If the Trump administration wants to use tariffs to fight “persistent” goods trade imbalances, the right statute is Section 122 of the Trade Act, not the International Emergency Economic ...
The Supreme Court will not devastate the economy or the budget by obeying the Constitution. Scott Lincicome is vice president ...
The Senate is expected to vote Tuesday on a measure that would block President Trump's tariffs on Brazil, as Democrats seek ...
V.O.S. Selections is a wine and spirits importer. In May, the Court of International Trade ruled the Trump administration ...
Sen. Ron Johnson (Wis.), the lead Senate Republican negotiator on a bill to pay key federal workers during the shutdown, says ...
In August, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed a previous lower court ruling, but said Trump's tariffs ...
Yes, even when they are also regulations. Whether the Court agrees could determine the future of presidential power.
The justices used the doctrine, a judicially created method of reading statutes, to thwart several major Biden programs.
Trump’s allies defend his use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose sweeping tariffs by insisting that Congress can end the underlying “national emergency.” They argue that if ...
Victor Owen Schwartz started his business importing wine and spirits to the United States with his mother nearly 40 years ago ...
A bipartisan group of former judges warned the Supreme Court could dangerously alter the power dynamic between the three ...