Trump
wins temporary reprieve as he fights against court block on tariffs
US president
rails against judges who ruled against him as appeals court grants pause until
challenge is heard
Dominic
Rushe in New York, Kalyeena Makortoff in London and Robert Mackey
Thu 29 May
2025 20.42 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/may/28/us-court-blocks-trump-tariffs
The Trump
administration is racing to halt a major blow to the president’s sweeping
tariffs after a US court ruled they “exceed any authority granted to the
president”.
A US trade
court ruled the president’s tariffs regime was illegal on Wednesday in a
dramatic twist that could block Trump’s controversial global trade policy.
On Thursday,
an appeals court agreed to a temporary pause in the decision pending an appeal
hearing. The Trump administration is expected to take the case to the supreme
court if it loses.
The ruling
by a three-judge panel at the New York-based court of international trade came
after several lawsuits argued Trump had exceeded his authority, leaving US
trade policy dependent on his whims and unleashing economic chaos around the
world.
On Thursday,
the Trump administration filed for “emergency relief” from the ruling “to avoid
the irreparable national-security and economic harms at stake”.
The White
House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said the judges had “brazenly abused
their judicial power to usurp the authority of President Trump” in what she
characterised as a pattern of judicial overreach.
“Ultimately
the supreme court must put an end to this,” she said.
Leavitt’s
comments came as a second judge, Washington DC district court judge Rudolph
Contreras, called the tariffs “unlawful” and ordered a preliminary injunction
on the collection of tariffs from a pair of Illinois toy importers, which
brought the case.
Tariffs
typically need to be approved by Congress but Trump has so far bypassed that
requirement by claiming that the country’s trade deficits amount to a national
emergency. This had left him able to apply sweeping tariffs to most countries
last month, in a shock move that sent markets reeling.
The court’s
ruling stated that Trump’s tariff orders “exceed any authority granted to the
president … to regulate importation by means of tariffs”.
The judges
were keen to state that they were not passing judgment on the “wisdom or likely
effectiveness of the president’s use of tariffs as leverage”. Instead, their
ruling centred on whether the trade levies had been legally applied in the
first place. Their use was “impermissible not because it is unwise or
ineffective, but because [federal law] does not allow it”, the decision
explained.
Financial
markets cheered the court’s ruling, with the US dollar rallying in its wake,
soaring against the euro, yen and Swiss franc. In Europe, the German Dax
rallied 0.9%, while France’s Cac 40 rose 1%. The UK’s FTSE 100 blue-chip index
ticked up 0.1% at the start of trading. Stocks in Asia also climbed on
Thursday, while in the US stock markets all rose marginally.
The ruling
immediately invalidated all of the tariff orders that were issued through the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), a law meant to address
“unusual and extraordinary” threats during a national emergency.
The judges
said Trump must issue new orders reflecting the permanent injunction within 10
days.
White House
officials have hit out at the court’s authority.
The ruling,
if it stands, blows a giant hole through Trump’s strategy to use steep tariffs
to wring concessions from trading partners, draw manufacturing jobs back to US
shores and shrink a $1.2tn (£892bn) US goods trade deficit, which were among
his key campaign promises.
Without the
help of the IEEPA, the Trump administration would have to take a slower
approach, launching lengthier trade investigations and abiding by other trade
laws to back the tariff threats.
The decision
is also likely to embolden other challenges to Trump’s policy. Last month,
California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, filed a lawsuit against the tariffs,
arguing they were “illegal, full stop”.
The court
was not asked to address some industry-specific tariffs Trump has issued on
cars, steel and aluminium, using a different statute, so these are likely to
remain in place for now.
Analysts at
Goldman Sachs said that there could be other legal avenues for Trump to impose
across-the-board and country-specific tariffs, saying: “This ruling represents
a setback for the administration’s tariff plans and increases uncertainty but
might not change the final outcome for most major US trading partners.”
Other
options for the president include sections under various trade acts that grant
him powers to intervene on trade policy, albeit in an often slower and, in some
instances, more limited way.
Stephen
Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff for policy, hit out at the ruling
in a social media post that claimed “the judicial coup is out of control”.
After a
relatively long – for him – period of silence on his social media platform,
Trump resumed posting on Thursday, with a 500-word screed attacking the three
judges who ruled against him.
Trump’s post
began by noting that the order to unwind the tariffs had been paused
temporarily by an appeals court, but then turned to baseless speculation that
the three judges on the federal trade court must have been motivated by hatred
for him.
“Where do
these initial three Judges come from? How is it possible for them to have
potentially done such damage to the United States of America? Is it purely a
hatred of ‘TRUMP?’ What other reason could it be?” the president asked, without
noting that he had appointed one of the judges himself in 2018.
Trump’s
curiosity as to what could possibly explain the decision did not, apparently,
extend to reading any of the 49-page explanation written by the court, because
his post did not deal with any of the legal issues raised in the opinion.
At least
seven lawsuits have challenged Trump’s border taxes, the centrepiece of Trump’s
trade policy.
The court
made its ruling in response to two cases. One was filed by a group of small
businesses, including a wine importer, VOS Selections, whose owner said the
tariffs were having a major impact and his company may not survive.
The other
was filed by a dozen US states, led by Oregon.
“This ruling
reaffirms that our laws matter, and that trade decisions can’t be made on the
president’s whim,” said the Oregon attorney general, Dan Rayfield.
The
plaintiffs in the tariff lawsuit argued that the emergency powers law did not
give the president the power to apply tariffs, and even if it had done, the
trade deficit did not qualify as an emergency, which is defined as an “unusual
and extraordinary threat”.
The US has
run a trade deficit with the rest of the world for 49 consecutive years.
Trump also
targeted imports from Canada, China and Mexico, claiming his decision was meant
to combat the illegal flow of immigrants and the synthetic opioids across the
US border.
His
administration pointed to the court’s approval of Richard Nixon’s emergency use
of tariffs in 1971, and claimed that only Congress, and not the courts, could
determine the “political” question of whether the president’s rationale for
declaring an emergency complied with the law.
Reuters and
the Associated Press contributed reporting
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