Why SCOTUS won't deter Trump's desire to weaponize trade - Responsible Statecraft
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the International Economic Emergency Powers Act (IEEPA) does not authorize the president to impose tariffs, limiting Trump's ability to use that authority for trade measures. Despite this setback, the Trump administration has indicated it will pursue other legal tools, such as Sections 301, 232, and 338 of trade law, to justify tariffs and trade policies. The administration's ongoing efforts suggest that trade enforcement and protectionist strategies may continue through alternative legislative channels.
In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court today ruled against the White House on a key economic initiative of the Trump administration, concluding that the International Economic Emergency Powers Act (IEEPA) does not give the president the right to impose tariffs.
The ruling was not really a surprise; the tone of the questioning by several justices in early November was overwhelmingly skeptical of the administration’s argument, as prediction markets rightly concluded. Given the likelihood of this result, it should also come as no surprise that the Trump administration has already been plotting ways to work around the decision.
Tariffs have been the administration’s signature economic policy, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent referred to them as such when he defended their use on the eve of the Supreme Court hearings. At the time, he also noted that the administration has other legislative rationales to impose them should the court rule against the White House. And indeed, the administration just
announcedThese tools (known by their section numbers to trade law aficionados) include Section 301, which targets “unfair trade practices,” and Section 232, which invokes considerations of “national security.” Both those tools have been used by this and previous administrations, with Section 301 being the rationale for a
multiyear battleThe U.S. has also invoked the national security rationale in the past, hitting imports of oil from
Iranand Libya in the 1970s and 1980s. But the use of Section 232 fell out of favor until Trump used it to justify broad tariffs on
autos to bathroom vanitiesTariffs under Sections 232 and 301 both require a period of investigation by the Commerce Department or U.S. Trade Representative before they can be put into effect. This makes them different from the IEEPA authority invoked by President Trump when he imposed tariffs for varied and sundry reasons on countries in the Global South, as in the case of the tariffs levied against Mexico for fentanyl, Brazil for "
" of that country, and India for
persecuting a former President.
importing Russian oilIEEPA authority was also the rationale behind the “ reciprocal tariffs” of Liberation Day, an extraordinarily sweeping
voteThere is, however, one other clause: Section 338 of the 1930 Smoot-Hawley Act, which allows tariffs of up to 50% against any country that “discriminates” against the U.S. And indeed, in its calculation of the original Liberation Day tariffs, the administration already used a simple failure to achieve a perfect bilateral balance of trade as evidence of non-tariff barriers. As noted
hereIt might thus be too soon to sound the all-clear on U.S. trade policy when it concerns an administration determined to use market access to the U.S. as both a swiss army knife and a sledgehammer.
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