Trump, tariff
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Trump’s tariffs are not dead yet
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Conversation around tariffs has surged after the U.S. Supreme Court recently struck down the broad global tariffs that President Trump had imposed under emergency powers, ruling they were unconstitutional because only Congress can levy taxes like tariffs.
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has once again turned to tariffs to try to get his way with a U.S. trading partner. This time, the target is Mexico: Trump plans to impose 5% tariffs on Mexican imports starting June 10 and to ratchet them up to 25% by ...
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Supreme Court Trump tariff decision impact: What to expect as fight for billions in refunds begins
The Supreme Court ruling that President Trump's tariffs are illegal will lead companies to seek billions in refunds, but the decision was silent on the issue.
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How do tariffs work?
Tariffs are taxes a government puts on goods and services that come from other countries. You can think of a tariff as an extra fee added at the border, which makes imported products more expensive. Governments use tariffs for several reasons. They raise ...
President Donald Trump’s economic agenda took a major hit when the Supreme Court struck down many of his most sweeping tariffs. While Trump has options to restore some of the tariffs, he’s losing his most powerful tool to impose them almost at will as a bargaining chip with other countries.
It has been slightly over six weeks since the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the challenge to President Donald Trump’s power to impose sweeping tariffs in a series of executive orders earlier this year. During the lengthy debate over those tariffs ...
A Trump supporter recently found out how tariffs work after ordering a package SHEIN and facing an extra charge to save the order from the trash. In a Facebook post warning others, Jamie or Jessie Myers complained that DHL was holding their clothes ...
President Trump posted on social media that the Supreme Court unwittingly gave him "far more power and strength" when it ruled last week against his broad global tariffs. Other levies could be used "in a much more powerful and obnoxious way,