The US Trade Court blocked Trump’s tariffs on May 28th, but the president immediately sued.
White House appeals court ruling banning Trump’s tariffs
The White House has filed an appeal in a court ruling prohibiting President Donald Trump from implementing his global tariff program.
The appeals court ruled that tariffs could continue to be collected, challenging the court’s order that President Donald Trump blocked them.
The May 29th decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit is a day after the U.S. Court of International Trade invalidated his use of the International Emergency Economic Force Act of 1977 to collect tariffs.
The May 28 Trade Court ruling was a setback in Trump’s economic agenda, but the administration quickly appealed and received at least a temporary reprieve.
The shocking ruling by the Trade Court threatened to kill or at least delay Trump’s “liberation day” tariff levies on goods from Canada, Mexico and China in connection with his accusations that the three countries are promoting fentanyl flow to the United States.
Tariffs are at the heart of Trump’s second term economic agenda. The president has imposed sudden collections on foreign goods, igniting international rage, disrupting the global economy, sending markets to tailspin, and increasing the fear of a recession.
However, a three-person judge panel at the International Trade Court unanimously discovered that Ieepa, who was called to unilaterally enact the obligations of foreign goods, “does not allow tariffs and has stopped them.”
Separately on May 29, a federal judge blocked the Trump administration from collecting tariffs from Illinois toy importers. US District Judge Rudolf Contreras ordered the administration on May 29 to not collect tariffs from a comparison of Hand2Mind with Vernon Hills, Illinois-based learning resources.
The ruling hit Trump’s trade agenda, but White House officials vowed to continue to hold the matter in court.
During the May 29 briefing, White House spokesman Caroline Leavitt told reporters that the Trump administration hopes the U.S. Supreme Court will resolve the issue. “The president’s trade policy continues,” she said.
Contributors: Bad Janssen, Reuters
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