Tariffs are Trump’s favorite foreign policy tool. The Supreme Court could change how he uses them
- This week the Supreme Court considers whether President Donald Trump overstepped authority in imposing tariffs, with courts leaving the contested tariffs in place as the high court reviews the case.
 - Lower courts concluded that President Donald Trump lacked IEEPA authority to set tariffs, while the Justice Department and White House defended the tariffs as lawful presidential foreign-affairs powers.
 - Trump has used tariffs to pressure countries on security and judicial matters, including Brazil and Canada, while imposing new rates by executive order and firing social media threats, including over an Ontario ad.
 - A ruling against President Donald Trump could curtail the rapid tariff leverage his foreign policy has used, while the White House is preparing contingency plans and some businesses have raised prices, affecting consumers.
 - The decision could rattle geopolitics and consumer wallets given strained relationships with allies and foes, while foreign governments may reconsider recent trade deals amid complex legal shifts under IEEPA, experts Emily Kilcrease and Josh Lipsky said.
 
129 Articles
129 Articles
Supreme Court cannot stop all of Trump's tariffs. Deal with it, officials say
Factory equipment maker OTC Industrial Technologies has long used low-cost countries to supply components - first China and later India - but President Donald Trump's blitz of tariffs on numerous trade partners has upended the supply chain math for CEO…
The president has no ‘foreign policy’ discretion to impose sweeping global tariffs
On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments to scrutinize the tariffs President Trump’s sweeping levied against every nation on earth. Trump invoked emergency powers from an obscure law to justify this move. Those now petitioning the Supreme Court to declare the tariffs unconstitutional have argued that whatever that obscure law says, Congress cannot delegate its exclusive powers — including the power to tax and to regulate for…
The U.S. President has been governing under the state of emergency for months to impose his customs duties on other countries.
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