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Verdict with Ted Cruz:  Detailed Prediction: Trump's Tariffs before the Supreme Court-What's Going to Happen

Verdict with Ted Cruz: Detailed Prediction: Trump's Tariffs before the Supreme Court-What's Going to Happen

Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description

In the latest episode of Verdict with Ted Cruz, Senator Ted Cruz and Ben Ferguson provide a comprehensive analysis of Trump v. V.O.S. Selections, the Supreme Court case examining whether President Trump lawfully imposed tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The decision—expected soon—has significant implications for executive power, congressional authority, and U.S. trade policy.

How the Tariff Dispute Reached the Supreme Court

President Trump imposed over $133 billion in tariffs after invoking IEEPA, which authorizes the President to regulate importation during a declared national emergency. However, the statute never explicitly mentions “tariffs,” prompting small‑business plaintiffs to challenge Trump’s interpretation.

Two major legal doctrines frame the dispute:

1. The Non‑Delegation Principle

This constitutional principle limits how much lawmaking power Congress can delegate to the executive branch.

The plaintiffs argue that Congress cannot silently pass tariff‑imposing power to the President without explicit, narrow instructions—especially since tariffs constitute taxation.

2. The Major Questions Doctrine

Under this doctrine, the Supreme Court requires clear authorization from Congress whenever the executive branch seeks to act on issues of vast economic or political significance.

Because tariffs reshape international trade, markets, and consumer costs, plaintiffs contend that IEEPA lacks the specificity required for such sweeping action.

Cruz emphasizes that the core tension lies between Congress’s Article I taxing authority and the President’s Article II foreign‑policy powers.

How the Supreme Court Approached the Case During Oral Arguments

Senator Cruz provides a justice‑by‑justice breakdown, interpreting each line of questioning based on long‑observed judicial patterns.

Chief Justice John Roberts

Roberts framed the issue squarely around taxation, questioning who bears the cost of tariffs and whether the executive can impose them without undermining Congress’s constitutional role.

Cruz notes Roberts’ skepticism but predicts institutional caution will guide his final vote.

Justice Elena Kagan

Kagan centered her analysis on delegation and raised concerns about granting the President unlimited tariff authority without explicit statutory limits.

She argued that tariffs are “quintessential taxing powers,” reserved for Congress.

Justices Neil Gorsuch & Amy Coney Barrett

Both raised concerns about the breadth of presidential emergency authority:

  • Gorsuch asked what limits would remain if the President could impose tariffs for virtually any asserted foreign threat.
  • Barrett questioned why Congress did not explicitly authorize tariffs if it intended to delegate that power.

Cruz suggests these two justices represent the most likely conservative defections.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh

Kavanaugh emphasized historical precedent supporting broad congressional delegations in foreign affairs.

He pointed to cases affirming significant executive discretion in regulating foreign commerce.

Justices Clarence Thomas & Samuel Alito

Thomas focused on historical practice, noting that tariffs have long been tools of regulating foreign trade.

Alito highlighted reliance interests, questioning what would happen to the billions already collected if the Court invalidated the tariffs.

Cruz’s

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