With a 6–3 majority, the Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s tariffs, but the ruling lacks full consensus on its reasoning or implications.
President Donald Trump's levies on automobiles and auto parts were unaffected by the Supreme Court's Friday tariff decision, ...
Post the US Supreme Court's order striking down Trump's tariffs, the legal and economic baseline for an India-US deal has ...
This Tuesday night, America will bear witness to Donald Trump’s first State of the Union address of his second term. I know—the mere thought of it rots a little piece of our souls that we’re never ...
Trump responded to the Supreme Court decision by proposing a new 10% global tariff under an alternative law, Section 122 of ...
Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the majority, was characteristically blunt: The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) of 1977 “does not authorize the President to impose tariffs.
The Supreme Court’s nixing of US President Donald Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs is throwing fresh confusion over the raft of trade deals negotiated by global partners as the inescapable reality of ...
US President Donald Trump has imposed new global tariffs after the Supreme Court struck down an earlier set of import taxes. To replace them, his administration announced a 10% tariff, later raised to ...
The rollback affects a wide range of imports from major Asian export economies such as China, South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, all of which play central roles in global manufacturing and technology supp ...
Trump signed an order to impose a 10% global tariff under Section 122. He earlier described it as ‘over and above our normal ...