
Trump’s administration urges the US Court of International Trade in New York to delay the enforcement of a decision that blocked the extensive global tariffs of President Donald Trump, warning that he can trigger a “catastrophe of foreign policy”, the report said.
Reaching an emergency stay
On Thursday (May 29), the Ministry of Justice (DO) submitted a request for a court residence and claimed that recovery would “cause immediate irreparable damage to US foreign policy and national security,” ABC News said.
“It is essential for the national security of the country and the behavior of the President of the ongoing, subtle diplomatic efforts to remain the court,” wrote the lawyers’ s proposal.
“The loss of the behavior of foreign affairs ordered by the court could not be greater.”
The Government said the court’s decision would undress the President of the fundamental negotiating leverage, threatened the trade agreements that have already been introduced, and encouraged foreign countries to take advantage of perceived weaknesses.
White House Slams Judicial Overreach
The White House spokesman Kush Desai defended Trump’s tariffs and criticized the court’s decision.
“It is not for the unmarried judges to decide how to properly solve the national emergency situation,” Desai said. “The administration is still determined to use each powerful power lever to solve this crisis.”
The court says Trump has crossed the legal boundary
On Wednesday (May 28) the panel of three judges decided that the global tariffs of Trump were “contrary to the law”, which has noticed a significant legal blow to the business strategy of the administration.
The panel decided that Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Power Act (IEEPA) for the imposition of tariffs exceeded the legal limits of the presidential authority.
“The President’s assertion of the Office for the production of tariffs in this case, unlimited, as is the restriction of the duration or scope, exceeds any tariff authority delegated to the President under the Ieep,” the court wrote.
“Thus, worldwide and retaliatory tariffs are ultra viruses and unlike law.”
Judges say Congress holds tariff power
The decision stressed that Congress – not the President – has the main power to store tariffs, and Trump’s actions did not meet the IEEP requirement to solve “unusual and extraordinary threats”.
This decision will not invalidate the wide range of emergency powers on which the administration relied on the imposition of duties on more than 50 countries from April.
The appeal is expected in the federal circuit
The administration is expected to appeal against the decision of the US Court of Appeal for the Federal District, where it can again try to order.
(Tagstotranslate) Donald Trump (T) US Court of International Trade (T) Ministry of Justice (T) Foreign Policy Scenter Foreign Policy for Foreign Policy