Sarah Holliger from Findley, Ohio, blows bubbles during a Tax Day demonstration on Capitol Hill in Washington, Saturday, April 15, 2017, calling on President Donald Trump to release his tax returns. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Sarah Holliger from Findley, Ohio, blows bubbles during a Tax Day demonstration on Capitol Hill in Washington, Saturday, April 15, 2017, calling on President Donald Trump to release his tax returns. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) Credit: Manuel Balce Ceneta

Protesters took to the streets in dozens of cities nationwide Saturday to call on President Donald Trump to release his tax returns, saying Americans deserve to know about his business ties and potential conflicts of interest. Organizers said the Tax March protests were scheduled in nearly 150 cities.

Trump is the first major party nominee in more than 40 years not to release his tax returns, claiming it was because he was under audit. He later said that voters donโ€™t care.

Ann Demerlis was among hundreds who marched in Philadelphia from City Hall to an area in front of historic Independence Hall, carrying signs and chanting. โ€œWe do care. We want to see his taxes,โ€ Demerlis said.

Trump, who spent the morning at his Florida golf course, avoided hundreds of protesters when his motorcade took a circuitous route back to Mar-A-Lago, his Palm Beach, Fla., estate. Protesters marched across the bridge that divides West Palm Beach and Palm Beach, chanting and hoisting signs that read โ€œDon the Con,โ€ โ€œGo back to New York,โ€ โ€œShow your taxes!โ€ and โ€œShow me the money!โ€

In Washington, D.C., one of Trumpโ€™s sharpest critics in the House spoke to protesters at the U.S. Capitol just before they set off on a march to the National Mall. Rep. Maxine Waters, a California Democrat, said thereโ€™s nothing to prevent Trump from releasing his income taxes and that โ€œthe simple truth is heโ€™s got a lot to hide.โ€

โ€œIf he thinks he can get away with playing king, heโ€™s got another thought coming,โ€ Waters said.

For four decades, presidents and major party nominees have released some of their tax returns, with the exception of Gerald Ford. Trumpโ€™s break with precedent has raised questions about possible conflicts of interest.

Democrats are pushing for a vote on a bill which would require the president and all major-party nominees to publicly disclose their previous three years of tax returns with the Office of Government Ethics or the Federal Election Commission.

Republicans also have rebuffed Democratsโ€™ efforts to get the House Ways and Means Committee to act. It has legal authority to obtain confidential tax records, and could vote to make them public.

Tuesday is the deadline for taxpayers to file returns.