Trump treats court opinions as "advisory"
Jake Johnson for Common Dreams
A panel of federal judges ruled Thursday that US President Donald Trump’s sweeping 10% tariffs on most imports are unlawful, another major legal blow to the centerpiece of the Republican president’s economic agenda—which has failed to produce the manufacturing boom he repeatedly promised on the campaign trail.The Court of International Trade (CIT) found in a 2-to-1 ruling that Trump violated the law when he unilaterally enacted the 10% import taxes following a February decision by the US Supreme Court, which struck down tariffs the president imposed using emergency powers.
But the CIT’s ruling, which the Trump
administration is expected to appeal, only barred collection of the
tariffs from some of the plaintiffs in the case—including a pair of businesses
and Washington state—limiting
the ruling’s immediate impact.
Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.), a member of the House Trade
Subcommittee, applauded the new ruling in a statement, saying that “Trump must
comply with the law by ending his illegal tax on the American people and
getting families and small businesses the refunds they are owed.”
“The Supreme Court already rebuked the president’s costly tariffs, but Donald Trump sees our Constitution as a mere suggestion to follow, and not the law of the land,” said Larson. “As families are squeezed by sky-high grocery bills and gas prices, his latest round of tariffs is only pouring salt in the wound. The average household has already had nearly $2,000 stolen from them by this administration, and they should not have to pay a penny more.”
The decision came as a new
analysis of trade and manufacturing data from the first quarter of
2026 found that Trump’s “actions on trade have not delivered on his
promises to quickly balance trade and revitalize US manufacturing.” Since
Trump’s return to the White House last
year, US manufacturing employment has declined by 82,000 jobs, according
to the Rethink Trade program at the American Economic Liberties
Project.
Additionally, the nation’s trade deficit was higher during
the first three months of this year compared to the same period in 2024,
Rethink Trade found.
“The first-quarter 2026 data show Trump’s promises
to prioritize speedily cutting the trade deficit and create more American
manufacturing jobs are getting undermined by his chaotic and often mistargeted
use of tariffs and squandering of leverage to demand other countries gut
their Big Tech anti-monopoly
and other policies instead of mercantilist abuses fueling the trade deficit,”
said Lori Wallach, Rethink Trade’s director.
