
US states mount court challenge to Trump's tariffs
Twelve U.S. states will ask a federal court on Wednesday to halt President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs, arguing that he overstepped his authority by declaring a national emergency to impose across-the-board taxes on imports from nations that sell more to the U.S. than they buy.
A three-judge panel of the Manhattan-based Court of International Trade will hear arguments in a lawsuit brought by the Democratic attorneys general of New York, Illinois, Oregon, and nine other states. They say the Republican president has sought a "blank check" to regulate trade "at his whim."
The states claim the president badly misinterpreted a law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to justify the tariffs. The law is meant to address "unusual and extraordinary" threats to the U.S.
Trump has said the U.S.'s decades-long history of importing more than it exports is a national emergency that has harmed U.S. manufacturers. But the states argue the U.S. trade deficit is not an "emergency" and that IEEPA does not authorize tariffs at all.
The same three-judge panel heard arguments last week in a similar case brought by five small businesses, and it is expected to issue a decision in the coming weeks.
Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield said that the tariffs were raising prices for Oregon families and small businesses, and they will cost the average family an extra $3,800 a year.
"President Trump imposed his tariffs without Congress, public input, or restraint – and claims the courts can't review his decisions," Rayfield said. "This is a misuse of emergency powers."
The Justice Department has said the states' lawsuit should be dismissed because the states have only alleged "speculative economic losses" instead of concrete harms from the tariffs. It has also argued that only Congress, not U.S. states or the courts, can challenge a national emergency declared by the president under IEEPA.
A DOJ spokesperson said the department "will continue to vigorously defend President Trump's agenda to confront unfair trade practices in court."
After imposing tariffs on China, Mexico and Canada in February, Trump imposed a 10% across-the-board tariff on all imports in April, with higher rates for countries with which the U.S. has the largest trade deficits, particularly China. Many of those country-specific tariffs were paused a week later, and the Trump administration temporarily reduced the steepest tariffs on China this month while working on a longer-term trade deal.
Trump's on-again-off-again tariffs have shocked U.S. markets. He has framed them as a way to restore U.S. manufacturing capability.
The states' lawsuit is one of at least seven court challenges to Trump's tariff policies. California has filed a separate challenge in federal court in San Francisco, and other lawsuits have been filed by businesses, legal advocacy groups and members of the Blackfeet Nation.
Decisions from the court, which hears disputes involving international trade and customs laws, can be appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, D.C., and ultimately the U.S. Supreme Court. (Reporting by Dietrich Knauth, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and David Gregorio)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Zawya
16 minutes ago
- Zawya
European shares stable as markets eye Sino-US trade talks
European stocks were steady on Tuesday, shrugging off modest losses from the previous session, as investors stayed on edge awaiting fresh signals from the second day of tense U.S.-China trade negotiations. The continent-wide STOXX 600 held its ground at 553.12 points, as of 0703 GMT. The spotlight remains on the talks in London between the world's two biggest economies, as investors eagerly watch for any signs of progress or a thaw in relations. U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday put a positive spin on the talks, without divulging any details on how the trade war, that has threatened to disrupt global supply chains, could de-escalate. Gains in automakers, which rose 1%, were offset by financial services and industrial shares, which fell 0.8% and 0.4%, respectively. Among stocks, Novo Nordisk gained nearly 2% after a report said activist hedge fund Parvus Asset Management is building a stake in the drugmaker. Bellway gained 4% after the British homebuilder raised its forecast for full-year volume production. Shares of Aberdeen gained 5% after upgraded the fund manager's stock to "overweight" from "neutral".


Tahawul Tech
31 minutes ago
- Tahawul Tech
Apple opens its AI to developers
Apple announced recently a slew of artificial intelligence features including opening up Apple Intelligence's underlying technology in a modest update of its software and services as it lays the groundwork for future advances. The presentations at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference focused more on incremental developments, including live translations for phone calls, that improve everyday life rather than the sweeping ambitions for AI that Apple's rivals are marketing. A year after it failed to deliver promised AI-based upgrades to key products such as Siri, Apple kept its AI promises to consumers low-key, communicating that it could help with tasks like finding where to buy a jacket similar to one they have seen online. Behind the scenes, Apple hinted at a strategy of offering its own tools to developers alongside those from rivals, similar to a strategy by Microsoft last month. Apple software chief Craig Federighi said the company will offer both its own and OpenAI's code completion tools in its key Apple developer software and that the company is opening up the foundational AI model that it uses for some of its own features to third-party developers. 'We're opening up access for any app to tap directly into the on-device, large language model at the core of Apple,' Federighi said. In an early demonstration of this at work, the company added image generation from OpenAI's ChatGPT to its Image Playground app, saying that user data would not be shared with OpenAI without a user's permission. 'You could see Apple's priority is what they're doing on the back-end, instead of what they're doing at the front-end, which most people don't really care about yet,' said Ben Bajarin, chief executive of analyst firm Creative Strategies. Apple is facing an unprecedented set of technical and regulatory challenges as it kicked off its software developer conference. Shares of Apple, which were flat before the start of the event, closed 1.2% lower on Monday. 'In a moment in which the market questions Apple's ability to take any sort of lead in the AI space, the announced features felt incremental at best,' Thomas Monteiro, senior analyst at said. Compared with what other big AI companies are introducing, he added, 'It just seems that the clock is ticking faster every day for Apple.' That is a contrast to the ambitious vision laid out by Apple last year. 'They went from being visionary and talking about agents before a lot of other people did, to now realizing that, at the end of the day, what they need to do is deliver on what they presented a year ago,' said Bob O'Donnell, chief analyst at Technalysis Research. Apple executives said that developers will have access only to Apple's on-device version of Apple Intelligence, which does not tap into special data centres Apple built for its AI efforts. The on-device model is about 3 billion parameters, a measurement of the model's level of sophistication, meaning that it cannot handle the more complex tasks that cloud-based models can. Source: Reuters Image Credit: Apple


Al Etihad
an hour ago
- Al Etihad
Dollar firms as traders await details from US-China talks
10 June 2025 11:13 SINGAPORE (REUTERS) The US dollar firmed on Tuesday as Washington and Beijing remained locked in trade talks that left investors on edge and hesitant in placing major bets while looking ahead to the US inflation report later in the officials from the world's two largest economies sought to defuse a dispute that has widened from tariffs to restrictions over rare earths, with trade talks extending to a second day in talks come after US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping spoke by phone last week and at a crucial time for both euro eased 0.17% to $1.14 and sterling was at $1.3543. The dollar index, which measures the US currency against six key rivals, was 0.2% higher at 99.189, but remained near six-week lows it touched last index is down 8.7% this year as investors, worried about the impact of tariffs and trade tensions on the US economy and growth, flee US assets and look for and Beijing are trying to revive a temporary truce struck in Geneva that had briefly lowered trade tensions and calmed Australian dollar, often seen as a proxy for risk sentiment, was flat at $0.652, while the New Zealand dollar was a touch softer at $0.60425, but stayed close to the seven-month peak it hit last Japanese yen weakened after comments from Bank of Japan Governor, Kazuo Ueda, suggested the timing of the next interest rate hike could be pushed back. The BOJ is due to meet next week and is expected to stand pat on risks to Japan's export-heavy economy from Trump's tariffs have pushed back market bets on the next rate-hike timing, investors are on the look-out for any clues from Ueda on how soon rate increases could yen was last 0.2% weaker at 144.90 per dollar but has gained over 8% against the greenback this year on safe-haven flows during the market tumult unleashed by Trump's tariff focus this week will be on the consumer price index report for May, due on Wednesday. The report could give insight into the tariff impact at a time investors are wary of any flare-ups in inflation ahead of the Fed's policy meeting next US central bank is widely expected to hold rates steady, with Fed officials having signalled that they are in no rush to cut rates. Traders are pricing in nearly two 25-basis point cuts by the end of the year.