UPDATE: US trade court rules against Trump’s emergency tariffs on global goods
Al Greenwood
29-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–A US court ruled on Wednesday that the president cannot impose global tariffs under an emergency act, a judgment that would void many of the tariffs that the nation imposed in 2025 against nearly every country in the world.
The administration of US President Donald Trump filed a notice that it was appealing the ruling.
Under the judgment issued by the US Court of International Trade, the US has 10 calendar days to withdraw the following tariffs:
– The 10% baseline tariffs against most of the
world that the US issued during its so-called
Liberation Day event on 2 April. These include
the reciprocal tariffs that were later paused.
The US issued the tariffs under Executive Order
14257, which intended to address the
nation’s trade deficit.
– The tariffs that the US initially imposed on
imports from Canada under Executive Order
14193. These were intended to address the flow
of illicit drugs. The US later limited the
scope of these tariffs to cover imported goods
that do not comply with the nations’ trade
agreement, known as the US-Mexico-Canada
Agreement (USMCA).
– The tariffs that the US initially imposed on
imports from Mexico under Executive Order
14194. These were intended to address the flow
of immigrants and illicit drugs. Like the
Canadian tariffs, these were later limited to
cover imported goods that did not comply with
the USMCA.
– The 20% tariffs that the US imposed on
imports from China under Executive Order 14195,
which was intended to address the flow of
illicit drugs.
The US imposed these tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which gives the president authority to take actions to address a severe national security threat.
To justify the use of the IEEPA, Trump declared that the trade deficit, drug smuggling and illegal immigration constituted national emergencies.
If the ruling stands, it would remove the tariffs that the US has imposed on many imports of commodity plastics and chemicals.
By extension, the ruling would remove the threat of retaliatory tariffs that other countries could impose on the nation’s substantial exports of polyethylene (PE), polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and other ethylene derivatives.
The court’s order does not cover the sectoral tariffs that the US has imposed on specific products such as steel and aluminium.
In addition, it does not cover the Section 301 tariffs that the US imposed against Chinese imports during Trump’s first term. These tariffs were intended to address unfair trade practices.
RATIONALE BEHIND THE COURT’S
JUDGMENT
The US constitution
delegates the power to impose tariffs to
congress. Although congress has delegated trade
authority to the president, it had set clear
limitations that allowed the legislature to
retain the power to impose tariffs.
The IEEPA does not delegate unbounded tariff authority to the president, the court said. “Any interpretation of IEEPA that delegates unlimited tariff authority is unconstitutional.”
The authority that congress delegated to the president under IEEPA is limited and does not include the power to impose any tariffs, the court said.
COURT FINDS NO
EMERGENCY
Even if the president
could impose tariffs under IEEPA, the trade
deficit does not constitute an emergency, the
court ruled. The US already has a statute to
address trade deficits under Section 122.
“Section 122 removes the president’s power to impose remedies in response to balance-of-payments deficits, and specifically trade deficits, from the broader powers granted to a president during a national emergency under IEEPA by establishing an explicit non-emergency statute with greater limitations,” it said.
In addition, the court found that drug trafficking and illegal immigration fail to meet the emergency threshold established under IEEPA.
To meet that threshold, the emergency must have a substantial part of its source outside of the US and it must pose a threat to the nation’s national security, foreign policy or economy. Also, the emergency must be unusual and extraordinary. The action that the president takes must deal directly with the threat.
The court found that the tariffs fail to directly deal with drug trafficking and illegal immigration. While they may provide the US with leverage to negotiate agreements, such leverage does not meet the threshold of addressing the emergency at hand.
The lawsuit was filed in the US Court of International Trade by the plaintiffs VOS Selections, Genova Pipe, Microkits, Fishusa and Terry Precision Cycling. The case number is 25-cv-00066.
Thumbnail shows containers, which are used in international trade. Image by Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock.
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