In a win for the Trump administration, an appeals court has agreed to temporarily pause a ruling that had declared the president’s sweeping tariffs illegal. This decision means that the collection of tariffs can continue for now, providing the White House with crucial time to prepare its legal arguments against what it views as an overreach of judicial power. The initial ruling by the Court of International Trade had thrown the future of Trump’s trade policy into uncertainty.
The core of the legal challenge centered on the president’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose tariffs, claiming trade deficits constituted a national emergency. The court, however, found that this action “exceed[ed] any authority granted to the president,” stating that the tariffs were “impermissible” due to a lack of legal foundation, not their economic impact.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt has publicly criticized the judges, calling their actions a “brazen abuse of their judicial power.” The administration is expected to take this case to the Supreme Court if it loses at the appeals level, signaling a prolonged and high-stakes legal battle.
Trump’s Tariffs Get Reprieve: Appeals Court Allows Collection to Continue
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