Trump has options if the Supreme Court blocks him from imposing ’emergency’ tariffs


WASHINGTON — Countries around the world — Canada included — are waiting anxiously as the U.S. Supreme Court considers whether President Donald Trump has the authority to continue using his favoured tariff tool.

No matter which way the court jumps, however, the Trump administration is expected to maintain some level of tariffs on the United States’ trade partners.

Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday it would be “devastating” for the country if the top court rules against him, “but I also think we will have to develop a game two plan.”

The conservative-led U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments Wednesday related to two separate legal challenges of Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act for tariffs.

Trump used the national security statute, better known as IEEPA, to impose his so-called “Liberation Day” tariffs and fentanyl-related duties on Canada, Mexico and China.

Trump’s top Supreme Court lawyer, Solicitor General D. John Sauer, faced pointed questions when he appeared before the court Wednesday. Several justices voiced skepticism about the president’s use of IEEPA when the statute itself does not include the word “tariff” or any of its synonyms.

The justices closely examined the language in the act — particularly the wording about the president’s power to “regulate” imports — to determine whether that allows for Trump’s wide-ranging tariffs.

Sauer argued that Trump is using IEEPA to regulate foreign commerce rather than raise money — despite Trump’s repeated public claims that the duties are making America rich.

The U.S. Constitution reserves power over taxation and tariffs for Congress. The justices wrestled with the broader implications of handing wide-ranging tariff powers to the president.

Trump appointee Justice Neil Gorsuch suggested that once that power was given to a president, it would be next to impossible for Congress to get it back.

“It’s a one-way ratchet toward the gradual but continual accretion of power in the executive branch and away from the people’s elected representatives,” Gorsuch said.

The lawyers arguing against Trump’s tariffs were also challenged by the justices on the broad language in IEEPA, said King & Spalding partner Ryan Majerus, a former assistant general counsel at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative during the first Trump administration.

The conservative majority justices on the Supreme Court have been hesitant to rein in the unprecedented expansion of executive power during Trump’s second term.



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