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A Constitutional Clash: Trump's Tariffs and the Separation of Powers

A Constitutional Clash: Trump's Tariffs and the Separation of Powers

Season 2025 Episode 1 Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
Description

Overview

This episode examines the Supreme Court's September 9, 2025 Order that expedited review of two consolidated cases challenging President Trump's authority to impose sweeping tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), representing a constitutional clash over the separation of powers and presidential trade authority.

Roadmap

Opening: Explosive Constitutional Questions

  • September 9, 2025 certiorari grant and consolidation order
  • Expedited briefing schedule for November 2025 oral arguments
  • Stakes: Presidential power to tax trillions in trade and reshape the economy

Background: The Trump Tariff Orders

  • Reciprocal Tariffs: 10% on virtually all imports, higher rates for 57 countries
  • Trafficking Tariffs: Levies on Mexico, Canada, and China for drug enforcement
  • IEEPA as claimed statutory authority for both tariff schemes
  • National emergency declarations underlying the orders

The Central Legal Question

  • Does "regulate" in IEEPA include power to impose tariffs?
  • Constitutional separation of taxing vs. regulating powers
  • Article I distinctions between taxation and commerce regulation
  • Historical significance: "No taxation without representation"

Lower Court Journey

  • Multiple simultaneous lawsuits in different courts
  • District court and Court of International Trade conflicting approaches
  • Federal Circuit en banc decision striking down tariffs
  • Judge Taranto's influential dissent supporting tariff authority

Referenced Cases

Trump v. V.O.S. Selections | Case No. 24-1286 | Docket Link: Here

Question Presented: Whether IEEPA authorizes the President to impose these specific sweeping tariffs

Government Arguments:

  • "Regulate" includes power to impose tariffs as lesser-included authority
  • Historical practice supports broad executive trade power during emergencies
  • Major questions doctrine doesn't apply in foreign policy contexts

V.O.S. Arguments:

  • Constitutional separation requires clear authorization for taxation
  • "Regulate" and "tariff" are distinct powers with different purposes
  • Major questions doctrine requires explicit congressional authorization

Learning Resources v. Trump | Case No. 24-1287 | Docket Link: Here

Question Presented: Whether IEEPA authorizes any presidential tariffs whatsoever

Learning Resources Arguments:

  • "Regulate" means control behavior, "tariff" means raise revenue - fundamentally different
  • No historical practice of IEEPA tariffs in nearly 50 years
  • Constitutional avoidance: IEEPA covers exports where tariffs are prohibited

Government Arguments:

  • Plain text of "regulate importation" naturally includes tariff authority
  • Yoshida precedent shows Congress ratified tariff interpretation
  • Presidential action deserves greater deference than agency action

Key Legal Precedents Examined

Historical Foundation Cases

  • Gibbons v. Ogden (1824): Marsha
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