(Image source from: Fox News)
The United States Senator Bernie Sanders has released a decade of tax returns on Monday.
According to the returns provided by his campaign on Monday, Sanders and wife Jane's bottom line jumped from $240,622 in 2015, the year he launched his first White House bid, to $1,073,333 a year later.
The release has provided new insight into how the Democratic socialist from Vermont turned a millionaire between his two presidential runs.
Since that first run, the Sanders couple made a total of more than $2.79 million, putting them in the category of the super-rich.
Sanders in a statement on Monday said the returns "show that our family has been very fortunate".
"I consider paying more in taxes as my income rose to be both an obligation and an investment in our country... I will continue to fight to make our tax system more progressive so that our country has the resources to guarantee the American Dream to all people," he added.
The records showed that Sanders' growing income and confirmed his status as a millionaire, largely on the strength of proceeds from book sales, including the bestselling "Where We Go From Here", published in 2018.
Sanders reported a total 2018 family income of $566,421 - $382,920 of which came from authorship and royalties. According to documents, he paid $137,573 in federal taxes in 2018 and owed $8,267 in taxes for the year.
Sanders reported paying a 26 percent effective tax rate on his adjusted gross income. The couple reported donating $18,950 to charity.
Sanders earlier this year made $110 in music royalties, presumably for his 1987 folk album, "We Shall Overcome", and an additional $1,810 from his 1997 memoir, "Outsider in the House". He was paid an additional $391,000 for his books.
In 2016, during his first presidential campaign, Sanders released only one year of records - from 2014.
Sanders' tax returns comes a day after Democratic presidential candidate Senator Kamala Harris released 15 years of her tax returns, showing that she and her husband earned almost $1.9 million in 2018.
Senators Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Amy Klobuchar, as well as Washington Governor Jay Inslee, has already made their tax returns public as part of their Democratic presidential campaigns.
Senator Cory Booker, former congressman Beto O'Rourke and South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg are yet to release their financial documents.
By Sowmya Sangam