Trump's Tariffs Face a Major 'Major Questions' Problem at the Supreme Court
The same legal theory that tripped up Joe Biden's student loan scheme could also sink Donald Trump's tariffs.

The Trump administration has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to quickly review a case challenging the legality of President Donald Trump's sweeping trade barriers—but the appeal seems likely to run headlong into the same issue that lower courts highlighted when ruling against the tariffs.
In their respective rulings in the tariff case, both the U.S. Court of International Trade and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal District have leaned on the "major questions" doctrine. Under that legal theory, the executive branch can only exercise powers that Congress has explicitly granted. The U.S. Supreme Court invoked that doctrine in other recent high-profile cases, including the 2023 ruling that struck down then-President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness scheme.
There is no doubt that Congress has, in fact, granted huge tariff powers to the executive branch. But the narrow question before the Supreme Court is whether the law Trump has invoked to impose these tariffs—the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA)—grants such broad authority. The law does not contain the word "tariff" and has never been used to impose tariffs before now.
In its 7–4 ruling against the tariffs last month, the federal appeals court noted that "it seems unlikely that Congress intended, in enacting IEEPA, to depart from its past practice and grant the President unlimited authority to impose tariffs."
Furthermore, the appeals court said that if Congress intended to give the president such broad tariff powers, it would have done "so explicitly, either by using unequivocal terms like tariff and duty, or via an overall structure which makes clear that Congress is referring to tariffs."
When it ruled in May, the Court of International Trade also nodded to the major questions doctrine when it concluded that "any interpretation of IEEPA that delegates unlimited tariff authority is unconstitutional."
It's clear that this doctrine is central to the Supreme Court's review of this case, because the administration's brief to the court spends several pages discussing how that doctrine intersects with the lower courts' rulings. "In short, IEEPA is all about major questions," the administration argues, "and the more natural presumption is that Congress intends broad language conferring emergency powers to be construed broadly, not narrowly."
But if that's true, IEEPA could be read to allow the president to do literally anything in response to any declared "emergency," no matter how much of a threat it actually poses—and by declaring trade deficits to be an emergency, Trump has already stretched the meaning of the word to new limits.
The situation is not much different than when the Biden administration claimed the power to forgive all student loans because Congress had once passed a law allowing limited student loan forgiveness for 9/11 first responders. The Supreme Court, in that case, leaned on the major questions doctrine in ruling that executive power should be construed narrowly, not broadly.
It should do the same here. Rather than tying itself into knots to affirm nearly unlimited executive powers over commerce, the Supreme Court should tell the Trump administration to get permission from Congress before imposing new tariffs.
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We will find out. Not sure a dozen plus articles were needed before SCOTUS rules.
Soooo... A libertarian news establishment should remain silent ass the SCROTUS gears up to possibly BLESS infinite flexibility to Our Orange God, when shit cums to calling everything and anything an emergency excuse for grabbing yet MORE Taxing Powers? Twat kind of business are YOU running (or sucking the tits or udder organs of), Scumby, that needs yet MORE "Special Protections" from competition?
It is okay. If President Trump can impose 50% tariffs despite the lack of any law indicating that he can and a lack of any Constitutional authority, then President Ocasio-Cortez will be able to impose 50% wealth taxes despite the lack of any law indicating that she can and a lack of any Constitutional authority. Kings are kings!
Chumby isn't too bright, is he? Maybe the articles are too complicated for his little brain.
To be fair, even when scotus rules they'll continue applauding lower level courts ignoring scotus.
~~sing-songy~~ Article Twoooooooo
Only leftist Marxists with TDS think the Constitution and the law say what they say.
True libertarians understand that the Constitution and the law say whatever Trump and his lawyers claim that they say.
This would be more effective if you ever bothered to read the constitution or the laws you complain about.
Maybe you should read it. It says that Congress can impose taxes, not the President.
read the whole thing.
Charlie the retard might need a coloring book version.
First - The Trump administration has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to quickly review a case challenging the legality of President Donald Trump's sweeping trade barriers
Asked SCOTUS.
Second - There is no doubt that Congress has, in fact, granted huge tariff powers to the executive branch.
Granted huge tariff powers...
But keep gaslighting. It's all you've got.
The tariff powers granted by Congress are the ones Trump used during his first term and the ones that Biden used. They grant the president the power to lay tariffs on specific goods. For example washing machines and solar panels.
The tariff powers in question are the ones that Trump has been using during is second term. These are different in that he is laying tariffs on all goods coming in from a country, as opposed to targeting specific industries.
Specific industries vs everything from a country. Not the same thing.
Now you can call me names some more since you lack the honesty and integrity to have any discussion beyond calling someone a poopy-head.
Have you ever encountered a MAGA troll with honesty and integrity?
Red Rocks can be reasonable sometimes. Other than him, no. Not that I can think of.
"Have you ever encountered a MAGA troll with honesty and integrity?" asked the troll, charliehall, who, ironically, was familiar with neither honesty nor integrity.
Trump once was just a wack job with a massive ego. Now he's a threat to our very country. Given his past actions, what's to stop him from taking violent, armed action to retain office after his term expires? The things he's done in recent months were unthinkable just last winter, and those who said he might do any of these things were mocked as raging paranoids. Hide and watch. He's capable of much worse.
"Hang Mike Pence!" comes to mind!
Also this:
https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/24/politics/trump-election-warnings-leaving-office/index.html
A list of the times Trump has said he won’t accept the election results or leave office if he loses.
Essential heart and core of the LIE by Trump: “ANY election results not confirming MEEE as Your Emperor, MUST be fraudulent!”
September 13 rally: “The Democrats are trying to rig this election because that’s the only way they’re going to win,” he said.
Trump’s constant re-telling and supporting the Big Lie (any election not electing Trump is “stolen”) set up the environment for this (insurrection riot) to happen. He shares the blame. Boys will be boys? Insurrectionists will be insurrectionists, trumpanzees gone apeshit will be trumpanzees gone apeshit, so let’s forgive and forget? Poor Trump was misunderstood? Does that sound good and right and true?
It really should immediately make us think of Krystallnacht. Hitler and the NAZIs set up for this by constantly blaming Jews for all things bad. Jew-haters will be Jew-haters, so let’s forgive and forget? Poor Hitler was misunderstood? Does that sound good and right and true?
what's to stop him from taking violent, armed action to retain office after his term expires?
The entire federal law enforcement establishment and military?
What a retarded post. Did you have help from the Maddow fan club with that?
The title clearly states what I've been mulling over in my mind since President Trump started using the IEEPA to justify his many and varied tariffs. I may be wrong, but at least I'm not completely alone in my reasoning.
Considering how big the machine has become why would anyone not understand congress has to delegate some of it's responsibilities because there is not enough time in the day to accomplish the tasks at hand?
Look at the demoncrats trying to put road blocks in place and shut down any and all actions of the President. It is disgusting really. And just because they did it first, many times over, doesn't mean the GOP has or will.
This is not the design, not what was/is intended. People without any authority acting as if they can thwart the will of the President, the Chief Executive and the Will of the People has become absurd. There must be accountability for these rogue judges to stop this waste of tax payers dollars and time and to end the media and democrats attempts to push unlawful action.
International trade policy in the privy of the Chief Executive. How this could not include tariffs which are not taxes as designated under the control of congress.
Tariffs must be a tool available for the President to wield his international policies.
Back to the start of my post. Congress does not have the time to accomplish the tasks on it's plate and has delegated away much of it's authority. Including tariffs.
Considering how big the machine has become why would anyone not understand congress has to delegate some of it's responsibilities because there is not enough time in the day to accomplish the tasks at hand?
Amusingly, this is also the fault of Congress since they capped the number of Congressmen so they wouldn't need a bigger building.
It also had the effect of watering down representation. I'm sure that was a total accident. Just like it was a total accident that Congress gave away a bunch of their authority to the President so that they don't need to be on record as supporting this or that, and can always just bitch about the President instead.
For all the gashing of teeth regarding tariffs, Congress hasn't done anything to restore tariffs to their own bailiwick. They don't want that responsibility, they just want to campaign and use their insider positions to get rich. Doing the job would require actually doing things, and doing things runs the risk of being run out of office and stopping the gravy train.
Tariffs are taxes and squarely in the sole power of Congress. Also the President has limited ability to wield international policies because Congress controls treaties, international commerce, all federal laws, and when wars are declared.
The Constitution gives the President limited and enumerated powers.
This is false based on 2 laws which courts have ruled as valid.
Try again.
Which ones?
Hehehehehe..... the final futile twitches of the reject facing the inevitable. Carry on.
Oh, I thought maybe micropenis finally auto-erotically asphyxiated a little bit too hard.
Poor, sad little micropenis.
Look at the demoncrats trying to put road blocks in place and shut down any and all actions of the President. It is disgusting really.
I know it. Holding the president to the enumerated powers in the Constitution is disgusting. Expecting him to follow the law is disgusting. Not allowing him to legislate with executive orders is disgusting. It's disgusting all around.
How this could not include tariffs which are not taxes as designated under the control of congress.
Great point.
Article I, Section 8 says "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises".
Because it does not specifically say "tariff" and only says "taxes", that means they never had the power to lay taxes on imports.
Nothing in Article II says that the president doesn't have the power to make tariffs, which means that he has that power.
That's because all powers not given to Congress belong to the president.
Why only the president? I mean they are found in article 1 not article 2. Weird.
Also strange you continue to ignore delegation doctrine has been in front of courts for over a century now. But you think it is a Trump thing.
It’s disgusting because they only seem to care about doing it with this particular president. You can tell this because they aren’t arguing that the IEEPA is ridiculously broad and an unconstitutional delegation of their authority that should be rescinded post haste.
This goes for all the other things that they’re screaming about him doing but not actually proposing to take back those same powers. Mostly because they don’t want to actually govern and be held accountable to the voters.
You can tell this because they aren’t arguing that the IEEPA is ridiculously broad and an unconstitutional delegation of their authority that should be rescinded post haste.
The problem isn't the law (not that I'm a fan of laws delegating power to the president), it's how Trump is abusing it. It doesn't specifically say tariffs, and it's supposed to be for actual emergencies.
Contrast that with the law that Trump used during his first term, and that Biden used during his. That law actually gives tariff powers to the president, but only for specific industries (washing machines, solar panels...) as opposed to every product from a country.
This goes for all the other things that they’re screaming about him doing but not actually proposing to take back those same powers.
Once again, it's not so much the powers that have been delegated, but how Trump is abusing them. You would be better able to understand what is going on if, instead of viewing everything as Republican/Democrat, you sat back and looked at how Trump is doing things differently. It's not all about him as a person. It's about how he's going beyond the limitations of his powers. He doesn't give two shits about laws, about separation of powers, checks and balances, delegated powers, limits on power, and all that antiquated Constitution stuff. Yeah I know, Democrats did it first, whatabout Obama and Biden, blah blah blah... never mind.
“The problem isn't the law (not that I'm a fan of laws delegating power to the president), it's how Trump is abusing it. It doesn't specifically say tariffs, and it's supposed to be for actual emergencies.”
Specifically regarding this law, as I read through the text, I agree that it doesn’t address tariffs or duties (except it seems for a few specific items) directly, but there is so much wiggle room between regulate and prohibit (as Lee Moore argues below) that the only reasonable solution is Congress clearly defining if it’s (imposing tariffs) allowed or not. Considering how many fracking amendments I scrolled through while reading the text, this seems like a routine thing for them to do.
And the problem with the National Emergency Act (besides also possibly being an unconstitutional delegation of authority) is the wide latitude it gives the President in declaring a national emergency, to the point that he is basically the sole arbiter of what is a national emergency or not.
I’m not saying all this because I think his invocation of the act is the right thing to do or that he should have nearly unlimited power, btw. But by the plain reading of both of those laws, he basically does until Congress passes a joint resolution (to terminate the emergency), so I think we’ll just have to agree to disagree on this, because, as I see it, the entire problem is the laws themselves and the delegation of power. I mean, that’s kinda the whole thing Reason and the commentariat has been pointing out for nearly two decades here re: the imperial presidency.
And more importantly, Congress will not make time to tackle such issues.
" How this could not include tariffs which are not taxes as designated under the control of congress."
Read the Constitution some time before embarrassing yourself again.
Why would anyone want to make it easier for Congress or the President to do anything given how they have grown the behemoth to where they are incapable of doing their jobs as prescribed by the Constitution is beyond me. They have abused the power they were given and your prescription is to give them more?
The only major question here is how much bullshit will SCOTUS spout to justify giving Trump what he wants.
The problem is that the Court has no enforcement power. So it can say whatever it wants, but if Trump says "I do what I want!" they can't do a damn thing about it. In that case Congress could (and should) impeach, but that would require Republicans growing a pair. And that's not happening.
You get more retarded by the post.
He he he... right wingers are seeing the walls closing in and can't make a single point out of their panicked frenzy. Insults guard their sore egos, but reality just keeps on nagging and nagging and nagging.....
The walls are always closing in, but never close. Weird. Poor little micropenis is just full of fever dreams.
Cite an example of said bullshit molly.
Congress will never do anything useful until the ratio of accountability to people is increased.
That isn't possible now, but it was when the nation was smaller.
While I agree with this article - and the theme that the Sup Ct should be consistent when applying their own legal doctrine... I am hoping that the non-delegation argument gets some favor.
One way to stop executive overreach in an area the constitution specifically assigns to another branch of govt is to rule not so much that the executive branch can't do something...but rather instead that if it needs done...then Congress HAS to do it themselves. If there truly is an emergency, our fed govt has shown they will come together and pass something to address it. If its not important enough for them to do it for the good of the country; then its not an emergency that has to be addressed via emergency powers.
I am pretty sick and tired of fake emergencies being declared and the call for more and more blind deference to the executive such that so long as the executive invokes some magic words in an executive order... they can do whatever the f they want the Constitution notwithstanding. It's bad practice. It's bad governance and it increases partisanship because whatever team has the executive branch cheers it on while the opposition is accused of being traitors for not supporting the President in whatever fake crisis they make up.
Aye
Aye
Aye
What's a "real crisis?"
People calling out Team D dumping boxes of ballots at the eleventh hour.
Snot ENOUGH punishment of ALL of the BAD people who do SNOT Slurpport AT and Dear Orange God? A LACK of sufficient POWER for the RIGHT People?
One way to stop executive overreach in an area the constitution specifically assigns to another branch of govt is to rule [...] that if it needs done...then Congress HAS to do it themselves. If there truly is an emergency, our fed govt has shown they will come together and pass something to address it. If its not important enough for them to do it for the good of the country; then its not an emergency that has to be addressed via emergency powers.
100% on board with this. No matter who is president. No delegating Congress' power to the Executive. No delegating Congress' power to "quasi-private" entities. Nothing. Do your fucking job. Or don't.
That is a really weak argument.
The law gives the President a list of things he can do to interfere with imports :
..investigate, block during the pendency of an investigation, regulate, direct and compel, nullify, void, prevent or prohibit, any acquisition, holding, withholding, use, transfer, withdrawal, transportation, importation....
Tariffs are a species of regulation. They are used to regulate imports by adjusting the relative prices of foreign and domestic goods.
The major questions doctrine asks whether Congress could really have intended to include such a major power as levying tariffs in the above list of powers. That might be a reasonable question if the list had stopped at "regulate." But it doesn't, it carries right on to mention :
direct and compel, nullify, void, prevent or prohibit
Each of which is unarguably a power more major than levying tariffs. Would you rather have your desired imports subject to a tariff or prohibited altogether ? The question answers itself. Thus the major question doctrine is, in this case, a complete lemon. There are much more "major" powers already included in the listed powers.
Even if you insist that tariffs are not a form of regulation, that's a different argument - about the meaning of "regulate." It has nothing to do with the major questions doctrine.
Tariffs are a species of regulation.
They are a tax and form a monophyletic group with other taxes that while possibly within the clade "regulation" are distinct from regulations as the term is commonly used, just as mammals are not species of bony fish despite being in the sarcopterygii (lobe-finned fish) clade, Plus MQD.
Well. If there is any honor left in the court they'd rule the Constitution specifically made the power to Tax a power of Congress and Congress can't just re-write the people's law over them however they so please.
Props for being on the right side of the argument where Trump is on the wrong side.
Agree with SRG2... Kudos to TJJ2000!
No libertarian should want the executive deciding he can tax virtually every import based on some specious argument of national security.