General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWalleye
(45,353 posts)bigtree
(94,610 posts)...and the Constitution.
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(14,895 posts)GCG
(114 posts)It's Thomas, Alito, and either Gorsuch or Kavanaugh!
musette_sf
(10,502 posts)no surprises
newdeal2
(5,573 posts)He needs Trumps protection more than ever.
crazylikafox
(2,940 posts)yardwork
(69,550 posts)I was shocked but on reflection, not surprised.
Ocelot II
(131,169 posts)bluestarone
(22,434 posts)Allowing him to shoot thousands on 5th Ave.!!!
ShazzieB
(22,838 posts)But not completely shocked. Thomas and Alito are the one who go along with whatever Trump wants, but Roberts, Barrett, Gorsuch, and Kavanaugh have all ruled against him at various times.
P.S. Autocorrect tried to change "Gorsuch" to "Porsche." Wtf, autocorrect?
Johonny
(26,557 posts)Golden trophies for nothing. Hilarious. Tim Apple at home humiliated, sucker.
Johnny2X2X
(24,414 posts)I believe that the most effective way to change countries to be more free is through free trade. Not even wars are as effective historically.
His tariffs were insane and based on idiotic equations they came up with probably while high on drugs. This provides much needed relief to consumers. And businesses legitimately might cancel some planned layoffs because of this.
BannonsLiver
(20,839 posts)Lets be clear: THIS IS A SETBACK FOR TRUMP.
Whyisthisstillclose
(736 posts)Ocelot II
(131,169 posts)There are other ways of imposing tariffs and he's sure to try them, but those are much more limiting than the IEEPA, which he incorrectly thought gave him the right to declare an emergency any time he felt like it. He can no longer use it as a means of punishing or rewarding other countries using tariffs.
AllyCat
(18,981 posts)OGBuzz
(544 posts)or at least a death stare at the two conservative judges who ruled correctly, but will be labelled traitors by Trump and MAGA.
Greg_In_SF
(1,312 posts)has limited President Trump's ability to impose sweeping tariffs, but he may pursue tariffs through other legal avenues, such as Section 232 and Section 301 of trade law. These sections allow for tariffs under specific circumstances, such as national security concerns or unfair trade practices.