Trump vows to use tariffs in ‘more powerful and obnoxious’ way after Supreme Court ruling
Following the Supreme Court ruling invalidating emergency tariffs, Trump raised global import duties to 15% under a different law, with $133 billion collected previously under emergency powers.
- Following the Friday decision, the White House announced new tariffs rising from 10 to 15 percent to take effect on Tuesday, after the Supreme Court struck down broad tariffs in a 6-3 ruling.
- The U.S. Supreme Court found IEEPA did not authorize broad tariffs, and the administration has invoked Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act as an alternative. The court emphasized congressional authorization is required.
- Reacting early Monday, President Donald Trump claimed on Truth Social that the court 'accidentally and unwittingly' granted him 'far more powers and strength' and said he can use licenses to do 'terrible' things to foreign countries, though he clarified the ruling doesn't allow it.
- Internationally, the European Parliament groups paused work to ratify a US-EU trade deal after new 15% tariffs, while UK officials said engagement continues but warned nothing is off the table.
- Markets reacted as the FTSE 250 fell 17.4pc amid tariff uncertainties and a Bank of England policymaker warned that the US tariff shock could take years to impact the economy.
183 Articles
183 Articles
On Friday morning, the United States Supreme Court ruled, by a vote of 6 to 3, that the 1977 Emergency Act did not delegate the power of the Congress to impose tariffs on the President, identifying acute differences between capitalists and triggering an unprecedented attack by Trump on the court and individual judges.
State of the Union to Focus on Economy and the Middle Class
President Donald Trump is about to walk into the House chamber not just to deliver a constitutionally required report, but to make a direct appeal to the people who decide whether this country rises or collapses: America’s working families. His 2026 State of the Union is being framed by the White House as a data-backed, human-centered economic case on affordability, wages, and opportunity—paired with new policy moves designed to lock in his visi…
After the setback imposed by the Supreme Court, Donald Trump threatened "much higher" tariffs, and denounced "a ridiculous decision," while saying that he could act without Congress' agreement.
US imposes new tariffs as Trump moves to rebuild trade agenda following Supreme Court ruling
Fresh US tariffs on imported goods have come into effect, marking a significant shift in President Trump's trade agenda following a Supreme Court ruling. This new policy, aimed at addressing the US balance-of-payments deficits, raises questions about its impact on global trade dynamics.
Murdoch Paper Slams ‘Bull-Headed’ Trump Over SCOTUS Tantrum
The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board blasted “bull-headed” Donald Trump’s decision to respond to the Supreme Court nullifying his precious tariffs with more tariffs. Trump, amid his fuming at the court, announced on Saturday that he had imposed 15 percent tariffs globally by invoking part of the Trade Act of 1974, which lets the president apply tariffs for a maximum of 150 days. “The smart play after his legal defeat would be to take an off…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 57% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium





































