White House moves to overturn ruling that Trump’s tariffs are illegal

White House moves to overturn ruling that Trump’s tariffs are illegal


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The White House is seeking to suspend a court ruling that Donald Trump’s “liberation day” tariff scheme is illegal as his top trade adviser said “nothing has changed” in the president’s drive to strike trade deals with other countries. 

The US Court of International Trade ruled late on Wednesday that Trump did not have the authority to use the emergency economic powers legislation that he cited when he imposed sweeping global tariffs last month.

Senior White House officials said the administration would immediately appeal against the decision, and move to stay, or put a hold, on the order.

Trump’s top trade and economic advisers also insisted there are other ways for the president to pursue his global trade war — and that negotiations for deals with other nations will carry on.

“We think we have a strong case. Yes, we will immediately appeal and try to stay the ruling,” Peter Navarro, the chief architect of Trump’s trade wars, told Bloomberg on Thursday morning.

He said the court ruling showed the administration could also use different legal bases to impose tariffs.

“So nothing has really changed here in that sense . . . We are still, as we speak, having countries call us and tell us they want a deal,” Navarro, Trump’s senior counsellor for trade and manufacturing, added. “These deals are going to happen.”

The ruling by the Court of International Trade comes as the Trump administration is pushing to cut trade deals with dozens of countries. Judges gave the administration 10 days to implement their ruling.

Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, also insisted that the Trump administration would be able to press ahead with its plans.

“Trump does always win these negotiations because we are right. We are right that America has been mishandled by other governments, that our tariffs are taking them to the table, and they are coming in with massive concessions, opening up their markets to our products and lowering their tariffs on us,” Hassett told Fox Business.

“These activist judges are trying to slow down something right in the middle of really important negotiations.”

Hassett said there were “different approaches” that the administration could take to impose tariffs if required, but added: “We’re not planning to pursue those right now because we’re very, very confident that this really is incorrect.”

Wall Street analysts suggested the court ruling would slow down, but not derail, the White House’s plans. US stocks rose after the ruling but the rally moderated in morning trading, with the S&P 500 index up just 0.2 per cent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rising 0.4 per cent.

“The administration is likely to either successfully appeal the ruling or to use other authority . . . to keep tariff rates high and revenue substantial,” Citi analysts wrote in a note on Thursday. “For now, the ruling will complicate and potentially delay trade negotiations.”



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