’s largest donors, including Laurene Powell Jobs, David Filo, and Pierre Omidyar.

The nonprofit news organization’s June 8 story boasted about a “trove of never-before-seen records [that] reveal how the wealthiest avoid income tax.” ProPublica documented the staggering wealth of business and finance titans, while emphasizing that they paid taxes to the federal government at a lower rate than many middle-class Americans. Conspicuously missing from the report, however, were details on whether the billionaires who fund ProPublica engage in similar tax avoidance schemes. ProPublica declined to say whether it had obtained tax returns for any of its donors or whether it planned on publishing them.

The organization initially stayed mum when asked by the Washington Free Beacon how they chose which tax returns to divulge out of the “thousands” they obtained. In a follow-up email, ProPublica president Richard Tofel said he is “not commenting on what we have until and unless we publish it.”

“I note that your list of questions seems to involve individuals who have contributed to ProPublica, directly or through entities they have created,” Tofel said. “I would note that our first story contained information about George Soros, who is similarly situated, but about whom you didn’t ask.”

Although ProPublica did make a passing reference to Soros—alleging that he “paid no federal income tax three years in a row” and printing a statement from his spokesman—the Hungarian-born billionaire is not a major funder of ProPublica.