Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Trump Admin’s Tariff Appeal on Fast Track
The Supreme Court on Sept. 9 agreed to expedite review of lower court rulings that struck down most of President Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariffs.
The president has made tariffs the centerpiece of his foreign policy in his second administration, saying they may be used to encourage manufacturing to return to the United States. He has also said that tariffs may help correct what he considers to be unfair trade practices engaged in by countries that export goods to the United States.
The two cases are Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump and V.O.S. Selections Inc. v. United States. The high court consolidated the cases and ordered that they be heard together. No justices dissented. The court did not explain its decision.
“It’s a very important decision, and frankly, if they make the wrong decision, it would be a devastation for our country,” he said.
“Without the tariffs, this country is in serious, serious trouble. We’ve taken in almost $17 trillion of investment [which] is coming in. Most of it is coming because of tariffs.”
“If the court says it, we’d have to do it,” he said, noting that the Trump administration is confident that it will win the case before the Supreme Court.
Bessent said there could be “other avenues” to imposing tariffs if the Supreme Court rules against those duties, although he did not give details about what they are. However, he said, those maneuvers would diminish the authority of the Trump administration.
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