The Volokh Conspiracy

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

The Volokh Conspiracy

Tariffs

"The New Global Tariffs Are Also Unlawful," by Philip Zelikow

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A very interesting article by my Hoover Institution colleague Philip Zelikow, who is an emeritus history professor (mostly specializing in the history of American foreign affairs) at the University of Virginia, but also a lawyer; here are the introductory paragraphs:

On February 20, the Supreme Court ruled that President Trump's tariffs imposed under an emergency powers law were unlawful. After raging at the court, the president imposed a new set of global tariffs using a different statutory authority. I participated in the tariff litigation from the start and argued, both to the court and in this Substack, that those tariffs were unlawful.

The new 10 or 15 percent global tariffs, claiming authority from a 1974 law, are also unlawful. When courts look into this, I think they will find that this is not a close case.

In 1976, two years after that law was passed, the US government formally decided that the relevant statutory term, "balance of payments," had become obsolete after the end of fixed exchange rates and the demise of the Bretton Woods system. The US government would therefore no longer report a "balance of payments" in its statistics. That may be one reason why the old 1974 authorities had never been used. There are better laws available to achieve more sustainable results.

Even though the 1974 law allows the tariffs to be imposed only temporarily, for a maximum of 150 days, the matter may be worth litigating for two reasons. First, the costs, almost all paid by Americans, would run at least into tens of billions of dollars. Second, a number of lawyers fear that the White House may attempt to "rinse and repeat" the temporary tariffs again and again. Sadly, given presidential behavior in some other settings, including the appointment of interim US attorneys, these are not idle fears.

Why the 1974 authorities (section 122) are obsolete

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National Security

Anthropic, the Pentagon, and the Defense Production Act

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Prof. Alan Rozenshtein (Minnesota) has a very interesting item on this today at Lawfare; I'm not an expert on the subject, so I can't offer an independent evaluation, but I thought it was worth passing along. (Let me know, please, if you can suggest some contrary views that are also credible and worth passing along.) An excerpt, but you should read the whole thing:

On Tuesday, Feb. 24, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and threatened to invoke the Defense Production Act (DPA) if Anthropic doesn't agree to the Pentagon's terms by Friday. The DPA, Hegseth warned, would let the government compel Anthropic to provide its technology on the Pentagon's terms. Anthropic is resisting allowing its artificial intelligence (AI) to be used for autonomous weapons or mass surveillance—two red lines that the company has maintained since entering the defense market.

I argued last week that Congress—not the Pentagon or Anthropic—should set the rules for military AI. The DPA threat makes that case stronger. But first, it's worth understanding what the DPA can actually do here, because the answer depends entirely on what the government is demanding. The legal analysis is genuinely complicated: Different demands raise very different legal questions, and a statute whose core compulsion powers were designed for steel mills and tank factories maps awkwardly onto a dispute about AI safety guardrails….

The DPA is a Korean War-era statute that gives the president broad authority to direct private industry in the name of national defense. It has been extended many times since its enactment, most recently through September 2026.

The DPA already applies to AI. The Biden administration's since-rescinded Executive Order 14110, Section 4.2, invoked the DPA to require AI companies to report on training activities, red-team results, and model weights. But President Biden used Title VII, which contains the DPA's information-gathering authority. Based on the available reporting, Hegseth is likely threatening Title I—the statute's core compulsion power. That's an enormous escalation.

Biden's precedent cuts both ways for Anthropic. It makes it harder for the company to argue the DPA doesn't reach AI at all. But establishing that AI falls within the statute's scope doesn't mean every demand is lawful. The range of possible demands under Title I is enormous, and the legal analysis is different for each….

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From SOTU to SCOTUS

The Chief Justice granted my motion.

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It's been a busy twenty-four hours. Yesterday evening, Steve Vladeck and I chatted about the emergency/shadow docket at the Georgetown Federalist Society. There was more agreement than you might expect. Remember, social media is not the real world.

After dinner with the students, where we talked about the new GULC Dean, I braced myself to watch the State of the Union address. In the past, my favorite part of the SOTU is when the Justices entered. Last night, the drama was about which Justices would attend. In the end, four showed up: Chief Justice Roberts, and Justices Kagan, Kavanaugh, and Barrett. Justice Gorsuch, who has attended in recent years, was absent. Justices Thomas and Alito have not attended in years. Justice Sotomayor who has usually attended was not there. Justice Jackson attended when Biden was in office, but was not there last night. (All of the Justices made it to the bench this morning, so none were out of town; it was a choice to not attend)

When the President entered the chamber, each of the Justices greeted him cordially. I couldn't make out anything that was said. If the Justices were bothered by Trump's remarks--as they should have been--they didn't show it. I give special extra credit to Justice Barrett, who displayed some serious self-control by pleasantly smiling when she talked to the President, and held that pose even as the camera lingered on her for a bit longer.

Once Trump started, I waited with despair for him to talk about the Supreme Court. The baseline was President Obama's remarks during the 2010 State of the Union following Citizen's United.

With all due deference to separation of powers, last week the Supreme Court reversed a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests –- including foreign corporations –- to spend without limit in our elections. (Applause.) I don't think American elections should be bankrolled by America's most powerful interests, or worse, by foreign entities. (Applause.) They should be decided by the American people. And I'd urge Democrats and Republicans to pass a bill that helps to correct some of these problems.

I suspected that President Trump would go lower than President Obama, but I didn't know by how much. Here are the remarks as delivered:

One of the primary reasons for our country's stunning economic turnaround — the biggest in history, where the Dow Jones broke 50,000, four years ahead of schedule, and the S&P hit 7,000, where it wasn't supposed to do it for many years — were tariffs. I use these tariffs, took in hundreds of billions of dollars to make great deals for our country, both economically and on a national security basis.

Everything was working well. Countries that were ripping us off for decades are now paying us hundreds of billions of dollars. They were ripping us so badly. You all know that. Everybody knows it. Even Democrats know it. They just don't want to say it. And yet these countries are now happy, and so are we. We made deals. The deals are all done. And they're happy. They're not making money like they used to, but we're making a lot of money.

There was no inflation, tremendous growth. And the big story was how Donald Trump called the economy correctly, and 22 Nobel Prize winners in economics didn't. They got it totally wrong. They got it really wrong.

And then just four days ago an unfortunate ruling from the United States Supreme Court, it just came down, came down. Very unfortunate ruling. But the good news is that almost all countries and corporations want to keep the deal that they already made, right, Scott? Knowing that the legal power that I as president have to make a new deal could be far worse for them. And therefore they will continue to work along the same successful path that we had negotiated before the Supreme Court's unfortunate involvement.

So despite the disappointing ruling, these powerful, country-saving — it's saving our country, the kind of money we're taking in — peace protecting — many of the wars I settled was because of the threat of tariffs. I wouldn't have been able to settle them without — will remain in place under fully approved and tested alternative legal statutes, and they've been tested for a long time. They're a little more complex, but they're actually probably better. Leading to a solution that will be even stronger than before.

Congressional action will not be necessary. It's already time-tested and approved. And as time goes by, I believe the tariffs, paid for by foreign countries, will, like in the past, substantially replace the modern-day system of income tax, taking a great financial burden off the people that I love.

Right? Moving forward, factories, jobs, investment and trillions and trillions of dollars will continue pouring into the United States of America. Because we finally have a president who puts America first. I put America first. I love America.

For decades, before I came along, we had the exact opposite. From trade to health care, from energy to immigration, everything was stolen and rigged in order to drain the wealth out of the productive and hard-working people who make our country great, who make our country run.

The President said the ruling was "unfortunate" and "disappointing." Honestly, I was expecting much, much worse. What made Trump's press conference so problematic was that he did not only criticize the decision, which I think is within bounds, but he targeted specific Justices. At the State of the Union, he reserved his criticism for the ruling, and not the Justices.

There is a long line of Presidents who criticized rulings from the Supreme Court. President Lincoln was not a fan of Dred Scott and Chief Justice Taney. President Theodore Roosevelt said that "I could carve a judge with more backbone out of a banana" than Oliver Wendell Holmes. President Franklin D. Roosevelt wanted to expand the Supreme Court in response to their rulings. But "disappointing" seems a plausible word to use. Indeed, the language that President Trump used should sound familiar. In 2013, President Obama said he was "deeply disappointed" with Shelby County. I recall President George W. Bush used similar language after Boumediene. I'm okay with "deeply disappointed."

I did notice that the Justices quickly exited the chamber before Trump made his way down. I think they made the same exit last year. In the past, the Justices would wait until the President made his way out. I suppose the Chief Justice felt the need to get out of there.

Speaking of the Chief Justice, today was a special day for me. For the first time, I moved for admissions at the Supreme Court. Way back in 2016, my good friend Ilya Shapiro moved for my admission on the day Zubick v. Burwell (better known as Little Sisters of the Poor) was argued. I sat a few seats away from Paul Clement. It was pretty cool. Since then, I have signed admission papers for several lawyers, but have never done the process in open court.

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Free Speech

X and XXX (but No XX): No Revenge Porn Liability for X Based on X User's Alleged Illegal Posting of Commercial Porn Depicting Plaintiff

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From today's order by Chief Judge Reed O'Connor (N.D. Tex.) in Doe v. X Corp.:

[The federal] Non-Consensual Intimate Image ("NCII") disclosure prohibition, colloquially known as the "revenge porn statute[,]" … prohibits anyone from recklessly or knowingly disclosing another's "intimate visual depiction … without the consent of the individual" and imposes statutory damages of $150,000 for violations. It excludes from liability those disclosures containing "commercial pornographic content, unless that content was produced by force, fraud, misrepresentation, or coercion of the depicted individual." …

Plaintiff John Doe ("Plaintiff") creates posts on OnlyFans containing sexually explicit content. OnlyFans is a subscription-based platform on which creators post content for subscribers to view. The OnlyFans terms of service prohibit any user from taking and republishing, or otherwise reproducing, content from its site without permission. Plaintiff has also created pornography produced by Falcon Studios, SayUncle, Pride Studios, and ASG Max. Each of these studios grants viewers of its commercial pornography a limited license for viewing that does not permit republishing or otherwise reproducing images on a website or social media platform….

A third party copied commercial pornographic content from Plaintiff's OnlyFans and studio-based productions and uploaded it to X without his consent, violating the OnlyFans terms and conditions and the studios' licensing agreements. Plaintiff contends that the person who copied his images off these accounts "misrepresented [his or her] willingness to comply with the acceptable use policy and terms of service" on his platforms and thus "fraudulently gained access to [his] intimate visual depictions." He alleges that the third party reposted the content to X and that X disclosed it to xAI. Accordingly, Plaintiff asserts the third party "produced" the stolen images by fraud and misrepresentation. He also alleges he informed X that "he did not consent to disclosure of his intimate images" on X, including by X to xAI. Therefore, he claims X has disclosed his commercial pornographic content which was "produced by fraud" or "misrepresentation" without his consent in violation of Section 6851….

Here's the heart of the analysis (though the full opinion also deals with some other complicated statutory arguments):

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Free Speech

No First Amendment Right to Film Others' Party in Public Park, Even to Try to Document Alleged Ordinance Violations

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From Monday's decision by Judge Edward Chen in Barroca v. Hayward Area Recreation & Parks Dist. (N.D. Cal.):

Plaintiff also asserts a First Amendment claim based on an incident in which a park ranger told him to stop filming a family barbecue held by Marco Hernandez, a retired HARD employee.

The Ninth Circuit has "recognized that there is a First Amendment right to film matters of public interest." A well-established application of this right is recording the official conduct of police and other public officials in public spaces.

Here, Plaintiff alleges that he noticed Mr. Hernandez, a retired HARD employee who lives in the caretaker's house in the park, hosting a family and friends barbecue in a public area next to the caretaker's house. Plaintiff alleges that Mr. Hernandez and his guests were violating numerous park ordinances, including having a fire, drinking and serving alcohol, and using a fenced-off yard for his guests. Plaintiff started filming from 150 yards away. Ten minutes later, Ranger Oliver arrived and ordered Plaintiff to stop filming. When Plaintiff refused to stop videotaping, Ranger Oliver called the Alameda County Sheriffs and told them there had been an altercation. Plaintiff does not allege that he was arrested.

Plaintiff fails to satisfy the first prong of First Amendment retaliation—that he was engaged in protected First Amendment conduct. While the First Amendment protects filming public officials in the exercise of their duties, Mr. Hernandez was not a public official and was not engaged in any public duty. As to the more general rule that the First Amendment protects filming matters of public interest, Plaintiff provides no authority that a family barbecue in a public park is a matter of public interest, whether or not Plaintiff suspects that barbecue violates park ordinances. The Court does not find that the barbecue, as alleged by Plaintiff, constitutes a matter of public interest….

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Tariffs

Thoughts on the Potential Broader Significance of the Supreme Court's Tariff Decision

Only time will tell how great the impact of the ruling will really be. But, at this point, it seems like a very significant decision.

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President Donald Trump and tariffs
Eddie Marshall | Midjourney

How significant is the Supreme Court's decision striking down Trump's massive IEEPA tariffs in Learning Resources v. Trump? Only time will truly tell. It's often hard to fully appreciate the importance (or lack thereof) of a decision until we have some historical perspective on it, and see how it impacts future cases. But there is good reason to believe it will have at least some substantial impact, perhaps in multiple ways.

Certainly, a good many prominent observers seem to think so. Conservative New York Times columnist David French (who is also a well-known lawyer and legal commentator) wrote that the ruling "may prove to be the most important Supreme Court decision this century" and that "it may have saved the republic." Harvard law Prof. Jack Goldsmith - a former high-ranking Bush Administration official and leading expert on executive power and foreign affairs issues - describes it as "a massive defeat for the president" and a "blockbuster on many levels." After initially downplaying its significance, my co-blogger Josh Blackman now says the decision is "the Worst Judicial Defeat in Presidential History." He adds that "I think we are already seeing that Trump's efforts to use alternative statutory authorities will not work."

I rarely agree with Josh, in recent years. But I hope he turns out to be right about these two points. And I certainly believe the effort to use "alternative statutory authorities" deserves to be rejected by courts. See my recent article about why Trump's new Section 122 tariffs are illegal.

For my part, I think it is hard to make definitive judgments about the ruling's significance at this point. And it is particularly hard for me to be objective about it; I was one of the attorneys on the case, and it had its origins in a blog post I wrote at this very website. An impartial observer of this case I am not.

That said, I doubt that it is either the most important decision of the century, or the biggest judicial defeat a president has ever experienced. Those are very high bars! In addition, it is difficult to compare the impact of decisions in very different fields of law. But I do think the ruling is likely to prove significant in various ways.

First, the Court rejected Trump's effort to use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to claim virtually unlimited presidential authority to impose tariffs - what Chief Justice John Roberts, in his majority opinion, called the power to "impose tariffs on imports from any country, of any product, at any rate, for any amount of time." That's significant even if it has little or no broader doctrinal impact. The consequences of a decision the other way would have been devastating to the American economy and the rule of law. Ditto for the consequences of simply letting the IEEPA tariffs stand without challenging them.

Moreover, as discussed in my Atlantic article about the decision, all six justices in the majority - in different ways - expressed general skepticism of the idea that the president could ever wield such sweeping tariff authority. That point goes beyond the specifics of IEEPA and implies a general willingness to rule against future presidential power grabs in this important field.

A second important aspect of the decision is that the three conservative justices in the majority - Roberts, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett -  held that the "major questions doctrine" (which  requires Congress to "speak clearly" when authorizing the executive to make "decisions of vast economic and political significance") applies to tariffs and possibly to other delegations of congressional power related to "foreign affairs." That further limits future presidential power grabs.  These three justices also signaled their willingness to apply the major questions doctrine to power grabs by Republican presidents, as much as Democratic ones. Many observers previously doubted they would do that.

To be sure, the opinions of three justices are not a binding precedent of the majority of the Court. But, as Jack Goldsmith notes, these three justices are likely to be crucial swing votes in future cases involving executive power, and will have a lot of leverage:

A very significant aspect of the Chief Justice's MQD 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.

Finally, the case is a further demonstration of the potential effectiveness of combining litigation and political action as a strategy for resisting abuses of government power.  I summarized the advantages (as well as some limitations) of this approach in a May 2025 UnPopulist article, where I built in part on my and others' previous academic work. I think it worked here.

We prevailed in part because we developed strong legal arguments, and because our team had outstanding lawyers like famed Supreme Court litigators Neal Katyal and Michael McConnell, and Jeff Schwab of the Liberty Justice Center (all vastly better litigators than me!). But it also helped that we were effective in waging the "war of ideas" in the public arena outside the courtroom, influencing the climate of elite and public opinion. The climate of opinion can matter in high-profile litigation.

The fact that the tariffs became highly unpopular also likely helped at the margin, perhaps making it easier for judges to rule against the president's signature policy initiative. A YouGov poll taken soon after the decision found that 60% of Americans approve of the result, while only 23% disapprove.

I highly doubt that any lower-court judge or Supreme Court justice ruled against the tariffs primarily because of their unpopularity. But, for judges inclined to conclude the tariffs were illegal, that unpopularity may have made it easier for them to stand up to the president on a high-profile issue than might otherwise have been the case. The tariffs' unpopularity was at least in part due to effective political advocacy against them (almost entirely that of people outside our legal team), emphasizing how they were increasing prices. As I explained in a 2024 post, focusing on price increases is a time-honored effective strategy for turning public opinion against protectionism.

Just as I tried to learn from the experience of previous efforts to protect constitutional rights and enforce limits on government power, so future public interest litigators and activists might learn from ours. I may have more to say about the "war of ideas" aspect of the case in future writings. Here, I merely suggest it is a noteworthy part of the story, and one that may be of use in efforts to combat future abuses of government power.

New in City Journal: "Trump's Tariff Loss Is the Worst Judicial Defeat in Presidential History"

"From Jefferson to Lincoln, Nixon to Bush, no president’s agenda has been so thoroughly undercut by the Supreme Court."

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Has any President ever lost such a significant case before the Supreme Court? I don't think so. That is the theme of my latest piece in City Journal, titled "Trump's Tariff Loss Is the Worst Judicial Defeat in Presidential History."

Here is the introduction:

How bad was President Trump's loss last week at the Supreme Court in the tariffs case? Really bad.

How does this defeat compare with other losses suffered by presidents at the Court? There is no sugarcoating it: the Roberts Court handed Trump the worst judicial defeat in presidential history.

There isn't even a close second. Not Richard Nixon's Watergate case. Not Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal setback. Not Harry S. Truman's attempt to seize steel mills. Not George W. Bush's War on Terror losses. None were in the same ballpark as the ruling in Learning Resources v. Trump. Even when those presidents lost, their own appointees generally ruled in their favor—in contrast to Trump, who saw two of his own nominees rule against him.

The results suggest that Trump will suffer many more defeats in the remainder of his second term—often through the votes of justices he selected.

And the conclusion:

All these defeats pale in comparison with the tariffs case. While Justice Kavanaugh argued that the president could use other powers to accomplish the same ends, time will tell whether a majority of the Court would reject these grounds, as well. In any case, the Learning Resources ruling has greatly diminished tariffs' utility as a bargaining chip, since negotiators on the other side of the table now have ample reason to believe that the courts will bail them out.

It remains to be seen whether the Supreme Court will continue to hobble President Trump for the remainder of his second term, but the tariff ruling suggests a rocky road ahead.

I think we are already seeing that Trump's efforts to use alternative statutory authorities will not work.

I am dreading what might come at the State of the Union tonight.

Final Version, "Data Scanning and the Fourth Amendment"

Especially relevant for United States v. Chatrie, the geofence warrant case.

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I am pleased to post the final version of my new article Data Scanning and the Fourth Amendment, just out in the Boston College Law Review.  Here's the abstract:

An important question of Fourth Amendment law has recently divided courts: When government agents conduct a digital scan through a massive database, how much of a "search" occurs? The issue comes up in diverse contexts including geofence warrants, reverse keyword searches, tower dumps, and Internet pen registers. When a government agent runs a filter through a massive database, resulting in a list of hits, is the scale of any Fourth Amendment search determined by the size of the database, the filter setting, or the filter output? Fourth Amendment law is closely attuned to the scale of a search. No search means no oversight, small searches ordinarily require warrants, and limitless searches are categorically unconstitutional. But how broad is a data scan?

This Article argues that Fourth Amendment implications of data scans should be measured primarily by filter settings. Whether a search occurs, and how far it extends, should be based on what information is exposed to human observation. This standard demands a contextual analysis of what the output reveals about the dataset based on the filter setting. The proper question is what information is expressly or implicitly exposed, not how much raw data passes through the filter or what the raw data output says expressly. The implications of this approach are then evaluated for a range of important applications, among them geofence warrants, reverse keyword searches, tower dumps, and artificial intelligence queries.

As it happens, the issues discussed in the article may be resolved sooner than anyone (or at least I) expected. Last month, the Supreme Court agreed to hear United States v. Chatrie, the geofence warrant case I have blogged about here at Volokh over the yearsChatrie could be resolved in several ways.  But one of the easier paths would be to use the case to resolve the split on how warrants work for scanning through large databases, which I think rests on the data scanning question analyzed in the article.

Oral argument in Chatrie is scheduled for April 27th. As always, stay tuned.

Tariffs

My New Boston Globe Article on Why "Trump's New Tariffs are Another Dangerous Presidential Power Grab"

The article explains why the new Section 122 tariffs are illegal, and courts should strike them down, when (as is likely) lawsuits are filed against them.

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Today, the Boston Globe  published my article, "Trump's New Tariffs are Another Dangerous Presidential Power Grab" (non-paywall link here). Here is an excerpt:

On Friday, the Supreme Court struck down the sweeping tariffs President Trump had imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977. In a 6-3 decision, the court rightly held that IEEPA does not authorize tariffs.

Among the cases the court decided with this ruling was V.O.S. Selections Inc. v. Trump, which the Liberty Justice Center and I filed on behalf of five small businesses harmed by the tariffs. The ruling was a major victory for the constitutional separation of powers and the rule of law. The justices rightly held that no one man can impose tariffs at will; under the Constitution, the power to tax is reserved to Congress.

As Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. explained in his majority opinion, Trump could not rightfully claim the power to "impose tariffs on imports from any country, of any product, at any rate, for any amount of time."

But in the aftermath of the decision, Trump has attempted to reconstitute his tariff power by reinstating most of the tariffs using a 1974 law. If allowed to stand, this action would undermine the constitutional system almost as much as the IEEPA tariffs did.

Shortly after the court's decision, Trump issued a proclamation invoking Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose 10 percent global tariffs. The next day, he increased the rate to 15 percent — though as of Tuesday, the administration implemented only 10 percent tariffs. Section 122 only permits tariffs for up to 150 days in response to "fundamental international payments problems" that cause "large and serious United States balance-of-payments deficits" or "an imminent and significant depreciation of the dollar," or are to cooperate with other countries in addressing an "international balance-of-payments disequilibrium."

As conservative legal commentator Andrew McCarthy explained in National Review, none of these legal preconditions to the use of Section 122 exist. Nor is the scheme part of some plan of international cooperation.

A balance of payments deficit can only arise in a fixed exchange-rate system, like the one the United States had before 1973, when the federal government took part in the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates backed by US gold reserves. In that situation, the United States could experience a shortage of official currency reserves when demand for dollars at the fixed rate increased, or a shortage of gold arose. Since the introduction of floating exchange rates in 1973, that problem has been eliminated. As Nobel Prize-winning monetary economist Milton Friedman explained in 1967, "a system of floating exchange rates completely eliminates the balance-of-payments problem. The [currency] price may fluctuate but there cannot be a deficit or a surplus threatening an exchange crisis." When Section 122 was enacted in 1974, it was not yet clear whether the flexible exchange rate system would continue indefinitely. Since it did, Section 122 has never been used until now…

The Section 122 tariffs will likely soon be challenged in court. If judges wrongly defer to Trump's claims that a balance-of-payments crisis exists, Section 122 could become the kind of blank check for executive imposition of tariffs that the court rejected in the IEEPA case. When the president invokes sweeping emergency powers like those of IEEPA or Section 122, courts must ensure that the emergency in question actually exists. Otherwise, we risk a dangerous expansion of executive power.

In his concurring opinion in the IEEPA case, Gorsuch warned that if courts failed to police executive power grabs, "[o]ur 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 principle applies to Trump's latest tariff power grab, as well.

The rest of the article explains why the major questions and nondelegation doctrines bolster the case against the Section 122 tariffs, and why broad judicial deference to the president on Section 122 would likely allow him to easily circumvent the 150 day time limit required by the statute, thereby converting into the kind of boundless tariff authority the Supreme Court clearly rejected in the Learning Resources case.

For links to my other writings on the tariff litigation and its aftermath, see here.

UPDATE: Phil Magness has a Wall Street Journal article on the same issue, making similar arguments.

The Saving Construction in NFIB and the Anti-Saving Construction in Learning Resources

Six justices found that the best reading of statute supports the government, but only three applied the major question doctrine. Why wasn't this a reversal?

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In NFIB v. Sebelius, the votes were unusual. Five justices held that the ACA's mandate could not be supported by Congress's commerce powers. Five justices also held that under the best reading of the statute, the penalty enforcing the ACA's mandate cannot be construed as a valid exercise of the taxing power. Chief Justice Roberts, however, used these findings of unconstitutionality as a necessary predicate to applying the saving construction.

This part of the opinion is not well-understood. Some critics charged that Roberts's analysis of the commerce clause was unnecessary since he ultimately upheld the law as a valid exercise of the taxing power. The speculation was that Roberts wanted to gift conservative some jurisprudential victory on the Commerce Clause while upholding Obamacare. The Chief Justice could only get to the saving construction after fully considering whether the law was otherwise unconstitutional. Under the saving construction, the Chief Justice was able to construe the penalty as a tax. To be sure, Roberts acknowledged the saving construction wasn't the best reading of the statute, but it was a reasonable reading for purposes of constitutional avoidance. Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan joined that portion of the saving construction, giving it five votes, and making that a majority opinion.

Learning Resources operates in something of a mirror fashion. Chief Justice Roberts, as well as Justices Gorsuch and Barrett, found that under the major questions doctrine, the plaintiffs would prevail. While constitutional avoidance in NFIB compelled a saving construction, constitutional avoidance in Learning Resources compelled an anti-saving construction. For a duly-enacted statute, the Court reads the statute to uphold Congress's handiwork. But for a novel executive branch interpretation of an old statute, the Court reads the statute to cut against the President's handiwork. To use Justice Gorsuch's phrasing, "When Congress failed to speak clearly, courts put a thumb on the scale in favor of delegated power. " In other words, Congress puts a thumb on the scale against the executive branch.

The only way that Roberts, Gorsuch, and Barrett could have reached the Major Questions Doctrine is by finding the plaintiffs do not prevail under the best reading of the statute. I'll admit this point is not stated expressly in the opinion. Part II-A-2 of the Chief's opinion sort of just jumps into MQD without explaining why. And Justice Kagan does not join II-A-2. But why apply this canon (whatever the basis) if the plaintiffs plainly win under the statute? Justices Kagan, joined by Justices Sotomayor and Jackson, found that the plaintiffs had the best "straight-up" reading of the statute. But these three refused to join the Court's application of the Major Questions Doctrine. Kagan wrote, "For all those reasons, straight-up statutory construction resolves this case for me; I need no major-questions thumb on the interpretive scales."

I think Kagan is right that there is a big difference between "straight-up" statutory interpretation, and MQD statutory interpretation. Whether you approach this from the perspective of substantive canons (like Justice Gorsuch) or "common sense" (like Justice Barrett), the MQD is doing something different than the traditional tools of statutory interpretation. When I went to law school two decades ago, and studied statutory interpretation, the MQD wasn't really a thing. Sure we read Brown & Williamson and a few other cases, but no one thought this was a revolutionary doctrine. But it is a thing now. If the MQD is simply another name for statutory interpretation, then why call it something else?

I think the Roberts opinion has to be seen as expressly rejecting this "straight-up" reading of the statute. Otherwise, there would be no need to go down the Major Questions Doctrine route. In NFIB, the Chief Justice made clear why he was applying the saving construction. But in Learning Resources, the Chief Justice did not explain why he was applying the anti-saving construction. Indeed, Roberts could have joined Kagan's opinion, which endorsed the plaintiffs' statutory reading. But that didn't happen.

Justices Kavanaugh, joined by Justices Thomas and Alito, found that the plaintiffs do not prevail under the "straight-up" reading of the statute, nor do they prevail under the Major Questions Doctrine. Justice Kavanaugh found that "In the foreign affairs context, including tariffs, the longstanding rule is simple: Interpret the statute as written, not with a thumb on the scale against the President." Here, "as written" means "straight-up." I think Kagan and Kavanaugh are on the same page here.

Let's count the votes.

Three justices clearly found that the "straight-up" reading of the statute, without the major questions doctrine, supports the government: Kavanaugh, Thomas, Alito. Three justices would have necessarily needed to find that the "straight-up" reading of the statute, without the major questions doctrine, supports the government: Roberts, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh. I count six votes for this position. Three justices found that the statute can be read, under the major questions doctrine, to support the plaintiffs: Roberts, Gorsuch, and Barrett.

Six should beat three. So why was this case a reversal? The simple answer is that Justice Kagan, Sotomayor, and Jackson stated that they concurred in the judgment. But concurring in a judgment does not create a judgment. The judgment should be determined based on which interpretative position garners the most votes. Here, there are six votes to reject the lower court's reasoning on the statute. This is not a case like Marks where no single interpretive position garners a majority. There is a majority, but the Justices do not wish to acknowledge it. You cannot turn a dissent into a concurrence by labelling it as concurring in judgment. Here, a majority of the Court squarely rejected the plaintiffs' statutory argument, and only three members adopted the plaintiffs' backup argument under the MQD. Why did the government lose?

All of the above analysis would be wrong if the major questions doctrine is not viewed as some sort of avoidance canon. But if it's not an avoidance canon, what is it? I realize there is an ongoing debate in the literature, and on the Court, about what triggers the MQD. But I think everyone would agree that it is always the first step, where possible, to apply a "straight-up" method of statutory interpretation. The sort of statutory interpretation we all learned in law school decades ago. In other words, if Justice Kagan is right, then there is no need to ever consider the major questions doctrine. And unlike NFIB, Justice Kagan did not join the anti-saving construction.

I realize this issue is largely academic, as the judgment says "affirm," but I don't think the answer is so clear.

Update: I had an extended exchange with a colleague who is a federal courts expert.

He said that Roberts has no obligation to reject the straight up-reading. He can jump straight ahead to the MQD.

He said further that even if Roberts had expressly rejected the straight up reading, while Kagan refused to embrace MQD, there would still be an affirmance because six votes voted to affirm. After all, Justices are under no obligation to provide any reasoning. They can simply vote to affirm or reverse.

I will consider both of these points further.

Update 2: I think Justice Kavanaugh's opinion is consistent with my initial read:

In an ordinary statutory interpretation case, I amconfident that a majority of this Court would flatly rejectthe plaintiffs' exceedingly weak statutory arguments and would hold that IEEPA's authorization for the President to "regulate . . . importation" during national emergenciesincludes the power to impose tariffs.Notably, the Court today does not claim that the phrase"regulate . . . importation" on its own excludes tariffs as a matter of ordinary statutory meaning. Only three Members of the Court, JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, JUSTICE KAGAN, and JUSTICE JACKSON, do so. THE CHIEF JUSTICE's opinion in Part II–A–2, which is joined only by JUSTICE GORSUCH and JUSTICE BARRETT, instead relies on the major questions doctrine. The majorquestions doctrine is an important canon of statutoryinterpretation that the Court has applied in a number of significant cases over the last 45 years. See Industrial Union Dept., AFL–CIO v. American Petroleum Institute, 448 U. S. 607, 645 (1980) (plurality opinion).

And Footnote 17:

17Of course, if the major power does not fall within the generally worded text as a matter of ordinary statutory interpretation, the major questions doctrine is not implicated or necessary to apply because the Government's statutory argument fails to begin with.

State of the Union

Don't Go to the State of the Union

Let the Wilsonian Nightmare End

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Over at The Dispatch, I have a new piece on the State of the Union address and why the justices should stay home. After President Obama caused a stir by criticizing the Court for its Citizens United decision during the State of the Union address, I wrote an article on presidential criticisms of the judiciary in public speeches and on the evolution of the State of the Union address. Chief Justice John Roberts complained after that episode that the event seemed like a presidential pep rally. Well, no duh. The State of the Union is a presidential pep rally. That was Woodrow Wilson's goal when he started the modern tradition of an annual in-person speech to a joint session of Congress.

One can see why such a platform is politically useful to the president. But no one else should play along, or pretend that the State of the Union is some kind civic ceremony. It is, and has always been, a vehicle for the president to bully Congress into doing what he wants. There is no reason for the justices to attend such an event, and no reason for the opposition members of Congress to show up either.

From the piece:

Who knows what Trump might choose to say in this State of the Union address, just days removed from this signature loss in the Supreme Court and with a long track record of losses in the lower courts. Will the justices be required to "sit there expressionless" as the president's "cheering and hollering" supporters surround them and the president himself looks down on them and calls them fools and perhaps announces his own court-packing plan?

Now would be a good time for the Wilsonian experiment to come to an end. It seems like it is only a matter of time before the Republican prediction from back in 1913 comes true and a president is greeted with a cacophony of boos. Instead of Democrat House Speaker Nancy Pelosi waiting until the end of a Trump presidential address to show her disdain by ripping up his speech, a future House speaker might take the opportunity to show even less restraint while sitting on camera behind the president. Rather than a single member of Congress shouting "liar" at President Joe Biden during his speech, a partisan majority might decide to shout down the president with jeers and boos. After the midterm elections, an emboldened new Democratic congressional majority might simply refuse to invite President Trump to the chambers to deliver a speech at all. He can, after all, deliver a speech from the White House lawn any time he wants.

Read the whole thing here.

Politics

Court Requires That Vulgar Criticism of Mayor Be Obscured, but Eventually Changes Course

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From a press release by Daniel A. Horwitz (Horwitz Law, PLLC), who prevailed in the case; I've worked with him before and generally quite trust his work (plus I looked through the source material myself as well):

Following a multi-month prior restraint that forbade local citizen Glenn Whiting and his affiliated entity Liberty Property Services from displaying the message "Mayor Larry Eaton tells citizen FUCK you after Court said city violated law," District Attorney Stephen Hatchett's obscenity lawsuit against Liberty Property Services must be dismissed, McMinn County Circuit Court Judge J. Michael Sharp has ruled. A copy of the Circuit Court's dismissal order is accessible here: https://horwitz.law/wp-content/uploads/Order-Regarding-Motion-to-Dismiss.pdf.

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Free Speech

Arrest of Commenter at City Council Meeting for Accusing Police of Being "Fascist" and "Pro Domestic Abuse" Violated First Amendment

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An excerpt from yesterday's long decision by Chief Judge Stephanie Rose (S.D. Iowa) in Petersen v. City of Newton:

The constitutional violations alleged in this case stem from the enforcement of Newton's Derogatory Comments Rule …, which prohibited speakers from making "derogatory statements or comments about any individual" during the public comment portion of city council meetings….

[In August 2022,] Newton Police Officer Nathan Winters arrested Tayvin Galanakis during a traffic stop—an incident that drew Petersen's attention to the police department. Petersen investigated and discovered that Officer Winters was subject to a civil no-contact order related to domestic abuse allegations. When Petersen submitted public records requests seeking information about how the department had handled the matter, the City denied them….

Petersen attended the October 3, 2022 city council meeting to speak during the public comment period. He began reading prepared remarks characterizing the police department as "violent" and "pro domestic abuse." Mayor Hansen interrupted, declared Petersen in violation of the Rule, and directed Chief Burdess to remove him from the meeting. When Petersen insisted on finishing his remarks, Chief Burdess arrested him for disorderly conduct. This arrest was unprecedented—no one had ever been arrested at a Newton city council meeting before. Yet, at this same meeting, other speakers made critical comments about city officials that Mayor Hansen permitted under the Rule.

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