The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002

The Volokh Conspiracy

From Prof. Jack Goldsmith (Harvard) on the Tariff Decision

"A massive defeat for the president and an extraordinary affirmation of the Supreme Court's power."

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An excerpt from his Executive Functions post today; note that his and Curtis Bradley's Foreign Affairs, Nondelegation, and the Major Questions Doctrine, 172 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1743 (2004) was heavily cited both by Justice Gorsuch's concurrence and Justice Kavanaugh's dissent:

A very significant aspect of the Chief Justice's [Major Questions Doctrne] analysis is that three conservative justices embraced it to rule against President Trump's signature policy. And they did so in the most difficult possible context, with an issue involving national security and foreign affairs.

This is a rebuttal to those who have claimed that the Court, or at least those three justices, invoke the doctrine opportunistically and politically to hurt Democratic presidents. And I think it signals more clearly than ever that, going forward, this Court is going to view broad delegations of statutory authority to a president to act, and/or extravagant presidential interpretations of authorizations to act, with skepticism. The three justices firmly committed here to the MQD can (if they wish) ensure that outcome in a case of just about any political configuration.

To the extent this is true, it is a hugely important complement to the Court's emerging broad view of the unitary executive. Put another way, it is a vindication of Sarah Isgur's view that the tradeoff on the Court for enhancing vertical unitary presidential control is "for the court to rein in Congress's bad habit of delegating vast and vague powers to the executive branch," including through MQD.

It also puts in a better light the Court's interim orders to date in Trump 2.0, a large number of which, due to the application strategy of the Solicitor General, involved issues of vertical control. The tariff opinion gives the lie to the notion that the Court is in the bag for the president and also makes its approach to issues of presidential power in Trump 2.0 both clearer and more nuanced….

[T]he Trump press conference [following the decision] was an amazing portrait of a president who claims to be unbound by law seethingly acquiescing in a court ruling on "an important case to me" that he abhorred with every fiber of his body. It is clear the administration will use every alternative legal tool at its disposal to replicate or go further in deploying international economic weapons. That is its legal prerogative. But still, Trump's anger combined with his acquiescence in the ruling elevated the Court and was a remarkable testament to its power….

IEEPA

A Note on Tariff Refunds

Thanks to our victory in the tariff case before the Supreme Court, businesses that paid billions of dollars in illegally collected tariffs can seek refunds. But the process may be difficult.

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Since we prevailed in our tariff case at the Supreme Court today, and even before, I have gotten many questions about tariff refunds. US importers who paid illegally collected IEEPA tariffs are eligible for up to $175 billion in refunds. As I see it, justice requires repayment of every penny - with interest! Administration claims that repayment is too difficult ring hollow. They shouldn't have illegally taken much money in the first place. And, in the litigation in the lower courts, they argued for stays of the injunctions against them on the grounds that - if we won - the businesses victimized by the tariffs would be eligible for refunds once the litigation reached a conclusion.

However, I am not an expert on the tariff refund process. I became involved in this case because of my expertise in constitutional law and issues involving emergency powers. A tariff refund specialist I am not. Thus, I am not the right person to ask about how to get back the illegally collected tariff payments.

However, I would like to refer anyone interested in this issue to an excellent September 2025 Lawfare article by Joshua Claybourn. Josh helped organize some important amicus briefs for our case, and - unlike me - he really does have expertise on the issue of refunds.  His article  provides a valuable overview of the tariff refund process. Here is an excerpt from it:

This piece examines the core legal obligation of the U.S. government to refund unlawfully collected tariffs, including (a) the statutory framework under 19 U.S.C. § 1514, governing the finality and correction of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) decisions; (b) judicial precedents confirming the government cannot retain illegally exacted duties; (c) administrative mechanisms available for importers seeking tariff refunds; and (d) procedural implications arising from recent and historical court decisions mandating refunds.

There is a strong legal basis for importers to recover duties unlawfully collected under IEEPA. However, importers must comply with statutory deadlines and administrative procedures—such as timely protests or claims—to preserve refund rights. The government's obligation to refund such amounts, along with any applicable interest, will arise once courts definitively invalidate these tariffs, subject to any procedural bars under 19 U.S.C. § 1514.

Finally, I should note that - as of today - I am no longer involved in the tariff litigation as an attorney (my part of the case is over), and thus have no plans to be involved in refund litigation.

I Got 99 Delegations, but a Tariff Ain't One

Words from noted rapper I-Eepa,

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as analyzed by Justice Kagan's concurrence in today's tariff decision:

As the principal opinion explains, "regulate" is one of 9 verbs listed in IEEPA's delegation provision. (The others are "investigate," "block," "direct," "compel," "nullify," "void," "prevent," and "prohibit.") Those verbs are followed by 11 objects, each describing a distinct sort of transaction involving foreign property—not just "importation," but also "acquisition," "use," "transfer," and so forth. Combine the verbs and objects in all possible ways, and the statute authorizes 99 actions a President can take to address a foreign threat. And exactly none of the other 98 involves raising revenues.

(Justice Kagan concludes that, therefore, the 99th combination, "regulate" "importation," doesn't authorize raising revenue, either.)

Executive Power

"The Day Will Come When Those Disappointed by Today's Result" as to Tariffs …

"will appreciate the legislative process for the bulwark of liberty it is."

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A prediction from the conclusion of Justice Gorsuch's concurrence in the tariffs decision:

For those who think it important for the Nation to impose more tariffs, I understand that today's decision will be disappointing.

All I can offer them is that most major decisions affecting the rights and responsibilities of the American people (including the duty to pay taxes and tariffs) are funneled through the legislative process for a reason. Yes, legislating can be hard and take time. And, yes, it can be tempting to bypass Congress when some pressing problem arises. But the deliberative nature of the legislative process was the whole point of its design.

Through that process, the Nation can tap the combined wisdom of the people's elected representatives, not just that of one faction or man. There, deliberation tempers impulse, and compromise hammers disagreements into workable solutions. And because laws must earn such broad support to survive the legislative process, they tend to endure, allowing ordinary people to plan their lives in ways they cannot when the rules shift from day to day.

In all, the legislative process helps ensure each of us has a stake in the laws that govern us and in the Nation's future. For some today, the weight of those virtues is apparent. For others, it may not seem so obvious. But if history is any guide, the tables will turn and the day will come when those disappointed by today's result will appreciate the legislative process for the bulwark of liberty it is.

"No Recipe for a Republic"

"[C]ontinual and permanent accretion of power in the hands of one man," stemming from broad readings of Congressional delegation to the Executive.

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Another nicely crafted passage from Justice Gorsuch's concurrence today in the tariff case, further defending the "major questions doctrine"—the principle that "ambiguous language" in a statute shouldn't be seen as delegating "highly consequential power" to the Executive Branch, even if it can be read as delegating lessers power:

Another feature of our separation of powers makes the major questions doctrine especially salient. When a private agent oversteps, a principal may fix that problem prospectively by withdrawing the agent's authority. Under our Constitution, the remedy is not so simple. Once this Court reads a doubtful statute as granting the executive branch a given power, that power may prove almost impossible for Congress to retrieve. Any President keen on his own authority (and, again, what President isn't?) will have a strong incentive to veto legislation aimed at returning the power to Congress.

Perhaps Congress can use other tools, including its appropriation authority, to influence how the President exercises his new power. Maybe Congress can sometimes even leverage those tools to induce the President to withhold a veto.

But retrieving a lost power is no easy business in our constitutional order. And without doctrines like major questions, our system of separated powers and checks-and-balances threatens to give way to the continual and permanent accretion of power in the hands of one man. That is no recipe for a republic.

"Our Founders Understood That Men Are Not Angels, and We Disregard That Insight at Our Peril When …"

"we allow the few (or the one) to aggrandize their power based on loose or uncertain authority."

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A nicely crafted passage from Justice Gorsuch's concurrence defending of the "major questions doctrine" (the principle that "ambiguous language" in a statute shouldn't be seen as delegating "highly consequential power" to the Executive Branch, even if it can be read as delegating lesser power) in today's tariffs case. And here are the two following sentences:

We delude ourselves, too, if we think that power will accumulate safely and only in the hands of dispassionate "people … found in agencies." Even if unelected agency officials were uniquely immune to the desire for more power (an unserious assumption), they report to elected Presidents who can claim no such modesty.

Tariffs

Supreme Court Decides Our Tariff Case - and We Won!

In a 6-3 decision, the Court ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorize tariffs.

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Today, the Supreme Court decided our case challenging Donald Trump's massive IEEPA tariffs. In a 6-3 decision, Court rightly ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not give the President the power to "impose tariffs on imports from any country, of any product, at any rate, for any amount of time." It's a major victory for the constitutional separation of powers, for the rule of law, for free trade, and for the millions of American consumers and businesses enduring higher taxes and higher prices as a result of these tariffs.

Our case was filed by Liberty Justice Center and myself on behalf of five small US businesses. We were later joined by prominent Supreme Court litigators Michael McConnell and Neal Katyal. Michael became our chief counsel for the Supreme Court phase of the litigation, and Neal skillfully conducted the oral argument before both the Federal Circuit and the Supreme Court. A case that had its origins in a blog post laying out some legal theories and another one recruiting potential clients went all the way to the Supreme Court and culminated in an important victory.  Earlier, we prevailed in the US Court of International Trade (the trial court with jurisdiction over cases involving trade policy) and again in the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the opinion for the Court, which concludes that IEEPA's grant of authority to "regulate" importation in response to an emergency that qualifies as an "unusual and extraordinary threat" to the US economy, national security, or foreign policy, does not include the power to impose tariffs. He, Justice Neil Gorsuch, and Justice Amy Coney Barrett also based their conclusion in part on the major questions doctrine, which  requires Congress to "speak clearly" when authorizing the executive to make "decisions of vast economic and political significance."  The three liberal justices - (Kagan, Sotomayor, and Jackson) did not join this part the opinion, because they argued that ordinary principles of statutory interpretation were enough to resolve the case.

The Supreme Court today also decided a case against the tariffs brought by 12 states led by the state of Oregon (they prevailed, too). The court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction the Learning Resources cases, because they held it should have been filed in the US Court of International Trade (where we filed ours).

The implications of the ruling for future administration efforts to impose tariffs are not completely clear. But I believe it will not be possible for the president to replicate the massive, sweeping worldwide tariffs he tried to do under IEEPA. Today's ruling also signals that a majority of the Supreme Court is skeptical of claims of virtually unlimited delegation of tariff power to the president.

I want to commend the Liberty Justice Center and their litigation team led by Jeffrey Schwab for bringing this case at a time few other groups were willing to do so, and Michael and Neal and their respective firms for their extraordinary work in conducting the appellate phase of the litigation. I also want to recognize our clients for their courage in joining this cause, and enduring the resulting public and media scrutiny, and the potential risk of retaliation by the administration. Many others - too many to list here - also deserve credit and thanks. It was an honor to have played a modest role in this case, myself.

I will likely have more to say later. In the meantime, for a compendium of my previous writings related to the tariff litigation, see here.

S. Ct.'s Tariff Opinion Now Available

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Read it here. I'm just starting it. From the syllabus (which is not a part of the Court's opinion, but is prepared by the Reporter of Decisions, and is usually a good summary):

The Chief Justice delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I and II–A–1:

Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution specifies that "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises." The Framers recognized the unique importance of this taxing power—a power which "very clear[ly]" includes the power to impose tariffs. Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 201. And they gave Congress "alone … access to the pockets of the people." The Federalist No. 48, p. 310 (J. Madison). The Framers did not vest any part of the taxing power in the Executive Branch. See Nicol v. Ames, 173 U.S. 509, 515. The Government thus concedes that the President enjoys no inherent authority to impose tariffs during peacetime. It instead relies exclusively on IEEPA to defend the challenged tariffs. It reads the words "regulate" and "importation" to effect a sweeping delegation of Congress's power to set tariff policy—authorizing the President to impose tariffs of unlimited amount and duration, on any product from any country. 50 U.S. C. §1702(a)(1)(B).

The Chief Justice, joined by Justice Gorsuch and Justice Barrett, concluded in Part II–A–2:

The Court has long expressed "reluctan[ce] to read into ambiguous statutory text" extraordinary delegations of Congress's powers. West Virginia v. EPA, 597 U.S. 697, 723 (quoting Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA, 573 U.S. 302, 324). In several cases described as involving "major questions," the Court has reasoned that "both separation of powers principles and a practical understanding of legislative intent" suggest Congress would not have delegated "highly consequential power" through ambiguous language. Id., at 723–724. These considerations apply with particular force where, as here, the purported delegation involves the core congressional power of the purse. Congressional practice confirms as much. When Congress has delegated its tariff powers, it has done so in explicit terms and subject to strict limits.

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Free Speech

U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Testimony on Anti-Semitism on College Campuses and the First Amendment

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I testified on the subject yesterday, together with other leading scholars, such as Michael Dorf (Cornell), Benjamin Eidelson (Harvard), and Genevieve Lakier (Chicago); you can see the written statements here, and more on the hearing here. I thought I'd pass along my statement, which I imagine won't be at all surprising to long-time readers:

Dear Commission Members:

I was asked to testify about how the First Amendment affects the government's ability to deal with anti-Semitism on college campuses. Here are my general thoughts.

[1.] No First Amendment Exception for Hate Speech

The First Amendment protects all viewpoints, including anti-Semitic and otherwise prejudiced ones. There is no First Amendment exception for "hate speech," advocacy or defense of genocide, or other such views. And that extends even to generally available government benefit programs: The government, for instance, can't exclude "[s]peech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground" from trademark registration.[1] Nor can this be evaded by recharacterizing the expression of such viewpoints as "harassment."[2] "There is no categorical 'harassment exception' to the First Amendment's free speech clause."

And this is an important protection for all speakers. For instance, the lack of any exception for speech that supposedly promotes "genocide" protects pro-Hamas speakers—but it also protects pro-Israel speakers who seek to defend Israeli actions in Gaza, despite claims that those actions themselves constitute "genocide" of Palestinians. I personally generally support Israel's right to exist, and I think that this means that Israel must be able to try to destroy those who have attacked it (such as Hamas), even when the attackers deliberately hide among civilian populations who will then inevitably be killed or injured in the resulting war. But speech defending Israeli actions (and even calling for harsher actions) is constitutionally protected regardless of whether university administrators or judges agree with me. Likewise for speech condemning Israel or even praising Hamas.

Likewise, there is no exception for speech calling for the armed destruction of a foreign nation. Again, I believe Israel has a right to exist, but others disagree—and we are all equally protected by the First Amendment, as are those who would call for, for instance, armed attack on North Korea, Iran, and any other country.

[2.] Public Universities Can't Restrict Student Speech Based on Viewpoint

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Politics

Tomorrow Is National Legislator Integrity Day

Or so I've decided to call it, in honor of the 225th anniversary of the vote on renewing the Sedition Act of 1798.

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The Sedition Act of 1798 famously expired on March 3, 1801, and purported to punish false and malicious statements about the Federalist President John Adams and the majority-Federalist Congress, not about the Democratic-Republican Vice-President Thomas Jefferson. This is often mentioned as evidence of the Federalists' partisanship in enacting the Act.

But (and this is much less well-known) it turns out that the Federalists tried to reenact the Act in January and February 1801, when it would have outlawed criticism of the newly-elected Democratic-Republican President and Congress. (At the time, the lame-duck session of Congress lasted until March 3.) The bill was defeated in the House by a 53-49 vote; nearly all Federalists voted for it, and all Republicans voted against it. The four Federalists who voted against consisted of one (George Dent) who voted against the 1798 Act, two who weren't in the House for the 1798 Act vote, and one who was in the House in 1798 but didn't vote.

The Federalists' stated arguments (see 10 Annals Cong. 916-939) seemed to chiefly be

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Free Speech

No Pseudonymity for Defendant in Computer Fraud and Abuse Act / Trade Secrets Case

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From Grow Universe Inc. v. Doe, decided Friday by Judge Gregory Woods (S.D.N.Y.):

Plaintiff filed this action on March 5, 2025, alleging that Defendant accessed Plaintiff's Google business account without authorization, misappropriated the proprietary information stored within it, and deleted the account. The complaint asserts claims under the Computer Fraud and Abuse and the Defend Trade Secrets Act, as well as conversion and tortious interference under New York law.

The court had earlier refused to quash a subpoena to Spectrum seeking identification information about the defendant, plaintiff therefore identified the person that it thinks is the defendant. That person moved to intervene, asking to remain anonymous, but the court rejected the anonymity request:

Because Movant identifies only the ordinary reputational consequences attendant to civil litigation, and because this fact-intensive dispute between private parties turns on contested conduct and credibility, Movant has not overcome the strong presumption that parties must litigate in their own names….

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Immigration

My New Dispatch Article, "In Defense of Sanctuary Cities"

It explains how sanctuary policies are justified on both constitutional and moral grounds.

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Today, The Dispatch published my new article, "In Defense of Sanctuary Cities" (gift link). Here is an excerpt:

Sanctuary cities and states have been a major focus of political conflict in the second Trump administration, perhaps even more than in the first. These jurisdictions refuse or severely limit assistance to federal efforts to detain and deport suspected illegal immigrants. Most only provide such assistance in cases involving undocumented migrants who have committed serious crimes. Regardless of the politics, the 10th Amendment protects sanctuary jurisdictions from compulsion by the federal government. And their policies are also well justified on moral and pragmatic grounds. This is particularly true at a time when many federal immigration enforcement efforts are cruel and illegal….

The 10th Amendment states that "powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." In a series of decisions primarily supported by conservative justices, the Supreme Court has held that the 10th Amendment bars federal "commandeering" of state and local government personnel and resources, including forcing them to help enforce federal law against private parties….

The constitutional basis for protecting sanctuary jurisdictions against executive-created spending conditions is also strong. As numerous court decisions have held, the Constitution gives Congress, not the president, the power of the purse. Thus, the executive cannot attach its own conditions to federal grants to the states, as Trump has repeatedly tried to do. In addition, even Congress' power to spend for the "general welfare" is not unlimited, and it cannot use this authority to completely gut state autonomy…

Conservatives tempted to jettison these constitutional rules in order to stick it to liberal immigration sanctuaries would do well to remember that the same principles also protect red-state "gun sanctuaries," such as Missouri and Montana, which deny state assistance for enforcement of federal gun control laws. The two types of sanctuary jurisdictions stand or fall together….

In addition to being constitutionally protected, sanctuary policies are also right and just. Sanctuary jurisdictions have rightly concluded that police resources are better used to combat violent and property crime instead of aiding in deportation efforts….. Undocumented migrants actually have much lower crime rates than native-born citizens, and most of those detained, especially in recent months, actually have no criminal records at all. Local and state participation in deportation efforts also makes it more difficult to combat crime by poisoning relations between law enforcement agencies and minority communities.

The cruel and illegal nature of much of the federal deportation effort provides additional justification for denying it state and local assistance. In more than 4,400 immigration cases over the last year, courts have ruled that the second Trump administration illegally detained people. The true number of illegal detentions is likely much greater….

Meanwhile, federal immigration agents routinely engage in unconstitutional discrimination in the form of racial and ethnic profiling. The incredible extent of racial and ethnic profiling by federal immigration authorities is demonstrated by the fact that immigration arrests in Los Angeles County declined by 66 percent within just 16 days after a court order barred the use of such tactics… Conservatives and others who advocate color-blindness in government policy should support state governments' refusal to facilitate such massive racial discrimination…..

Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities routinely feature shockingly callous treatment of those imprisoned there, including overcrowding, inadequate food, denial of needed medical treatment, and child abuse, including hundreds of violations of a legal settlement barring detention of children for more than a 20-day period. State and local governments should not help imprison still more people in these horrific conditions.

I also covered Tenth Amendment issues related to sanctuary cities in two other recent articles linked below:

"Does the ICE Crackdown in Minnesota Violate the Tenth Amendment?," Brennan Center State Court Report, Feb. 2, 2026.

"Minnesota's Compelling 10th Amendment Case Against Trump's ICE Surge," Lawfare, Jan. 30, 2026.

Politics

Harlan Virtual Supreme Court Semifinalists

Fourteen teams of high school students presented oral arguments in the case of Patriots v. Loyalists.

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The Harlan Institute is currently hosting the Fourteenth Annual Virtual Supreme Court Competition. This competition offers teams of two high school students the opportunity to research cutting-edge constitutional law, write persuasive appellate briefs, argue against other students through video chats, and try to persuade a panel of esteemed attorneys during oral argument that their side is correct. This year, in honor of America's 250th Anniversary, the competition will focus on the case of Patriots v. Loyalists.

Fourteen teams of high school students presented oral arguments in the semifinal round. The teams were superb. Truly, these high school students could compete in any law school moot court competition. My sincere thanks two Elizabeth Steeves (Yale) and Shemaiah DeJorge (Georgetown) for helping to judge the rounds.

The Round of 8 will be held the week of March 9, 2026. The championship round will be held at the National Archives in April.

Semifinal Match #1

Team #24081

Semifinal Match #2

Team #24266

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