Mike Johnson Wanted Congress To Reclaim Power Over Tariffs—in 2019
Now, under Johnson's leadership, the House has changed its rules to make it even harder for lawmakers to signal their opposition to Trump's tariffs.
Asked earlier this month about the possibility that the Supreme Court could strike down President Donald Trump's tariffs on the grounds that they are an unconstitutional delegation of congressional authority, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R–La.) said the justices should have no such concerns.
"The President is using the authority that the people gave him—I would argue a mandate they gave him—to fix the trade imbalance," Johnson said during an interview with RealClearPolitics. "I would have stepped in already if I felt like the executive had overstepped their authority. I don't think that's happened yet."
Just six years ago, however, Johnson had a different perspective. In 2019, he was one of several Republicans who co-sponsored a bill seeking to "restore Congressional authority" over matters of "tariffs, duties, and quotas."
At the time, Trump was in the midst of rewriting the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) into the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), which was finalized in July 2020. He had also launched the first of his unilateral tariff efforts, targeting imported steel, aluminum, and many items from China. All of that paled in comparison to the broad emergency powers that Trump has claimed during his second term to impose tariffs on nearly all imports, raising the average U.S. tariff rate to levels not seen in nearly a century.
But the more limited trade war from Trump's first term inspired a mild backlash from Republicans in Congress, including the now-speaker.
That 2019 bill, which never got a vote, was introduced by Rep. Warren Davidson (R–Ohio), who was at the time part of the House Freedom Caucus. (He was tossed out of the group in 2024.) It was also co-sponsored by then-Rep. Justin Amash and about a dozen other members, including Johnson.
At the time, Davidson said there was a need for Congress and the president to "collaboratively address the substantial impact of trade policy on job creators, farmers, and consumers in Ohio and across the country."
There has been no indication that the House still believes such "collaboration" is necessary, even when it comes to a core function of Congress as outlined by Article I of the U.S. Constitution.
The Senate has pushed back against some of Trump's tariffs this year—most notably by passing a series of resolutions in late October to terminate the "emergency" underpinning Trump's tariffs.
Meanwhile, the House under Johnson's leadership has actively sought to avoid any conflict with the White House over trade policy. House Republicans changed the rules governing certain resolutions to prevent bills that might strike down the tariffs from reaching the floor—where they might pass, or at the very least might create some awkward votes for GOP members.
Johnson says that he would have "stepped in" to block Trump if he believed the president was overstepping his authority, but he's actually done the exact opposite. He's given cover for Trump's unilateral tariffs and sweeping emergency powers by making it harder for rank-and-file members of the House to officially signal their displeasure with those unpopular policies.
It is no surprise that Johnson is doing what the Trump administration wants here. But it is noteworthy that he once seemingly held a different view about the proper roles for Congress and the presidency with regard to trade.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please to post comments
EB;dr
"The President is using the authority that the people gave him to fix the trade imbalance"
This doesn't even make sense logically, let alone pragmatically! To start with I doubt that "the people" even understood the trade imbalance let alone mandate the President to fix it. The most the typical American understands is that it might be unfair for other nations to restrict imports from America while objecting to restrictions on their exports to America. I would suggest that very few Americans understand even the basics of international currency exchange values or the impacts of free trade versus trade barriers. They certainly couldn't define "trade imbalance" even if you gave them a teleprompter!
And beyond that, I would suggest that even the Speaker himself doesn't really believe his own statement that the President even CAN "fix" the trade imbalance. If a President COULD fix the trade imbalance it certainly wouldn't result from punitive tariffs. And so it goes ... nothing ever new under the sun ...
You do know the imbalance has already dropped by 20B a month right?
So a majority in Congress decided not to interfere in trade deals in 2019 and a majority in Congress have decided the same in 2025. I'm not happy about it but please explain how the Congress is going to negotiate with hundreds of countries over thousands of imports and exports. A. There is no practical way of getting that done and B. They're too lazy and chicken shit cowardly to actually participate. Reason is hoping that SCOTUS will force Congress to shut down Trump's tariffs. But in all likelihood they won't.
Exactly.
Mike Johnson Wanted Congress To Reclaim Power Over Tariffs—in 2019
Yeah that was before Trump grabbed him by the pussy.
Sorry you mistook Mike Johnson for Missy wantsa Johnson but has not had the surgery yet.
In this article Boehm tacitly admits trump has tariff powers. What is there to reclaim if he doesnt?
They can pass the legislation and take back the powers they gave away. And/Or they can ratify the tariffs Trump has put forward into law and put this BS about authority over tariffs behind them.
I am curious who else has the Authority over international trade policy?
"the President's executive authority allows the administration to negotiate trade treaties and manage day-to-day policy through bodies like the Office of the United States Trade Representative"
"Negotiation and management: The President, through the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR), is responsible for negotiating and signing trade agreements and for enforcing U.S. rights under those agreements."
When tariffs are part of the negotiating and trade agreements with other countries the President has signed, it seems Congress is obligated to bring the tariffs into law, not decide what, or when, or upon whom, or how much, the tariffs are?