Uncertainty for UK After US Supreme Court Tariff Ruling, Experts Say
The UK government expects continued preferential trade terms despite uncertainty over tariff refunds and potential new US tariffs, British Chamber of Commerce said the ruling leaves trade conditions unclear.
- On Friday, the US Supreme Court struck down many of President Donald Trump's tariffs, leaving UK businesses facing immediate uncertainty over tariff exposure and sector deals.
- For the UK, officials point to a 10% rate and sector carve-outs negotiated by Sir Keir Starmer and President Trump, but duties on steel, aluminium, pharmaceuticals, automobiles, and aerospace remain.
- The British Chamber of Commerce warned that the decision `does little to clear the murky waters for business`, while Richard Rumbelow and Andy Prendergast urged clarity and called the ruling `very welcome`.
18 Articles
18 Articles
It's like adding uncertainty to the chaos. Donald Trump's angry reaction to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on Friday to the so-called reciprocal tariffs—a catarata of trade rates imposed on other countries in April 2025—has plunged into a wave of bewilderment businessmen and diplomatic leaders from around the world.
Trump tariffs ruling a 'strong signal' for trade rules, says German business
A US Supreme Court ruling that sweeping tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump are illegal is a "strong signal for the rules-based trading system", German industry group BDI said Friday.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 39% of the sources lean Left, 38% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium














