The Supreme Court has ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act tariffs exceed the executive's authority, and Congress must now take up the task of defining a new tariff agenda that ...
The answer is, it depends. In order to escape the bite of the Roberts court’s majority opinion in Learning Resources v. Trump, the license fee cannot be a tax, because that would run into the same ...
The Supreme Court's ruling to limit President Donald Trump's use of emergency powers to impose tariffs is forcing the ...
There are many laws that explicitly authorize the president to impose taxes on imports, but they include limits that Trump ...
The Supreme Court ruled on one of the president's signature economic achievements, which Trump has billed the tariff case as ...
President Donald Trump’s economic agenda took a major hit when the Supreme Court struck down many of his most sweeping ...
Tennessee-based FedEx is among the latest major companies moving to recover tariff payments after the Supreme Court struck down tariffs imposed under the International ...
FedEx said it imported goods from countries subject to the duties and "thus [has] suffered injury caused by those orders." ...
Last week, the Supreme Court struck down President Trump’s signature tariff initiative in a messy ruling highlighting sharp disagreements about presidential powers. Could Trump now do an end-run ...
The Supreme Court on Friday ruled President Trump does not have the authority to unilaterally impose sweeping tariffs under a federal emergency powers law.
Process matters. Due process, equal protection, gun rights, free speech, freedom of religion, voting rights and all other rights are protected by processes. Those processes include checks and balances ...
With Congress utterly failing as a check on executive branch power, the Supreme Court demonstrated it was up to the task. On ...