Trump Slams Supreme Court, Announces New 10% Global Tariff Immediately

US President Donald Trump harshly criticized the Supreme Court after it struck down his use of a key tariff authority. In response, he announced the immediate imposition of a new 10% global tariff, asserting other statutes allow him to continue his trade agenda. Trump claimed tariffs are responsible for economic successes like stock market highs and revived factories. The ruling leaves billions in collected tariff revenue in legal limbo, setting the stage for years of further litigation.

Key Points: Trump Announces 10% Global Tariff After Supreme Court Ruling

  • Trump criticizes Supreme Court tariff ruling
  • Announces new 10% global tariff immediately
  • Vows to use other legal authorities for tariffs
  • Claims tariffs are key to economic success
  • Legal battles over tariff revenue expected
4 min read

Trump announces 10 pc global tariff after raging over US Supreme Court loss

President Trump lashes out at the Supreme Court's tariff decision and announces a new 10% global tariff, vowing to continue his trade agenda.

"The Supreme Court's ruling on tariffs is deeply disappointing, and I'm ashamed of certain members of the court - Donald Trump"

Washington, Feb 21

US President Donald Trump, lashed out at the Supreme Court after it struck down his use of a key tariff authority, calling the apex court's verdict "deeply disappointing", while announcing he would move immediately to other statutes -- including a new "10 per cent global tariff" -- that he said would keep his tariff programme intact.

"The Supreme Court's ruling on tariffs is deeply disappointing, and I'm ashamed of certain members of the court, absolutely ashamed, for not having the courage to do what's right for our country," Trump said on Friday afternoon at a White House news conference, thanking Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh for dissenting.

The US President added that the Supreme Court's judgment did not end his tariff agenda and, in fact, clarified on using other options.

"The good news is that there are methods, practices, statutes, and authorities as recognised by the entire court in this terrible decision... that are even stronger than the tariffs available to me as President of the United States," Trump said.

He claimed: "The Supreme Court did not overrule tariffs, they merely over... a particular use of IEEPA tariffs and essentially its use to get a fee," adding, "I can do anything I want with IEEPA's... anything, I just can't charge anybody for it."

Trump said existing tariffs would remain, and new ones were imminent.

"Therefore, effective immediately, all national security tariffs under Section 232 and existing Section 301 tariffs they're existing. They're there remaining in place, fully in place and in full force and effect," he added.

"Today, I will sign an order to impose a 10 per cent global tariff under Section 122, over and above our normal tariffs already being charged," Trump added.

He said the US administration was also "initiating several Section 301 and other investigations to protect our country from unfair trading practices of other countries and companies".

Pressed about whether the US Congress would need to act, Trump said, "You don't need to -- it's already been approved," and later added, "I have the right to do tariffs. And I've always had the right to do tariffs, and it's all been approved by the US Congress."

US Trade Representative Jameison Greer reinforced the message of President Trump, saying: "We have Section 122, which will be implemented today... We have Section 301 investigations, which are incredibly legally durable... and we're going to keep continuity in the program."

One major uncertainty, Trump said, was the money already collected.

Asked whether about "$175 billion in tariff revenue... is now in limbo" and whether refunds would be required, the US President replied: "They take months and months to write an opinion, and they don't even discuss that point."

Trump said the Supreme Court's judgment left the issue for further litigation.

"I guess it has to get litigated for the next two years," he said, adding, "We'll end up being in court for the next five years."

Trump also framed tariffs as central to his economic claims.

"Our stock market has just recently broken 50,000 on the Dow... and... broken 7,000 on the S&P," the US President said, adding that tariffs helped revive factories, recounting a story of a steel executive, who told him, "Sir, I want to kiss you," because "you came in and imposed tariffs and all of that foreign junk... Stopped."

In the US, tariffs can be imposed under multiple laws, including provisions tied to national security (Section 232) and unfair trade practices (Section 301), while IEEPA is a separate emergency powers statute that US Presidents have used for certain economic restrictions.

Disputes over the scope of those powers routinely generate litigation that can reach the Supreme Court in the US.

Trade policy has been a recurring battleground between US Presidents, Congress, and the courts for decades, with administrations of both parties (Democratic Party and Republican Party) using tariffs and negotiated deals to pressure trading partners, protect domestic industries, and pursue broader foreign-policy goals.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The way he talks about the Supreme Court is concerning for any democracy. Calling out judges by name and saying he's "ashamed" of them? That's not how separation of powers should work, even if you disagree with the verdict.
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Priya S
Honestly, from an Indian perspective, we should see this as a warning. Over-reliance on any single market is risky. Time to diversify our export basket and strengthen trade with EU, ASEAN, and African nations. Atmanirbhar Bharat needs to be about resilience too.
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Rohit P
"I can do anything I want" – this attitude is the problem. No leader should have unilateral power to disrupt global trade. It affects jobs and prices here in India too. Our IT sector, pharmaceuticals, and textiles could feel the pinch.
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Karthik V
The stock market numbers he quotes are impressive, but at what cost? Protectionism might help some US factories, but it hurts consumers worldwide and invites retaliation. India should be prepared with a calibrated response, not just reactive tariffs.
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Michael C
Interesting to see the legal chess game here. The court blocks one path, he immediately finds another (Section 122). Shows how complex US trade law is. The "litigation for the next five years" line says it all – more uncertainty for businesses everywhere.

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