Supreme Court justices appear skeptical that Trump tariffs are legal
- In a packed marble courtroom, the US Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. opened oral arguments Wednesday, with Chief Justice John Roberts, Amy Coney Barrett, and Neil Gorsuch questioning US Solicitor General John Sauer for over 45 minutes.
- Invoking the IEEPA earlier this year, the administration applied levies from 10% to 50% on imports initially targeting China, Mexico and Canada, asserting emergency tariff authority.
- Neal Katyal argued challengers' case that revenue-raising tariffs exceed presidential authority, with Roberts warning `The justification is being used for power to impose tariffs on any product from any country in any amount, for any length of time`.
- This year analysts note the ruling covers roughly $90bn in tariffs already paid, and if the Supreme Court rules for President Donald Trump, it would overturn three lower courts.
- On Tuesday, Press Secretary Karoline Leavett said the administration is preparing alternatives as advisors warned it would be imprudent not to plan for prolonged litigation.
150 Articles
150 Articles
The purpose of the hearing before the highest court in the country was to determine whether or not the U.S. president had the right to impose these customs duties without going to Congress, using an exception law that had not been imagined for this purpose. The decision will be made by the U.S. president.
Trump's tariff power grab faces hostile Supreme Court reception
Victor Schwartz, founder and president of VOS Selections, spoke to reporters outside the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025. Schwartz, a New York-based wine and spirits importer of 40 years, was the lead plaintiff in the case against President Donald Trump's sweeping emergency tariffs. (Photo by Ashley Murray/States Newsroom)WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court during lengthy arguments Wednesday weighed whether President Donald Trump v…
By John Fritze, Elisabeth Buchwald and Devan Cole, CNN The Supreme Court expressed deep concern Wednesday over President Donald Trump's reliance on an ambiguous federal law to impose global tariffs, with several members of the conservative wing questioning the administration's stance in a case that could have broad implications for the economy and presidential power.
Conservative Supreme Court justices appear skeptical of Trump's unilateral tariffs
Key Supreme Court conservatives seemed skeptical Wednesday that President Donald Trump has the power to unilaterally impose far-reaching tariffs.
US Supreme Court signals skepticism of Trump tariffs
US Supreme Court justices appeared skeptical that President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff regime is legal, as the nation’s highest court heard arguments on the duties Wednesday. The case, which centers around whether Trump infringed on the power of Congress when he used an emergency law to impose the tariffs, marks “the first major test of whether the court will embrace or limit Trump’s assertions of broad executive power,” The Washington Post …
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