Supreme Court Tariff Ruling Shifts Focus to Plan B

The U.S. Supreme Court struck down a core pillar of President Trump's trade agenda on Friday, ruling 6-3 that his broad tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) were unconstitutional. Chief Justice John Roberts delivered the majority opinion of the court, which concluded that Trump's policies "would represent a transformative expansion of the President's authority over tariff policy." Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh dissented.

"This is a big blow to the president's signature economic policy, no question. But there are other mechanisms available to the president to impose tariffs. The administration has said it has a 'Plan B,' and I expect it will start implementing that right away," said Michael Townsend, managing director, legislative and regulatory affairs, at Schwab.

Townsend noted that there is an emergency provision that allows the imposition of up to 15% tariffs for 150 days. "If nothing else, that will buy the administration some time," he said. President Trump quickly took advantage of this provision on Friday, saying he would sign an executive order imposing 10% global tariffs after the Supreme Court's ruling, Bloomberg reported.

The Trump administration could also impose tariffs through the traditional process. That would involve a study by either the Commerce Department or the US Trade Representative's office, a report, and a public review. This is how sector- and product-specific tariffs have historically been imposed, including those currently imposed on steel, aluminum, copper, automobiles, and furniture. "Those tariffs are not impacted by today's ruling. So I expect the administration will use those processes going forward. It's time consuming, but it's possible," Townsend said.

That said, the Court's ruling does tie the president's hands, to some extent, after a year in which he generally implemented tariffs without input from Congress or other agencies.

"There really isn't anything that has the sweeping, broad reach that the president used to impose those reciprocal tariffs, but tariffs are definitely not going away," Townsend said.