Trump Hopes to Bully SCOTUS Into Upholding His Tariffs
Will it work?
President Barack Obama was roundly criticized by conservatives in 2012 after he used the presidential bully pulpit to pressure the U.S. Supreme Court into upholding the federal health care law known as Obamacare. It was April 2, several days after the Court heard oral arguments in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, and Obama took the opportunity to publicly lecture the justices against taking the "unprecedented extraordinary step" of overturning his signature policy. Two months later, the Supreme Court narrowly upheld Obamacare.
Next week, the signature policy of another president will be having its day in court when the justices hear oral arguments in Learning Resources v. Trump and Trump v. V.O.S. Selections, the consolidated cases challenging the legality of President Donald Trump's unilateral trade war. And much like Obama before him, Trump is now using the presidential bully pulpit in a blatant effort to influence the Supreme Court's decision-making process. Will it work?
You’re reading Injustice System from Damon Root and Reason. Get more of Damon’s commentary on constitutional law and American history.
As a legal matter, the Supreme Court has many excellent reasons to overrule Trump's tariffs. For one thing, the constitutional authority "to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises" as well as the authority "to regulate Commerce with Foreign nations," are assigned exclusively to Congress, which means that Trump is wielding power that the Constitution did not grant to him. His tariffs thus deserve to be struck down for violating both the constitutional separation of powers and the nondelegation doctrine.
Trump's tariffs also violate the major questions doctrine, which says that before the president may wield significant regulatory power, the president must first point to a clear and unambiguous delegation of such power to him by Congress. Yet the supposed tariff-making authority that Trump cites—the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA)—does not even mention tariffs anywhere in its text, which hardly qualifies as a clear and unambiguous delegation.
But excellent legal reasons such as these do not always matter as much as they should in the minds of Supreme Court justices. You have probably heard the oft-hurled insult that the justices are merely "politicians in robes." Unfortunately, it is sometimes true that political considerations outweigh legal ones at the High Court, especially in hot-button cases that are thought to have major political ramifications.
Trump seems to recognize that the legal arguments in the tariffs case may not go his way. So he is openly pressuring the justices to tip the scales in his favor for political reasons. "If a Radical Left Court ruled against us at this late date," Trump declared in August, it would produce "a GREAT DEPRESSION." Likewise, earlier this month, Trump asserted that "if we don't win that case, we will be a weakened, troubled, financial mess for many, many years to come." Trump has even mused about attending the oral arguments in person, which is something that no sitting president has ever done. I guess Trump thinks he is capable of literally staring down the justices.
For the sake of argument, let's assume that the Supreme Court will give extra weight to nonlegal considerations in the tariffs case. Even if it does, however, the justices still have many better nonlegal arguments at their disposal than Trump's self-serving pronouncements. For example, the justices would be well served if they paid heed to a friend of the court brief filed by trade and economic policy experts Scott Lincicome, Colin Grabow, and Clark Packard, who explained why Trump's claims of economic doom if he loses "are groundless and should be ignored." As they pointed out, "there is little merit to the government's frequent public claims about the parade of horribles that would befall the nation if the IEEPA tariffs were invalidated. The United States has survived—and in fact has thrived—without IEEPA tariffs, and there is little doubt that it would do so again."
Trump wants the Supreme Court to put politics first in the tariffs case. But given the overwhelming economic evidence arrayed against his tariffs, Trump might want to be more careful about what he wishes for.
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Thought Obama used private info to coerce congress and supposedly a homosexual Roberts into supporting a completely unAmerican fascist collectivist health insurance money redistribution boondoggle.
Scumby the Scummy Chimp-Chump chaffs and re-directs ass usual. Oh-Bummer is long out of orifice and can no longer hurt us; snot NEAR ass badly ass the Dear Orange DickTatorShit can do and is doing!! Ass usual, with RePoopLicKKKunts, shit's all about WHO, not WHAT!
Scumby the Scummy Chimp-Chump doesn't address tariff 'cause Chimp-Chump cun't DOOOO that!!! Nor can shit defend worshitting a USA economic DickTatorShit, either!
https://www.cnbc.com/2025/07/31/trump-announces-trade-deal-with-south-korea-setting-tariffs-at-15percent.html Trump announces trade deal with South Korea, setting tariffs at 15% …
Trump also said in a post on social media platform Truth Social that South Korea will “will give to the United States $350 Billion Dollars for Investments owned and controlled by the United States, and selected by myself, as President.”
Trump is now a One-Man Cummander In Chief of the USA economy, and a YUUUUGE part of the world’s economy!!! Thanks for NOTHING for putting this asshole in orifice, ye STUPID “Team R” Tribalist voters!
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These tariffs seem to really be hitting the globalists hard, nearly as bad as finally dealing with the wide open US border.
Yes, and I bet that nuclear weapons could cure a LOT of people's headaches and other sufferings, ass well ass clear the slums for urban renewal, or at the VERY least, for wildlife, such as cockroaches and MAYBE some higher organisms like rats!
(Some people, shit seems, have NO sense of balancing costs v/s benefits; They ONLY cunt-count the benefits and beneshits to the Sacred Political Powers of THEIR Piles of Steaming Teams!)
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Hey Damon. He has one of the best records at scotus on record. Maybe his lawyers aren't activists like the ones you seem to love?
Is he threatening them with assassinations like dems? Will they reap the whirl winds?
Poor Damon, realizing his law school utterly failed him.
Would you rather tariff powers lie with Congress or the President?
They are a component of foreign policy and not internal taxation like Lefties try to reframe the issue. Who originates foreign policy again?
So to be clear, you're saying you think the President should have broad authority here to unilaterally levy tariffs?
I don't really expect a straight answer to my question, because to do so would be to say you disagree with the Constitution as written.
I find it hilarious that Trump brags about his mandate and his control of Congress, but still finds it necessary to skirt the Constitution by using his emergency powers. There is no emergency. This is nothing but a way to bypass the process that is supposed to keep us from facing a different tariff scheme every time Trump sees something he doesn't like in a TV ad or on Twitter. The point of the Constitution is to make implementing these changes hard, not easy.
This is a no-brainer for a Constitutionalist that can see past their own political biases.
Poor Damon. Doesn't understand the laws or constitutional precedence.
Just declares his view correct without any analysis.
Your entire response is unintelligent begging the question with a morality filter thrown on at the end.
What a fucking clown lol.
Bullshit. They are a tax on Americans.
That is irrelevant.
The question is *do they* lay with the President or not. What I want is irrelevant here.
Mix of both like most powers. Congress is too slow to react in a market. I'm fine with executive powers in response to foreign actions.
Congress should define the framework, article 1, and the executive execute, article 2.
Oh wait. That's what they largely did.
Now why did you ask a question unrelated to current legality?
Did President Trump threaten to unleash the whirlwind on SCOTUS if they don't rule as he wishes?
The Flying Monkeys have been laid off due to the shutdown.
They must have gone apeshit when their checks stopped coming in.
Trump has no ability to "bully" the court. Get a grip on your TDS, Damon.
This is technically correct. But Roberts has shown that in my opinion he is more concerned about his court's reputation than the Constitution. I don't know how else to explain creating the "penaltax" out of thin air in order not to come under scrutiny for overturning Obamacare.
Let's hope if it comes down to a 5-4 decision he has a backbone this time.
And another terrible take by Leo. He is concerned more with the liberal view of the NYT and law colleges.
But even despite your ignorance here, majority of trump related decisions have had more than 7 justices. So yet another ignorant take by you.
SCOTUS gutted the medicaid expansion, and severed the mandate penaltax. Congress later zeroed it out.
Big win for Obama.
The 1962 and 1974 Trade Acts both operared under Title 19 – Customs Duties, the framework of the Tariff Act of 1930. Each assumed that any new duties “shall be collected as provided by law,” meaning through 19 U.S.C. § 1505 and existing customs machinery.
IEEPA (1977) lives in Title 50 – War and National Defense, a sanctions regime, not a tariff system. It lets the President “regulate or prohibit” transactions—but never to lay or collect a duty.
That’s the defect: IEEPA isn’t a trade statute. You can’t collect what Congress never empowered you to lay.
Excellent point. Combined with non delegation and the fact that decades long persistent trade imbalances are not an economic 'emergency' and we may be getting somewhere.
This most recent tiff with Canada about the commercial really puts the lie to this whole emergency business. A provincial govt commercial quoting Reagan is an international economic emergency requiring a 10% tariff on ALL of Canada? Oh really now.
Let's be honest. The people arguing for Trump on this are not making very coherent statutory arguments. Its theory. The President's power to declare whatever he wants an emergency is un-reviewable and what the President proclaims (via executive order or otherwise) creates this sort of fake reality that everybody else must accept as objective reality. Its all rather circular reasoning. The President can do X because he declared an emergency; but also look, the man the President named Treasury Sec also put out a bulletin declaring an economic emergency...and the man he named Sec of State put out a notice...as if all these things were not coordinated together at the cabinet level in a blatant attempt to bypass Congress and the constitution? C'mon now. If the executive branch is unitary as they want to proclaim then its just the President repeating himself over and over through his mouthpieces.
Damon Root hopes someone here is as full of shit as he is.
Damon Root is a TDS-addled lying pile of slimy shit who should fuck off and die.
What specifically do you disagree with in this article?
>For the sake of argument, let's assume that the Supreme Court will give extra weight to nonlegal considerations in the tariffs case. Even if it does, however
AI wrote this for you Root. You can't even be bothered to edit it yourself too.
What are you worried about if the USSC has so many reasons to shit Trump down?
are assigned exclusively to Congress, which means that Trump is wielding power that the Constitution did not grant to him
Unless they delegate it. Which they did.
Yet the supposed tariff-making authority that Trump cites—the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA)
That's not his only authority.
You have probably heard the oft-hurled insult that the justices are merely "politicians in robes."
Justice Sotomayor and Justice Not a Biologist DEI Hire.
The rest do a pretty good job of sticking to the Constitution.
"If a Radical Left Court ruled against us at this late date," Trump declared in August, it would produce "a GREAT DEPRESSION." Likewise, earlier this month, Trump asserted that "if we don't win that case, we will be a weakened, troubled, financial mess for many, many years to come."
"If they overturn Roe, millions of women will die overnight in back alleys and the streets will be flooded with unwanted babies!"
Camera rhetoric is not "openly pressuring the justices," dork.
Trump wants the Supreme Court to put politics first in the tariffs case.
And Reason wants them to put China first.
Why shouldn't it work? Obama successfully bullied Roberts into upholding Obamacare and there's little doubt Schumer was at least partially successful in bullying some of the justices into upholding recent gun control measures by winding up a wannabe assassin into going to Kavanaugh's home.
"His tariffs"? What about every/all other presidents?
Until imbeciles at Reason and Leftards can figure out that the problem, as so well described but blatantly ignored for everyone but HIM, is far bigger than JUST-His problem; the Supreme Court should kick the TDS witch-hunt out the door.
It should actually honor the US Constitution and rule the [D] IEEPA and all of it's predecessors UN-Constitutional and not just bow-to the TDS crowd specifically.