President
Trump’s proclamation placing a 10% tax on imports as of
Thousands of US companies are already
Trump’s new tariffs were issued under a different law — Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which has
“The president either doesn’t know the difference or he doesn’t care,” Arizona Attorney General
In a statement, White House Spokesman Kush Desai said, “The president is using his authority granted by Congress to address fundamental international payments problems and to deal with our country’s large and serious balance-of-payments deficits. The administration will vigorously defend the president’s action in court.”
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The president pivoted to Section 122 after the Supreme Court last month
“As with his unlawful use of IEEPA, the president has once again exercised tariff authority that he does not have — involving a statute that does not authorize the tariffs he has imposed — to upend the constitutional order and bring chaos to the global economy,” the states said in the complaint.
The states allege that Trump’s order announcing the Section 122 tariffs was “riddled with omissions and mischaracterizations” around the meaning of a balance-of-payments deficit. The trade deficit cited by Trump is just one part of calculating the country’s balance of payments position, the states say.
Under Section 122, the president can order import duties of as much as 15%. The executive action can last 150 days, at which point Congress would have to extend it.
Oregon Attorney General
Refund Fight
The clash over Section 122 is emerging just as the legal fight over refunds from Trump’s IEEPA tariffs is beginning to heat up. On Wednesday, a judge in the Manhattan-based trade court
“If the lawsuit is successful, Section 122 tariffs could be invalidated just as the IEEPA tariffs were invalidated, which would create a new refund issue for Customs and importers,” said
In their new lawsuit, the states seek a court order finding the new tariffs illegal and requiring refunds for entities that have paid tariffs under Section 122.
“After the Supreme Court rejected his first attempt to impose sweeping tariffs, the president is causing more economic chaos and expecting Americans to foot the bill,” New York Attorney General
The states argue that Trump’s new tariffs violate other requirements in Section 122, including that such duties not be discriminatory in their application. The states argue that Trump’s new tariffs improperly exempt some goods from Canada, Mexico, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua.
According to the complaint, the Trump administration conceded during the prior lawsuit against the president’s IEEPA tariffs that trade deficits “are conceptually distinct from balance of payments deficits.”
The case is Oregon v. Trump, 26-cv-1472, US Court of International Trade.
--With assistance from
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Steve Stroth, Laura Curtis
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