Trump Sued Over Emergency Powers to Impose Tariffs on China
US President Donald Trump bangs his fist after signing an executive order following remarks on reciprocal tariffs at a Rose Garden event entitled “Make America Wealthy Again” at the White House in Washington, DC, April 2, 2025. ©SAUL LOEB / AFP

A nonprofit group sued US President Donald Trump and his administration on Thursday over alleged misuse of emergency powers to impose tariffs on all imports from China earlier this year.

The lawsuit disputed the legality of Trump's executive order from February 1, not the broader set of tariffs announced on Wednesday that also target a number of US allies and trading partners around the world.

Trump's February executive order, based on a 1977 law granting presidents sweeping powers during an economic emergency, was "unconstitutional," said the nonprofit New Civil Liberties Alliance in the filing to a Florida federal court.

The 1970s law "authorizes presidents to order sanctions as a rapid response to international emergencies. It does not allow a president to impose tariffs on the American people," argued the group.

The new far-reaching tariffs, unveiled by Trump on Wednesday, sowed panic in the markets, setting off a global stock rout and sending oil prices to the lowest levels since December 2021.

 

With AFP

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