President
The filing comes in a case filed by two educational-toy makers that want the justices to take an unusual shortcut by getting involved before a federal appeals court has ruled. US Solicitor General
Trump’s import taxes remain in effect even though two courts have said many of them exceed the president’s powers. The challenged taxes include Trump’s April 2 “Liberation Day” tariffs, which combine a universal baseline levy of 10% with potentially much higher rates for various trading partners.
In the case before the high court,
The Trump administration then appealed, and the companies are asking the Supreme Court to directly review Contreras’ ruling. The high court in June
In a separate case, the US Court of International Trade similarly declared many of Trump’s tariffs illegal in May. A different federal appeals court scheduled arguments in that case for July 31 and
The April 2 tariffs represented the biggest increase in US import taxes since the 1930 Smoot-Hawley levies, taking the country’s average applied tariff rate to its highest level in more than a century.
Trump has portrayed tariffs as critical to leveling the playing field for American businesses and workers amid chronic trade deficits.
The case is Learning Resources v. Trump, 24-1287.
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Peter Blumberg
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