Donald Trump Imposes Sweeping Global Tariffs After Supreme Court Showdown

In a dramatic escalation of his “America First” trade agenda, President Donald Trump moved within hours of a major Supreme Court setback on Friday, February 20, 2026, to reimpose a 10% global baseline tariff using alternative legal authority.
The decision came immediately after the Supreme Court of the United States delivered a landmark 6–3 ruling in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, striking down the administration’s sweeping tariffs imposed under emergency powers.
The rapid pivot signals not retreat, but recalibration.
The Supreme Court Showdown: IEEPA Authority Rejected
At the heart of the case was Trump’s reliance on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to justify broad “Reciprocal Tariffs” and other duties introduced in 2025.
What the Court Said
Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the majority and joined by Justices Neil Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett, Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, made the constitutional line clear:
- The power to impose tariffs is fundamentally a taxing power.
- Under Article I, that power belongs exclusively to Congress.
- IEEPA allows regulation during emergencies—but not unilateral revenue generation through tariffs.
The ruling invalidated the legal foundation of Trump’s most expansive trade measures.
What Tariffs Were Struck Down?
The Court’s decision nullified:
- The broad 10% global baseline tariff imposed under IEEPA
- High-rate “Reciprocal Tariffs”
- “Fentanyl” tariffs targeting China, Mexico, and Canada
These measures had generated tens of billions in customs revenue since 2025.
The $175 Billion Refund Question
Perhaps the most explosive consequence is financial.
Economists estimate the federal government may owe up to $175 billion in tariff refunds to U.S. importers.
However, the Court did not outline a refund mechanism.
Key Unresolved Issues
- How will U.S. Customs process reimbursement claims?
- What happens to costs already passed to consumers?
- Can the Treasury absorb a multi-billion-dollar repayment shock?
The uncertainty alone could trigger waves of litigation and formal protests from importers.
Trump’s Immediate “Plan B” – Section 122 of the Trade Act
Within hours of the ruling, Trump announced a workaround under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974.
He signed an executive order reimposing a 10% across-the-board global tariff, citing “large and serious balance-of-payment deficits.”
New Section 122 Tariffs – Key Details
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Rate | 10% Global Baseline Tariff |
| Legal Basis | Section 122 (Balance-of-Payments Authority) |
| Duration | 150 days maximum without Congressional approval |
| Effective Date | Tuesday, February 24, 2026 (12:01 AM) |
| Exemptions | Certain food items, critical minerals, USMCA-protected vehicles/electronics |
Section 122 allows temporary import restrictions to address trade imbalances, but it cannot be extended beyond 150 days without congressional action.
This creates a built-in expiration window.
What Tariffs Remain Untouched?
Not all duties were invalidated.
Trump confirmed that the following remain fully in effect:
- Section 232 tariffs (national security-based steel and aluminum duties)
- Section 301 tariffs targeting unfair trade practices, particularly involving China
Because these measures rely on different statutory authority, they were not impacted by the Court’s ruling.
Why This Matters in 2026
This legal back-and-forth introduces significant volatility into global markets and trade negotiations.
1. A 150-Day Legislative Cliff
The Section 122 tariffs expire automatically after 150 days unless Congress codifies them into law.
That means by summer 2026, the administration faces a major legislative deadline.
If Congress does not act, the tariff regime could collapse again.
2. Weakening Negotiation Leverage
Trump has pursued “Reciprocal Trade Agreements” with over 50 countries.
However, the Supreme Court ruling weakens his negotiating position. Trading partners now know that:
- The President’s unilateral tariff authority has legal limits.
- Courts are willing to block expansive executive trade actions.
- Congressional backing is necessary for long-term stability.
This shifts leverage dynamics in ongoing trade talks.
3. Market and Inflation Uncertainty
Markets initially rallied after the Court’s decision, particularly:
- Retail stocks
- Technology firms dependent on imported components
However, optimism faded when the new 10% tariff was announced.
Economists warn that:
- Prices may remain volatile.
- Supply chain uncertainty continues.
- Businesses face regulatory unpredictability.
The risk of renewed global trade tensions remains elevated.
Constitutional Implications
The ruling represents one of the most significant reassertions of congressional authority over economic policy in recent years.
It reinforces:
- Separation of powers doctrine
- Limits on emergency executive action
- Congressional supremacy in taxation
Legal scholars view this case as a major precedent governing presidential tariff authority.
Political Fallout
Trump labeled the ruling a “disgrace” and criticized members of the Court in unusually direct terms.
The decision sets up:
- A likely congressional battle over tariff legislation
- Continued executive-judicial friction
- A defining economic debate heading into the second half of 2026
The administration’s willingness to pivot immediately demonstrates its commitment to preserving trade barriers, even if the legal pathway becomes more complex.
The Bigger Picture: Trade Policy at a Crossroads
The Supreme Court’s 6–3 decision in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump has reshaped the foundation of U.S. trade governance.
While the President has temporarily restored a 10% global tariff under Section 122, its expiration clock is ticking.
The coming months will determine whether:
- Congress formalizes the tariffs into statute
- Courts block the new workaround
- Or the administration develops yet another legal strategy










