SCOTUSblog on MSN
In tariff cases, verbs rather than major pronouncements about presidential power give the court the off-ramp it’s looking for
Clear Statements is a recurring series by Abbe R. Gluck on civil litigation and the modern regulatory and statutory state.
Toyota, Honda and Nissan forecast big hits to their profits from higher tariffs that they acknowledged were likely ‘here to ...
In arguments before the Supreme Court, the White House backed away from its claims that President Trump’s tariffs were about ...
Monica Mailk, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, talks about China's latest trade numbers, and what the US-China ...
We don’t expect any demand from China to return to the U.S. market with this change,’ said one trader at an international ...
Lawyer Neal Katyal argues Trump tariff case at Supreme Court while collaborating with John Mulaney on "The West Wing"-style ...
Oral arguments are presented about whether Donald Trump can hold on to his power to impose tariffs without the approval of ...
Gold prices edged up on Thursday, buoyed by a weaker dollar and a resurgence of safe-haven demand on concerns over a ...
Several justices seemed skeptical of the Trump administration's claims of broad tariff authority under a 1977 emergency ...
11hon MSN
Trump has other tariff options if the Supreme Court strikes down his worldwide import taxes
Trump will still have plenty of options to keep taxing imports aggressively even if the justices rule against him.
Supreme Court doubts on Trump tariffs could mean repeal—driving global market rallies and trade growth. Click for possible ...
Trade deficits are not a "national emergency." And contrary to Trump's presumption of unfairness, "foreign tariff rates on ...
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