President Trump said a court ruling against his tariffs will cause “an insurmountable National Security Event” that could be devastating and “possibly non-sustainable” for America.
POTUS Donald Trump insists the Supreme Court was provided with inaccurate figures in the case reviewing his use of tariffs.
In a post on his Truth Social platform on Tuesday, Trump said the “unwind” of tariffs, including investments already made, planned investments, and the return of funds, could exceed $3 trillion.
“It would not be possible to ever make up for that kind of a drubbing,” Trump wrote.
The president’s camp is waiting for the Supreme Court to deliver a decision on whether Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose tariffs on imported goods was lawful without a “thumbs up” from Congress.
Small businesses say Trump tariffs are illegal
According to a report from FOX News earlier this year, a number of small American businesses, including toy manufacturers and wine importers, filed a lawsuit accusing Trump of lacking the authority to levy tariffs unilaterally, which was harming their operations.
In May, the Court of International Trade in New York ruled against Trump, stating that “the US Constitution grants Congress exclusive authority to regulate commerce.” The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, DC, upheld that decision in August.
Now, the Supreme Court, the nation’s highest court, is set to decide whether the tariffs were legal. Last week, business representatives, including Indian-American lawyer Neal Katyal, told the court that the import levies had forced many companies to lay off workers and cut prices.
Source: Truth SocialTrump said on Sunday that the Supreme Court case is “one of the most important in the History of the Country.”
“If a President is not allowed to use tariffs, we will be at a major disadvantage against all other Countries throughout the World,” the POTUS wrote on his media platform, Truth Social.
US tariffs revenue hit $200 billion
US Treasury data, cited by FOX Business, revealed that America collected more than $213 billion in tariff revenue throughout the months ending September, including monthly totals exceeding $31 billion in August, $17.4 billion in April, and $29 billion in July.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has projected that tariffs enacted between January and May could reduce federal deficits by about $2.8 trillion over the next decade. CBO also slightly reduced its GDP predictions and made a 0.4 percentage point increase in inflation through 2027.
A separate analysis by the Tax Foundation estimates long-term tariff revenue at around $2.2 trillion, or $1.6 trillion after adjusting for reduced trade and slower growth.
President Trump does not want the Supreme Court to interfere, as he is adamant about the revenue generated by his tariffs, insisting they will help cut down the ballooning national debt of over $38 trillion.
Over the weekend, Trump suggested the idea of returning tariff revenue to Americans in the form of $2,000 payments. The proposal has no detailed implementation plans, which is why economists warn that the revenue may not be enough to cover the payouts at all.
Speaking with reporters on Monday, Trump said, “We’re going to issue a dividend to our middle-income people and lower-income people of about $2,000. And we’re going to use the remaining tariffs to lower our debt.”
As reported by Cryptopolitan, Treasury Secretary Scott Besant said the $2,000 dividend could take various forms. “It could be just the tax decreases that we are seeing on the president’s agenda. No tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on Social Security, deductibility of auto loans. Those are substantial deductions that are being financed in the tax bill.”
Erica York, vice president of federal tax policy at the Tax Foundation, told news publication NPR that even with conservative assumptions, the plan is financially unworkable. She calculated that issuing $2,000 rebates to individuals earning under $100,000 annually would create at least a $100 billion gap between tariff revenues and the proposed payouts.
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