HONOLULU (AP) — Lawmakers in Hawaii and several other states want to prevent presidential candidates from appearing on their states' ballots unless the candidates release their tax returns.

President-elect Donald Trump speaks at a news conference at Trump Tower on January 11, 2017 in New York City. Spencer Platt/Getty Images HONOLULU (AP) — Lawmakers in Hawaii and several other states want to prevent presidential candidates from appearing on their states' ballots unless the candidates release their tax returns.

They're responding to President-elect Donald Trump's decision to not release his tax returns during the presidential campaign, breaking decades of precedent.

The Hawaii bill would require candidates to release five years of federal and state tax returns to qualify for the ballot, state Rep. Chris Lee said Wednesday. Similar proposals are circulating in California, Massachusetts, and New Mexico.

"It's a reasonable step since every modern president has released their tax returns and put their assets into a blind trust to make sure the only interest they have is the interest of our country and its people," Lee said. "I think we're in a very dangerous climate in which that could change."

Lee consulted with lawyers who assured him it's legal, and if the bill passes it will undergo a thorough review from the state attorney general, he said.

Lee is still working out details on the Hawaii bill, but he plans to include a way to make the tax returns public. In the Massachusetts bill, that state's Secretary of State would be required to make the tax returns public within a month of each vote.

"If even one or two states take action, it changes the game," Lee said.

Trump has interests in 500 companies in about 20 countries, according to a disclosure document released in May. He announced plans for divesting from his businesses on Wednesday during his first press conference since being elected president.

Pew Research Center California state Sens. Scott Wiener and Mike McGuire are planning to introduce similar legislation, saying financial information should be made available to voters to build critical public trust.

Nationwide, about two-thirds of registered voters said it's somewhat or very important for presidential candidates to release their tax returns, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll in September. A Pew Research Center poll conducted in January had similar results.

Trump said at the press conference on Wednesday that he still wouldn't release his tax returns because "as you know, they're under audit."

"The only one that cares about my tax returns are the reporters. They're the only ones," Trump said at the press conference. "I won — I mean, I became president — no, I don't think [the public] care[s] at all. I don't think they care at all."