How Trump Could Unilaterally Place Tariffs on Mexico and Canada
They are allied countries with which the U.S. has a trade deal (a deal negotiated by Trump, no less), but presidential emergency powers are nearly limitless.

During his first term in office, President Donald Trump oversaw the renegotiation of a continent-wide trade deal that he hailed as "the fairest, most balanced, and beneficial trade agreement we have ever signed into law. It's the best agreement we've ever made."
As part of that deal, the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), the three countries agreed that they would not "increase any existing customs duty, or adopt any new customs duty" beyond the tariffs and duties outlined in the agreement.
Five years after he signed it, however, Trump seems to have little regard for that provision of the USMCA. He's now threatening to slap a general tariff on all imports from America's two neighbors and two largest trading partners. During an impromptu press conference in the Oval Office on Monday, Trump said those tariffs could be in place as soon as February 1.
Calling this an unprecedented maneuver is an understatement. Trump is threatening to start a trade war with two American allies, in direct violation of a trade deal that he signed just five years ago. If it's not a bluff, these tariffs would be economically damaging to all three North American economies. If it is, then it is an unnecessary bit of saber-rattling that serves only to undermine a deal that, again, Trump had signed and praised.
If he decides to follow through on the threat, however, Trump almost certainly has the power to do so. Here's how.
First, the USMCA itself is not a serious impediment. Any trade deal is ultimately only as good as all the signatories' willingness to abide by it—and the hypocrisy of tearing up his own agreement is apparently not enough to stop Trump. Additionally, the deal included a clause, Article 32.2, guaranteeing each country the right to apply new tariffs for "the protection of its own essential security interests." If Trump sets up his tariffs as a national security issue, the U.S. could claim the USMCA allows it.
That's convenient for Trump, because he'd likely also have to invoke a national emergency on the domestic side of things.
The most straightforward way for a chief executive to impose new tariffs without congressional approval or a lengthy review process—which would be required if Trump used Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, as he did in his first term to impose tariffs on China—would be to invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). That law, passed by Congress in 1977, gives the president broad and virtually unchecked power to regulate international trade while confronting "any unusual and extraordinary threat" to American "national security, foreign policy, or economy."
Since its passage, the IEEPA has been invoked 84 times, and 42 of those national emergencies are still active—mostly involving sanctions on various countries that are decidedly not U.S. allies. The IEEPA has never been used to impose tariffs. (However, President Richard Nixon used a precursor to the IEEPA to set 10 percent universal tariffs in 1971.)
Even though it's never been used that way before, even critics of Trump's tariff plans admit the IEEPA could be used to invoke them. "Aside from minor reporting and consultations with Congress, moreover, the only serious check on IEEPA authority is the requirement that the president declare an emergency pursuant to the NEA, which can be done at any time," the Cato Institute's Scott Lincicome and Clark Packard wrote in October.
But, wait, does such an emergency exist? Canada's and Mexico's status as close U.S. allies and trading partners (and signatories to a trade deal that includes the U.S.) would seem to preclude the notion that either could be appropriately labeled a national security or economic threat, much less an "unusual and extraordinary" one, right?
That probably doesn't matter. The open-ended nature of the IEEPA gives presidents "wide discretion in defining both the threat and the actions that the President finds necessary to deal with the circumstances of the emergency," explained Thomas Beline and James Ransdell, a pair of attorneys at a trade-focused law firm in Washington, D.C., in a September blog post.
Could Congress intervene to block an emergency declaration or to prevent Trump from using the IEEPA to impose tariffs? Probably not. Once the IEEPA has been invoked, the law requires only that presidents "consult" with Congress about the steps to be taken.
Congress does have the power to override national emergencies with a joint resolution, but getting a veto-proof majority in both chambers seems unlikely. No national emergency has been terminated without the president going along, and some recent attempts at undoing long-running "emergencies" have attracted little support in Congress.
The Trump administration would likely have to defend this use of the IEEPA in court, but the law has fair prospects of surviving a legal challenge. Beline and Ransdell argue that "any legal challenge might ultimately be deemed by a reviewing court to be a political question and one that the judiciary would not second-guess."
Recent history seems to confirm that. Judges were reluctant to get involved when Trump levied new tariffs on steel and aluminum imports during his first term, even though the "national security" rationale underpinning those actions was virtually nonexistent. Asking the Supreme Court to block a national security declaration or Trump's use of that declaration to impose tariffs would be a Hail Mary play.
We may be nearing the end point of a decadeslong trend that saw Congress offload its constitutional authority over trade policy to the chief executive, while simultaneously handing over virtually unchecked and vaguely defined emergency powers. Given the accumulation of those powers within the executive branch, it may have been inevitable that a president would eventually put the two together.
Some will argue that Trump's tariff threats against Mexico and Canada should not be taken too seriously, and that they are merely a starting point for the next round of negotiations over the USMCA. Under the terms of the deal, officials from all three countries are supposed to review it (and potentially make changes) in 2026.
There are a few problems with that logic. First, Trump has explicitly denied that's what he's trying to do. Perhaps more importantly: By setting a precedent of ignoring the plainly stated terms of the existing deal, Trump seems likely to undermine the long-term stability of the USMCA, even if he's able to negotiate productive changes next year.
After all, why should Canada and Mexico believe him the next time he proclaims a deal to be the "best agreement" ever?
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As I've said, so many times, Trump plans to declare fake national emergencies to activate powers that allow him to bypass Congress and unilaterally hike taxes on Americans who buy imports.
And his defenders think that this is totally awesome. Separation of powers is so quaint. They hate that shit. They say presidents raising taxes without Congress is the best.
Do you ever tire of posting strawmen to tilt at all day?
Oh, what sarcasmic wrote totally sounds like a strawman, I'll give you that. Except for the fact that it accurately describes what Trump has said and done on this.
Don’t wet yourself Jason.
Here's video of some fine folks who make our country richer and promote liberty through their migration choices, They might be fans of Reason's open borders policies. The gentleman at the :44 mark expresses a point of view in harmony with that of Reason. https://nypost.com/2025/01/23/us-news/ice-arrests-irate-haitian-gang-member-murder-and-rape-suspects-in-boston/
Geeze. It’s called negotiation. Everyone takes an unreasonable starting position.
But Boehm strategically and reluctantly shits his pants over it.
Problem is that the negotiation is over and the trade deal signed years ago.
That's what they said about NAFTA.
Has everyone already forgotten that Trump renegotiated NAFTA?
Has everyone already forgotten that Trump renegotiated NAFTA?
And Trump wasn't the one that made the NAFTA deal originally, so there was no surprise or hypocrisy when Trump called NAFTA a bad deal. Trump's deal he made 5 years ago is not a good deal anymore? Is he trashing his own deal-making ability as a renegotiation tactic?
We have problems with Mexico that have developed during the bleak period where Biden was installed in the White House.
He wants to squeeze them for some particular solutions.
For instance, he wants both Mexico and Canada to effectively patrol their borders instead of being conduits for illegal immigration and asylum seekers.
The way you get people to do things they don't want to do is to use leverage. I do not share Trump's goals, but his tactics are vastly superior to the Biden administration politely asking them for help.
The way you get people to do things they don't want to do is to use leverage.
Sure, some people might think that threats and "leverage" is the only way to get what you want from other people. There are people, though, that realize that you can also convince people to do what you want them to do by offering them something they do want in exchange. Or, you convince them that what seems undesirable in the short term will really benefit them in the long run. Or, you simply appeal to the moral an ethical values that they've already expressed to convince them that they should do what you want, despite not wanting to.
For malignant narcissists and people that don't know how to approach problems rationally, only the first option seems to be capable of getting them what they want.
Geeze. It’s called negotiation. Everyone takes an unreasonable starting position.
I've never taken an "unreasonable starting position" in a negotiation in my life. And no one I've bargained with did so either. Of course, "unreasonable" is subjective, so I'll modify what I said.
I've never taken a stance, as my starting position in a negotiation, that people I had previously dealt with and praised were suddenly cheating me and that I needed to get a 25% boost over the previous agreement that I had called fair and great for all of us.
Trump's idea of the "art of the deal" is to be a fucking bully and use his wealth as a lever to dominate less rich people. Such as the hundreds of vendors and subcontractors he stiffed that sued him, but had to settle for far less than Trump had previously agreed to. Because, unlike Trump, they needed to get paid something for every job they did in order to keep their small businesses going. They couldn't afford a protracted legal battle that would cost more in legal bills than what Trump owed them. When Trump loses huge amounts of money in his ventures, he just declares bankruptcy for those ventures (not the Trump Org, but the companies set up just for that project, and certainly not him personally), and then uses those loses as a tax write off for the next 10 years or so.
I don't suppose he thinks this is about fairness--to Canada and Mexico. I suspect he thinks this is about Canada and Mexico treating the U.S.A. fairly.
And from our immigration problems and fentanyl problems flooding in via Mexico, do you think Mexico is treating us fairly? Canada is only spending a fraction of their NATO obligations on defense--effectively free riding on the U.S. taxpayer's dime.
I believe Trump is using the threat of tariffs to light a fire under their asses to address those issues and more. I don't support using tariffs that way--because tariffs hurt American consumers. It's like threatening to hold our breath until we turn blue. But I don't think Trump is morally obligated to be fair to Canada and Mexico. As the POTUS, I think he's obligated to press the interests of the USA to the best of his ability.
I don't suppose he thinks this is about fairness--to Canada and Mexico. I suspect he thinks this is about Canada and Mexico treating the U.S.A. fairly.
Trump has always had a ridiculous difficulty in expressing reasonable ideas of what it means to be treated "fairly." The first example of this was in an early primary debate in 2015. The moderators asked for a show of hands to pledge to support whoever the Republican nominee would be. Trump was the only one to not raise his hand. He explained that it would depend on whether he was treated "fairly." Where "fairly," to him, meant that he would win. I expect that any judgement he makes about whether our trade deals with other nations are "fair" is entirely dependent on whether he is getting what he wants in the moment, rather than any actual analysis and understanding of international trade or the long-term consequences of trade agreements.
And from our immigration problems and fentanyl problems flooding in via Mexico, do you think Mexico is treating us fairly?
You know what would be the best defense against the importation of dangerous drugs? Reduced demand. I can totally imagine Mexicans thinking, "Stupid fucking gringos just need to stop dumping their wealth into chasing a high. Then there won't be so much money to be made feeding them drugs that our criminals can amass enormous wealth and power meeting the needs of gringo addicts."
Similar reactions are likely in many of their minds when they hear the America First crowd complaining about illegal immigration. "Why don't they crack down on the businesses making so much money employing all of the "illegals" they whine about? Why don't they instead have an efficient system for allowing and keeping track of legal migrant workers that will do jobs Americans think they are too good to do? Why do they keep telling us that their failures are our fault?"
I can answer that last question, if any of them really do wonder. The right in this country has made it their M.O. to blame outside forces (or those within America that are just outside of their tribe) for problems that they are unable or unwilling to solve on their own.
“….. for problems they are unable or unwilling to solve on their own.”
For once I agree with you Jason. Mexico, et al, need to solve their own problems instead of fleeing their homes like cowards to mooch off us. Otherwise, this never ends.
That’s not what you want, is it?
Haha. Everything Is So Terrible And Unfair, Jason.
What a doosh.
"Calling this an unprecedented maneuver is an understatement."
----Eric Boehm
It's factually incorrect to call this maneuver "unprecedented" because Trump did the same thing in 2018 when he renegotiated NAFTA.
"Tensions mounted between Canada and the United States after Trump, in April 2018, announced the imposition of import tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, an action that threatened to start a trade war and prompted forceful condemnation from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
At the end of August 2018 Mexico and the United States announced that they had come to terms on a new trade agreement that preserved much of NAFTA but introduced a number of significant changes. Under the pressure of being the odd country out, Canada, in the waning hours of September 30, also agreed to join the new trade accord."
----Encyclopedia Britannica, "Renegotiation in North American Free Trade Agreement"
https://www.britannica.com/event/North-American-Free-Trade-Agreement/Renegotiation
Threatening tariffs (and other things) to gain concessions in negotiations is Trump's SOP. Getting leverage like this before negotiations in commercial real estate is standard practice. The focus of a buyer's due diligence is often about looking for leverage in ongoing negotiations.
"After all, why should Canada and Mexico believe him the next time he proclaims a deal to be the "best agreement" ever?"
----Eric Boehm
He didn't come here to make friends. This is a bare-knuckled fist fight.
Does the term "realism" elude you? He's flexing American power in an effort to push American interests. Have you never heard the term "hegemony"? Do you think he wants to make friends with China, Iran, and Russia, too?
Do you think Mexico will help with deportations because we're honest and friendly? Do you think Canada will start spending their 2% NATO obligation on defense because we're so honest and friendly? These things need to be pushed.
Good theory but we still have tariffs in place from his 1st admin, so it doesn't quite explain all.
Did you like Joe Biden admin ruling us by executive dictates?
Because I understand it, doesn't mean I like it.
Realism has been the dominant theory in international relations since before the Renaissance--going back to the Delian League, at least.
I oppose all tariffs (unless we're going to war with someone), but I don't have TDS. There's no need to pretend I don't understand what Trump is doing here or why. Understanding realism before talking about international relations is like understanding how to count to ten before taking on calculus.
So it isn't just about leverage? I'm disagreeing with that this isn't all game theory. He is taking money from productive Americans and sending it to Washington DC, no game theory makes that right.
And fuck being told to shutup about it. I have had it up to hear with game theorist fucking with my life to advance their theories. Biden, Trump, Obama... all got theories coming out their ass and what do we have to show for it, 36 trillion in debt.
Reason happily embraces Homo Economus. They will never consider that countries have interests beyond money.
Why is it necessary to pretend that we're children?
If we're not nice to them, they won't trust us and they won't be our friends. We'll never get another play date!
: (
Oh look another one "Trade Act of 1974" on top of FDR's F'Up.
Introduced in the House as H.R. 10710 by Al Ullman (D–OR)
Enacted by the 93rd United States Congress [D] House & [D] Senate.
Fuck Donald Trump!
Trump has a constant "negotiation strategy". He takes away something that the other side already has, and then demands concessions to get it back. It is effective, however it detrimental to building positive relationships (such as between the US and Canada).
I don't think the positive relationship strategy is working so well.
I mentioned the Delian League above, and some of the things we're seeing now remind me of that. The city states that complained the most about Athenian hegemony were the ones who were closest to Athens and far away from the Persians. Getting them to do anything was like pulling teeth. The Athenians' closest allies were the city states closest to the Persians. The latter ones didn't complain about Athenian hegemony because they truly depended on the Delian League for their defense. Whatever Athens wanted they were happy to do.
Fast forward to today, and our closest allies are Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. They were already spending their 2% of GDP NATO obligation long before Trump started complaining about the rest. Ukraine would do anything to get into NATO. Meanwhile, the "allies" closest to us are the ones who are always complaining about American hegemony. Canada is spending little more than half of their NATO obligation on defense. Mexico is officially neutral to the point that they won't even join NATO.
If you want to be our ally, don't flood our country with asylum seekers and fentanyl. If you want to be our ally, spend enough money to defend yourself--according to our agreement--so that you aren't freeloading off the defense spending of the U.S. taxpayer. They won't stop doing these things because we're so honest and kind. You really do need some leverage.
Adopt some kid, and you may find that they're too eager to help with chores around the house. Your own kids sometimes won't do anything they're supposed to do until daddy comes home.
So? They’ve treated us like chumps for decades, and previous administrations just took it. Trump will not. Which is good. Things will definitely improve with Canada once Justin Castreau is gone, and Pierre Poilievre is PM. And Mexico must get serious and clean up their act.
They need us far more than we need them. Only a democrat could think otherwise.
This is what happens when you delegate emergency powers to an imbecile.
"How Trump Could Unilaterally Place Tariffs on Mexico and Canada"
1) Reluctantly.
2) Strategically.
3) Over Boehm's dead body. (Crosses fingers)