The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 against President Trump's attempt to use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose unlimited tariffs on over 100 countries, establishing that declaring an economic emergency does not grant unlimited presidential authority and that courts will scrutinize whether statutory language actually authorizes the specific power being claimed, with the Chief Justice's opinion explicitly stating that accepting such claims would erase constitutional limits on presidential power that have been foundational to the American constitutional structure for over two centuries.
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Trump Kicked Out Of Supreme Court after Judge’s Brutal TakedownAdded:
in New Hampshire has blocked a President Trump's attempt to end birthright citizenship, reviving the legal battle over the administration's efforts to challenge the long-standing law. Judge Joseph LaPlante said a lawsuit challenging the President's executive order can move forward as a class action. Constitution sets out that people born in the US are automatically citizens. The ruling tests lower courts' abilities to issue nationwide decisions after the US Supreme Court ruled that the state and local judges could not block federal policies. Here's something that does not happen very often in American politics. A president goes to the Supreme Court, a court that includes three justices he personally appointed, a court that has in other contexts been very willing to expand executive authority, and he loses. Not narrowly, not on the technicality. He loses 6-3 with a majority that crosses ideological lines, and the Chief Justice writes the opinion in a way that reads less like a legal ruling and more like a public dressing down. A formal, documented, on-the-record scolding from the highest court in the land telling the President of the United States that what he did was unlawful, that his legal theory was wrong, that his attempt to claim what the court called extraordinary power to unilaterally impose tariffs of unlimited amount, duration, and scope without clear permission from Congress did not hold up, and that the courts are not going to rubber-stamp it just because he called it an emergency.
That is what happened when the Supreme Court ruled on Trump's sweeping tariff program. And the people calling it a brutal takedown are not exaggerating.
contentious issue of birthright citizenship here in the US. Now, what you have here is a federal judge from New Hampshire who essentially has now ruled to block the ability of the Trump administration in enforcing an executive order, what we see happening over here.
Now, the American Civil Liberties Union has filed this, and it is this case which has been seen as a class action lawsuit on which the federal judge has now ruled. Because when you add up what happened in that courtroom, the questioning during oral arguments, the final vote count, the language Roberts chose to write the majority opinion. You get a picture of an administration that walked into the Supreme Court with a legal theory that could not survive serious scrutiny, and walked out having lost one of his most powerful economic tools, and gotten lectured about the separation of powers in writing. But, before we go any further, real quick, let's be honest, you can't really trust mainstream media anymore. That's why we built Punk Politics to bring you real stories, real context, and no corporate spin. If you want to stay ahead of the headlines, join our free newsletter.
We'll send the news straight to your inbox every day. Just click the link in the description to join. And if you just want to support what we're doing, join us, be part of the community that actually cares about the truth. All right, let's get back to the video. Let me give you the backstory, because to understand why this ruling is such a big deal, you need to understand what Trump was actually trying to do, and how far he was pushing the legal envelope to do it. In what his administration branded liberation day, Trump declared a national economic emergency, and used a decades-old law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose tariffs on imports from more than 100 countries simultaneously. The tariffs were sweeping, they were unilateral, they did not go through Congress, they were justified entirely on Trump's declaration that an economic emergency existed, a declaration that under his legal theory gave him essentially unlimited authority to impose taxes on imports for as long as he decided the emergency lasted, and whatever amounts he decided were appropriate, covering whatever countries he decided to target.
And Trump was explicit about how much he believed in this power. He described the tariff program as literally life or death for our country. He put it at the center of his economic agenda. He used it as a weapon in trade disputes with dozens of nations simultaneously, and dared the courts to stop him. The Supreme Court stopped him. And here is the detail that makes this story even more remarkable and more politically explosive than a standard court loss.
The justices who were most publicly skeptical of Trump's legal theory during oral arguments were not the liberal justices who were always going to vote against him. They were the justices he put on the bench.
Amy Coney Barrett, Trump appointee, pressed his own solicitor general during oral arguments to name a single historical example where the statutory language his administration was relying on had ever been used to justify broad tariff authority. She did not get a satisfying answer. She was open about the fact that she was not satisfied with the answer she was getting. Neil Gorsuch, another Trump appointee, warned explicitly that the administration's position risked what he called a one-way ratchet toward the gradual but continual accumulation of power in the executive branch and away from the people's elected representatives. That is Gorsuch, one of the most conservative justices on the bench, a justice Trump nominated and championed and whose confirmation he celebrated, telling Trump's own lawyers that their argument was pointing toward an unconstitutional concentration of executive power. And then voting with the majority to strike it down. When the justices you appointed are the ones publicly grilling your legal team and ultimately ruling against you, that is not just a legal loss. That is a repudiation from people who were supposed to be in your corner. So today we are going to break down exactly what the court ruled, what it means for Trump's tariff program, and the $200 billion in duties already collected, what it tells us about the limits of presidential emergency power, and why this decision matters not just for trade policy but for every future fight over what a president can and cannot do when he declares a crisis and reaches for powers that Congress never explicitly gave him. This is a big one and it is bigger than any single trade dispute. It is about where the line is between presidential authority and presidential overreach and the Supreme Court just drew that line in a place that leaves a lot of what this administration has been doing on the wrong side of it. Let us start with the law at the center of this case, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, because understanding what it actually says and what Trump claimed it meant is the key to understanding why the Supreme Court ruled the way it did. The International Emergency Economic Powers Act was passed by Congress in 1977. It gives the president certain powers to deal with foreign economic threats when a national emergency has been declared. And it has been used by multiple presidents over the years for things like freezing the assets of foreign adversaries, imposing sanctions on specific countries or individuals, and blocking certain kinds of financial transactions with hostile actors. Those are the kinds of things the law was understood to authorize, targeted specific economic measures directed at specific foreign threats in specific contexts. What it had never been used for, what no previous president had attempted, was to invoke it as a blanket authority to impose sweeping tariffs on more than 100 countries simultaneously with no specific cap on the rate, no defined end date, and no requirement to go back to Congress for approval. Trump's administration argued that the word regulate in the statute was broad enough to encompass this kind of unlimited tariff authority, and the Supreme Court said no, that is not what that word means. That is not what Congress intended when it passed this law. And taxing and tariff power has historically been a core congressional function, which means the president needs specific, explicit authorization from Congress before claiming the ability to exercise it unilaterally at this scale.
Chief Justice Roberts wrote the majority opinion, and the language he used matters because Roberts is not a writer who traffics in dramatic flourishes.
He is precise and measured and institutional. So, when his opinion says that Trump was trying to claim extraordinary power to unilaterally impose tariffs of unlimited amount, duration, and scope without clear congressional authorization, that framing is deliberate. Roberts is describing what Trump was actually attempting, unlimited, that is the word, unlimited tariffs. In any amount, for any duration, covering any scope of countries or products, with no check from Congress and no ceiling set by law.
And Roberts is saying no court can accept that argument. No reading of the statute can support that interpretation and accepting it would erase limits on presidential power that have been foundational to the American constitutional structure for more than two centuries. That is a strong statement and it is written to be clear and unambiguous enough that future administrations cannot easily find a work around. Roberts is not just ruling on this specific case. He is drawing a line for every future emergency power claim of this kind. The six to three breakdown of the vote is worth paying attention to because it tells you something important about where the court actually is on executive power right now and it complicates the narrative that the Trump era Supreme Court is simply a rubber stamp for presidential authority. The majority included Chief Justice Roberts who was appointed by George W. Bush. It included the three liberal justices, Sotomayor, Kagan and Jackson, who are always going to be skeptical of expansive executive power claims from a Republican president. And it included Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch, both Trump appointees, who crossed over and joined the majority. The three dissenters were Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh. So even within the six Republican appointed justices on the court, the vote was four to two against Trump's position. That is not a narrow partisan split. That is a court that looked at the legal argument and found it wanting across ideological lines. And it undercuts the assumption, which Trump and his team have operated on, that a court with a conservative supermajority would generally defer to a conservative president's assertions of authority. The oral argument exchanges are worth going into some detail on because they played out publicly. They were widely covered and they established the context in which the final ruling landed. Barrett's questioning of the Solicitor General was particularly pointed. She kept returning to the same basic challenge. Show me a historical example where this statutory language was understood to grant this kind of authority and the Solicitor General could not produce one. Not because the government's lawyers were unprepared, they were not, but because the example Barrett was asking for genuinely does not exist. No previous administration had made this argument.
No previous court had accepted anything close to it, and Barrett's visible dissatisfaction with the answer she was getting during argument was a signal, one that legal observers picked up on immediately, that the administration was in serious trouble with at least some of the justices it needed to keep in order to win. Gorsuch's one-way ratchet language was equally significant because it framed the constitutional concern not just as a question about this specific statute, but as a broader warning about the trajectory of executive power. A ratchet that only turns one direction, power that can be claimed in a crisis but never fully given back. That is the structural danger Gorsuch was identifying, and the fact that he was identifying it about a claim made by a president from his own party signals that at least some conservative justices are genuinely committed to limiting executive overreach rather than simply expanding it when the president is a Republican. Now, let us talk about the practical fallout because the legal and constitutional questions are important, but the real-world consequences of this ruling are enormous and immediately felt. Roughly $200 in tariffs that were already collected by the Trump administration are now under a cloud.
Companies that paid duties under the Liberation Day tariff scheme are now exploring whether they can seek refunds.
Legal challenges are being filed. The trade policy architecture that Trump built around this emergency power claim has to be fundamentally rethought, and the businesses across dozens of industries that were trying to plan around the trade environment shaped by those tariffs now face a new layer of uncertainty about what the tariff landscape actually looks like going forward. Some of those businesses had already restructured their supply chains, renegotiated contracts, made capital investments based on the assumption that the tariffs were a permanent part of the trade environment.
And now they are operating in a world where the legal foundation of those tariffs has been removed, and the question of what comes next is genuinely unclear. Trump described the case as literally life or death for the country.
That framing, which was designed to project how seriously he took the tariff program and how central it was to his economic strategy, now reads differently in the wake of the ruling. Because when you call something life or death, and then the Supreme Court strikes it down, the failure is not just legal, it is personal. It is a public demonstration that the president's judgment about what was necessary and justified was wrong, according to the highest court in the land. And Trump's reaction when the ruling came down, according to reporting on the moment, matched that personal dimension exactly. He was in a closed-door meeting with governors when the decision landed. He called it a disgrace. He launched into what was described as a profanity-laced rant. He vowed to find a backup plan. Those are not the reactions of someone absorbing a technical legal setback with equanimity.
Those are the reactions of someone who understood that something significant and personally important had just been taken from him by an institution he thought he had shaped in his favor. The backup plan question is the one that hangs over everything because Trump does not typically accept limitations on his authority without looking for ways around them. His administration will now have to identify statutory authorities that actually do provide clear congressional authorization for tariffs, negotiate with Congress to get explicit legislative backing for trade measures, or find other legal theories that can survive Supreme Court scrutiny. None of those paths are as fast or as flexible as the emergency power approach he was using. Getting Congress to explicitly authorize broad tariff authority requires getting legislation through a Congress that is already under political pressure heading into 2026 midterms.
Finding a different legal theory requires convincing courts that have now seen how skeptically the Supreme Court views creative executive power claims.
And the political time pressure of wanting to show tariff results quickly to be able to say the trade strategy is working and delivering wins for American workers makes the slower and more constraining paths even more frustrating for an administration that has operated on the assumption that speed and decisiveness are political assets. Three points. Here's what this ruling actually means and why it matters beyond the immediate trade policy debate. Point one, this is the Supreme Court doing exactly what it is supposed to do, and it matters enormously that it happened with Trump's own appointees in the majority. The constitutional design of the United States government is built on the premise that no single branch gets to accumulate unlimited power, that Congress makes the laws, the president executes them, and the courts interpret them. And the premise only holds if each branch is actually willing to check the others when they overreach. What the Supreme Court did here is apply that check in a direct and public way to a president who was pushing very hard against the limits of his authority. And what makes the ruling particularly meaningful is not just that it happened, but that it happened with justices Trump himself put on the bench joining the majority. Barrett and Gorsuch were not supposed to be the justices who stopped Trump's tariff program. They were the justices his supporters celebrated as part of a court that would be friendly to Republican governance. And the fact that they looked at his legal argument and said no, that they were among the voices publicly questioning his solicitor general, and ultimately voting to strike down his policy, is signal that the Supreme Court is not a monolithic instrument of presidentially power, even when the president has shaped his composition. That is important not just for this case, but for every future case where the administration pushes against constitutional limits. The court has now shown that it is willing to say no publicly, by a wide margin, to a president whose nominees make up a majority of its membership. Point two, the $200 billion under a cloud is the story that is going to hit voters and businesses directly, and it is going to shape the economic and political narrative heading into 2026 in ways that are hard to predict, but impossible to ignore. Because the trade policy uncertainty created by this ruling is real, and it is landing on real businesses and real workers right now.
Companies that built their planning around the assumption that the liberation day tariff framework was legally solid are now operating without that foundation. Supply chains that were restructured, contracts that were renegotiated, prices that were adjusted, all of that was done on the basis of a tariff regime the Supreme Court has now called unlawful and the question of what administration can do in the short term to rebuild a legal tariff framework one that satisfies the course requirement of clear congressional authorization does not have a clean or faster product which means the period between now and whenever a new legal framework is in place is a period of genuine uncertainty for trade dependent businesses across the country and that uncertainty has economic costs it delays investment decisions it complicates pricing it makes it harder for businesses to plan and compete Trump called the tariffs life or death for the country the Supreme Court threw them out and the gap between those two realities is where the political damage lives in the argument that the administration's economic strategy was built on an unlawful foundation and that the whiplash of building and then losing that strategy has created disruption that would not have happened if the administration had worked within its actual legal authority from the beginning point three the ruling has implications that go far beyond trade policy and the precedent it sets is going to shape how courts respond to every future emergency power claim this administration or any future administration tries to make because Trump's approach to executive power has not been limited to tariffs the pattern of declaring emergencies and using them to claim authority that Congress never explicitly granted is one that has appeared in immigration in funding decisions in regulatory actions and in multiple other policy areas throughout his second term and the Supreme Court in this ruling has established a principle that applies across all of that that claiming emergency does not grant unlimited authority that courts will scrutinize whether the specific statutory language actually authorizes the specific power being claimed and that congressional authorization has to be clear rather than implied or stretched to cover whatever the president wants to do that principle stated plainly and forcefully by six to three majority that includes justices from across the ideological spectrum is a significant constraint on the administration's governing strategy going forward every future emergency power claim is now going to be litigated in the shadow of this ruling. Every time a court is asked to defer to a presidential declaration of crisis, the judge reviewing it is going to be looking at what Roberts wrote and asking whether the statutory authority is actually as clear as the administration claims. That is a different legal environment than the one the administration has been operating in, and it is going to require a fundamental rethinking of how this administration pursues its agenda to executive action, which was supposed to be one of his primary governing tools. Stay with us, because next time we are going into what the backup plan actually looks like, what statutory authorities exist for trade policy that can survive judicial scrutiny, whether Congress is willing to give Trump the explicit tariff authority the court says he needs, and what the economic fallout of this ruling means for the specific industries and workers who were supposed to be protected by the tariff program that just got thrown out.
That one is going to get into the details in a way that matters directly for people's wallets. Do not miss it.
There is one more dimension to the part two story that deserves space, and it is the question of what this ruling says about the relationship between the Supreme Court and this administration more broadly. Because the conventional wisdom coming into Trump's second term was that he has successfully stacked the court in his favor. Three appointees, a 6-3 conservative supermajority, a court that had already shown Trump victory United States on the presidential immunity question that it was willing to expand executive authority in meaningful ways. And the assumption was that this court would generally be a friendly venue for a Republican president pushing aggressively on executive power. The tariff ruling complicates that picture significantly, because what it shows is that the court is not uniformly deferential to this president, that there are specific categories of power claims where even conservative justices, including Trump's own appointees, will draw a hard line. The line appears to be clearest when the president is trying to claim powers that have historically belonged exclusively to Congress, taxing power, appropriations power, the fundamental financial authorities that the Constitution assigns to the legislative branch. The immunity ruling expanded presidential protection in ways that the administration like this tariff ruling contracted presidential authority in ways the administration did not like at all. And the implication is that the court is not operating as a team for or against Trump. It is operating as an institution that applies its own reading of constitutional law, one that sometimes favors expansive executive authority and sometimes enforces hard limits on it. That is actually how the court is supposed to work, but it is a very different dynamic from what Trump and his allies projected when they were celebrating the composition of the court during the first term. The court that gave Trump broad immunity on presidential acts is the same court that just told him he cannot impose unlimited tariffs by declaring an emergency. Both of those things are true. And understanding that both of those things are true, that the court is neither a rubber stamp nor an instrument of opposition, is essential to understanding what the legal environment for the rest of this administration actually looks like. The profanity-laced rant in the closed-door meeting with governors and the vow to find a backup plan also tells you something important about how the administration processes institutional constraints. Because a measured and legally sophisticated response to a Supreme Court ruling you disagree with would be to immediately direct your legal team to identify the strongest alternative statutory authorities, engage Congress on potential legislative fixes, and present a clear public explanation of how the administration plans to achieve its trade policy goals within the boundaries the court has now established. That may happen eventually. But the first response, rage, accusations of disgrace, a promise to work around the ruling is the response of a leader who is more comfortable treating institutions as obstacles to overcome than as legitimate constraints on his authority. And that instinct, that reflex toward finding a backup plan rather than accepting the court's ruling as the final word, is going to define how the next phase of this trade policy fight plays out.
Whether it produces a legally grounded alternative or another creative legal theory that ends up back in front of the same justices is the question that the next few months are going to answer.
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