Trump administration requests another pause in tariff ruling on two toy companies
- The Trump administration has requested a pause in a court ruling about tariffs on two toy companies, Learning Resources and hand2mind, claiming it threatens trade negotiations with other nations and undermines the tariffs as a credible threat.
- US District Court Judge Rudolph Contreras ruled that Learning Resources and hand2mind would face irreparable harm from these tariffs.
- In its filing, the Trump administration claimed that the district court lacks jurisdiction and that only the trade court has jurisdiction over the case.
- Richard Woldenberg, CEO of Learning Resources, expressed confidence in the district court's ruling, stating, 'We’re very gratified by the ruling of the district court and believe the reasoning of the district court will be upheld.
24 Articles
24 Articles
Another appeals court pauses ruling that blocked Trump's tariffs
A federal judge on Tuesday granted the Trump administrations request to pause enforcement of a previous order that had blocked the government from collecting certain tariffs.Learning Resources Inc., a company that sells educational toys and materials, sued the administration, arguing that President Donald Trump lacked the authority to impose the tariffs. The company contends that such actions fall under Congresss constitutional powers.It marks t…
By Ramishah Maruf, CNN The Trump administration has requested a pause in a second court ruling challenging its sweeping tariffs invoked under emergency powers. The administration asked a US appeals court to stay a preliminary injunction issued last week in a case involving two US toy makers. Monday's filing argued that suspending the tariffs would threaten trade negotiations with other countries and weaken them, deeming them a "credible threat."…
By Ramishah Maruf, CNN The Trump administration has requested a pause in a second court ruling challenging its sweeping tariffs invoked under emergency powers. The administration asked a US appeals court to stay a preliminary injunction issued last week in a case involving two US toy makers. Monday's filing argued that suspending the tariffs would threaten trade negotiations with other countries and weaken them, deeming them a "credible threat."…
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