Tariff Rulings Inject New Uncertainty Into Trump Trade Strategy

1 day ago 6

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

A court ruling invalidating President Trump’s sweeping tariffs was halted hours later, throwing into question the administration’s overall approach to trade.

A container ship full of cargo at a port, cranes hovering above.
Using tariffs to pressure foreign countries to drop their own levies and to remove other barriers to U.S. exports has been one of President Trump’s main tactics.Credit...Maggie Shannon for The New York Times

Tony RommAna Swanson

May 29, 2025Updated 9:44 p.m. ET

A head-spinning series of court rulings over President Trump’s signature tariffs left Washington, Wall Street and much of the world trying to discern the future of U.S. trade policy on Thursday, including whether import taxes would fall meaningfully or if the administration would get the legal green light to upend the global trading system.

Less than 24 hours after the U.S. Court of International Trade blocked steep tariffs that Mr. Trump had imposed on trading partners using emergency powers, a separate court temporarily paused that decision, sowing even more chaos on a day filled with economic uncertainty.

The extent to which the legal wrangling may ultimately lower tariffs hinges on the next steps from the Trump administration and a series of judges who will further parse the president’s exact powers. Those decisions carry great consequences for the entire global economy, not to mention American consumers and businesses, who could face higher prices if Mr. Trump is allowed to proceed with his aggressive tariff strategy.

At the heart of the fight is the president’s use of a decades-old economic emergency law to impose some of his most eye-watering duties, including the minimum 10 percent levy he has placed on nearly every U.S. trading partner. On Wednesday, a panel of judges on the nation’s leading trade court found Mr. Trump had misapplied the law, ruling that Congress did not grant him “unbounded authority” to wage a global trade war.

The decision would have forced the Trump administration to unwind many of the president’s steep tariffs over the next 10 days, but the government quickly petitioned a federal appeals court to intervene. It asked a panel of judges to hold that order at bay while it weighed the administration’s fuller arguments that its tariffs were lawful.

The appeals court ultimately issued a temporary, administrative pause Thursday afternoon that allowed the government to keep its tariffs in place. The move bought time for judges to begin evaluating the legal core of the president’s arguments in a saga that is expected to reach the Supreme Court.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Read Entire Article
Olahraga Sehat| | | |