Trump Tariffs Case at Supreme Court Today
Digest more
The Supreme Court‘s Wednesday oral arguments over the legality of Donald Trump‘s sweeping “Liberation Day” tariffs pitted the president’s constitutional foreign affairs powers against Congress’s constitutionally delegated tariff power.
Next year, the Supreme Court will decide whether the President can use a five decade old emergency powers act to shape the U.S. economy.Trump invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or AYEEPA,
15hon MSNOpinion
Trump’s weaponizing of ‘emergency’ label comes to a head
The president continues to use this once-narrow exception for genuine crises as a routine pretext for government overreach.
Supreme Court justices expressed skepticism about Donald Trump's use of emergency law to impose global tariffs during oral arguments Wednesday.
23hon MSNOpinion
A good day for the separation of powers in the Supreme Court
After oral arguments it appears the Supreme Court will strike down President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs 6-3.
9hon MSNOpinion
'Emergency' Has Become Washington's Favorite Loophole. It's Cost Taxpayers $15 Trillion.
What was once meant to be a narrow exception for genuine crises has become a routine pretext for government overreach.
In times of national emergency, should the Supreme Court dictate America's grand strategy and international economic policies? This question confronts
SCOTUSblog on MSN
SCOTUStoday for Tuesday, November 4
The Iranian Hostage Crisis began on this day in 1969. As CNN reported last week, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act played a role in President Jimmy Carter’s work to resolve the crisis; he invoked IEEPA to explain why he could use “frozen Iranian assets as a ‘bargaining chip.