A major question for the Supreme Court: Will it treat Trump as it did Biden?
The Supreme Court examines if Trump lawfully used emergency powers under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose tariffs amid national security and economic claims.
- A major question hangs over the Supreme Court's closely watched case on President Donald Trump's far-reaching tariffs: Will the conservative majority hold Trump to the same exacting standards it used to limit his Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden?
- The businesses and states that sued over the tariffs are citing the three Trump-appointed conservative justices whose votes they hope to attract to stop Trump's economic agenda in a key test of presidential power.
- Trump imposed tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act , but the law makes no mention of tariffs, and the administration argued that the absence of 'magic words' is irrelevant.
86 Articles
86 Articles
A big question arises about President Donald Trump's tariff case being debated by the Supreme Court: Will the conservative majority keep the Republican president under the same demanding standards he used to limit his Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden?
Raskin: Conservative Supreme Court justices ‘willing to put the brakes’ on Trump
Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) said that some conservative justices on the Supreme Court appear “willing to put the brakes” on President Trump, as the high court considers the legality of the president’s sweeping tariffs. During Wednesday’s oral arguments on whether Trump overstepped his emergency authority to impose the levies, Chief Justice John Roberts and Trump-appointed…
Trump warns of 'life or death' consequences if Supreme Court fails to do his bidding
President Donald Trump warned there would be "life or death" consequences if the U.S. Supreme Court rules against his global tariff program ahead of Wednesday's oral arguments. "Tomorrow's United States Supreme Court case is, literally, LIFE OR DEATH for our Country," Trump wrote in a Tuesday post o...
Trump 'allocating himself a power that he does not have' on tariffs, expert says
The U.S. Supreme Court holds oral arguments on Wednesday over the legality of President Donald Trump's tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Speaking on FRANCE 24, Frederick T. Davis, Former Federal Prosecutor and Lecturer in Law at Columbia University, says that Trump 'is allocating himself a power that he does not have' and that the Supreme Court 'should say so'.
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