In a sweeping 7-4 decision that threatens to unravel a cornerstone of President Donald Trump’s economic agenda, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled Friday that the majority of the administration’s signature tariffs lack legal authority under current federal law.
The ruling represents the most significant judicial challenge to Trump’s trade policy in his second term, potentially forcing the Supreme Court to weigh in on fundamental questions about presidential power and congressional authority over taxation and international commerce.
The Legal Foundation Crumbles
At the heart of the dispute lies Trump’s unprecedented use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to justify sweeping tariff increases. The 1977 law, originally designed for imposing sanctions on hostile nations and freezing enemy assets during national emergencies, has never before been wielded by a president to impose broad-based tariffs on trading partners.
The appeals court found this interpretation legally untenable. “The statute bestows significant authority on the President to undertake several actions in response to a declared national emergency, but none of these actions explicitly include the power to impose tariffs, duties, or the like,” the court stated in its majority opinion.
This constitutional interpretation strikes at a fundamental principle of American governance: that Congress, not the executive branch, holds the power to tax. The court emphasized that any delegation of this core legislative authority “must be both explicit and limited.”
Emergency Powers Under Scrutiny
Trump’s justification for invoking emergency powers has centered on two distinct crises he declared. In April, he proclaimed a national emergency over America’s persistent trade deficit, arguing that importing more than the nation exports undermines manufacturing capability and military readiness. In February, he imposed separate tariffs on China, Canada, and Mexico, citing their alleged failure to prevent fentanyl trafficking across U.S. borders—claims all three nations have disputed.
The administration’s Department of Justice has maintained that IEEPA’s broad language authorizing presidents to “regulate” imports during emergencies encompasses tariff authority. However, the appeals court found this interpretation stretched the statute beyond its intended scope and historical application.
Political and Economic Ramifications
The timing of this ruling could hardly be more consequential. Trump has positioned tariffs as the central tool of his foreign policy apparatus, using them to extract concessions from trading partners and reshape international economic relationships. The levies have provided the administration with significant negotiating leverage, though they have also contributed to increased market volatility and higher consumer prices.
Trump’s immediate response via Truth Social reflected both defiance and concern: “If these tariffs ever went away, it would be a total disaster for the country.” His prediction that the Supreme Court would ultimately vindicate his position suggests the administration views this as a temporary setback rather than a decisive defeat.
Market Response Muted, For Now
Despite the potentially far-reaching implications, financial markets showed little immediate reaction in after-hours trading. This measured response likely reflects investor confidence that the tariffs will remain in place through the appeals process, as well as expectations that the business-friendly Supreme Court may ultimately side with the administration.
“The last thing the market or corporate America needs is more uncertainty on trade,” warned Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth, capturing the sentiment among financial professionals who have grown accustomed to policy volatility under Trump’s trade approach.
A Broader Constitutional Crisis Brewing
The tariff ruling emerges alongside another high-stakes legal battle over Trump’s attempt to remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, a move that could fundamentally alter the central bank’s traditional independence from political interference. Together, these cases present the Supreme Court with an unprecedented test of executive power in economic policy.
“I think it puts Trump’s entire economic agenda on a potential collision course with the Supreme Court. It’s unlike anything we’ve ever seen,” observed Josh Lipsky, chair of international economics at the Atlantic Council.
The Path Forward
The administration now faces a critical 45-day window to appeal to the Supreme Court, where Trump’s legal team will likely argue for a more expansive interpretation of presidential emergency powers. The high court’s 6-3 conservative majority has generally favored Trump’s policy initiatives but has also shown skepticism toward broad interpretations of older statutes that grant presidents expanded authorities.
Legal experts note that at least eight separate lawsuits are challenging various aspects of Trump’s tariff policies across multiple jurisdictions. The California attorney general’s office, along with eleven other Democratic-led states, has joined small businesses in arguing that the president has exceeded his constitutional authority.
Industry Bracing for Uncertainty
Trade policy experts suggest the administration has been anticipating this legal challenge and developing contingency plans. William Reinsch, a former senior Commerce Department official now with the Center on Strategic and International Studies, noted that “it’s common knowledge the administration has been anticipating this outcome and is preparing a Plan B, presumably to keep the tariffs in place via other statutes.”
The ruling leaves intact tariffs imposed under different legal authorities, including Trump’s steel and aluminum levies, suggesting the administration may pivot toward alternative justifications for its trade policies.
As this legal drama unfolds, the broader question facing the nation is whether Trump’s aggressive use of executive power to reshape international economic relationships will survive constitutional scrutiny—or whether the courts will force a fundamental recalibration of how America conducts trade policy in the 21st century.
The Supreme Court’s eventual decision could define the boundaries of presidential economic power for generations to come, making this case one of the most consequential constitutional tests of Trump’s presidency.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
A federal appeals court has ruled that President Trump lacks legal authority to impose most of his signature tariffs, forcing the issue to the Supreme Court and potentially dismantling a core pillar of his economic strategy.
The decision hinges on whether a 1977 emergency powers law designed for sanctions can be stretched to justify broad trade taxes—a constitutional question that could reshape presidential economic authority for decades. With tariffs currently driving Trump’s foreign policy negotiations, this ruling represents the most serious legal threat yet to his “America First” trade agenda.






















