Not at war with every nation: US Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s global tariffs

In a sharp rebuke to presidential power, the US Supreme Court ruled that emergency wartime authority cannot be stretched to justify sweeping tariffs on global trade partners.

“The United States, after all, is not at war with every nation in the world,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote, underlining the constitutional limits on executive power in a landmark 6-3 decision that struck down former President Donald Trump’s tariff regime.

At the heart of the dispute was the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), a 1977 law traditionally used to freeze assets or impose sanctions during national emergencies. Trump had relied on the statute to impose tariffs on nearly every US trading partner without seeking approval from Congress.

The majority made clear that the law does not authorise such action.

“Our task today is to decide only whether the power to ‘regulate importation,’ as granted to the president in IEEPA, embraces the power to impose tariffs. It does not,” Roberts wrote.

The opinion stressed that IEEPA contains no reference to tariffs or duties. No statute, the court noted, uses the word “regulate” to authorise taxation. Until now, no president had interpreted the law as granting tariff powers.

NO INHERENT PEACETIME AUTHORITY

The court went further, stating that the president has no inherent peacetime authority to impose tariffs. For actions of “vast economic and political significance,” the president must “point to clear congressional authorization,” Roberts wrote. “He cannot.”

Invoking the “major questions” doctrine, the majority said allowing unilateral tariffs of this scale would intrude on Congress’s constitutional authority over taxation and trade. The Constitution vests that power squarely in Congress.

The ruling marks the first time a president’s attempt to use IEEPA for tariffs has been rejected by the court. Trump had become the first to invoke the law in that manner after returning to office in January 2025.

DISSENT WARNS OF FALLOUT

Justice Brett Kavanaugh dissented, joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito. He argued that tariffs are a traditional tool to regulate imports and said the text, history and precedent of IEEPA supported the administration’s position.

Kavanaugh warned of significant practical consequences, including the potential refund of billions of dollars collected under the tariffs and uncertainty surrounding trade agreements negotiated during their enforcement.

WHO JOINED THE MAJORITY

Joining Roberts in the majority were Justices Neil Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson. The liberal justices did not join the portion of the opinion invoking the major questions doctrine.

The case was brought by businesses affected by the tariffs along with 12 US states, most led by Democrats.

With this ruling, the Supreme Court has drawn a clear constitutional line: emergency powers are not a blank cheque. And as Roberts reminded the nation, the United States is not in a state of permanent war with the world.

Latest

US Representative Eric Swalwell to resign amid sexual misconduct allegations

California Democrat Eric Swalwell steps down amid serious allegations

How US Navy is choking Iran through Hormuz blockade and at what cost

The blockade is a calculated attempt by President Donald Trump to squeeze Iran’s economy at its core by cutting off oil exports, one of its last major sources

US sought 20-year uranium ban from Iran in Islamabad talks

US and Iran remain divided over uranium enrichment timelines amid ongoing mediation efforts

‘In war times, artists shouldn’t…’: Pakistan’s Geo News after receiving show-cause notice over Asha Bhosle’s tribute

PEMRA issued a show-cause notice to Geo News for covering Asha Bhosle's passing. Managing director Azhar Abbas emphasised that art should transcend borders, esp

Don’t interfere: China fires warning shot at US over Hormuz blockade

Defence Minister Admiral Dong Jun's warning coincided with the start of the US naval blockade on Monday. 

Topics

SRH vs RR: Riyan Parag explains not using Ravindra Jadeja to bowl at Hyderabad

Riyan Parag called the decision to not bowl Ravindra Jadeja a split second call, even as the all rounder impressed with 45 runs off his bat in RR’s loss to SR

US Representative Eric Swalwell to resign amid sexual misconduct allegations

California Democrat Eric Swalwell steps down amid serious allegations

How US Navy is choking Iran through Hormuz blockade and at what cost

The blockade is a calculated attempt by President Donald Trump to squeeze Iran’s economy at its core by cutting off oil exports, one of its last major sources

Ishan Kishan considers ditching gloves to focus on his captaincy for SRH in IPL 2026

Ishan Kishan hinted he may give up wicketkeeping duties to focus on captaincy, saying better communication with bowlers could improve SRH’s on-field execution

US sought 20-year uranium ban from Iran in Islamabad talks

US and Iran remain divided over uranium enrichment timelines amid ongoing mediation efforts

World Liberty investor Justin Sun claims Trump crypto venture secretly installed tool to freeze user holdings

USA-TRUMP/WORLD LIBERTY-JUSTIN SUN (PIX):World Liberty investor Justin Sun claims Trump crypto venture 'secretly' installed tool to freeze user holdings

Anthropic talking to the Trump administration about its next AI model, co-founder says

USA-ANTHROPIC/CLARK (PIX):Anthropic talking to the Trump administration about its next AI model, co-founder says

Sundheim’s D1 Tumbled 6% in March as Biggest Stock Bets Soured

D1 Capital Partners’ equities book tumbled 6% in March, according to people familiar with the matter, making Dan Sundheim’s firm one of the worst-performing
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img