A major US federal trade court has ruled that President Donald Trump’s 10% global tariffs, imposed in February 2026 under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, are illegal. The US Court of International Trade said the administration wrongly interpreted the law by equating trade deficits with a “balance of payments crisis,” which the statute does not support.
The 2–1 ruling, issued on May 7, orders limited relief for plaintiffs including small businesses and one US state, and directs refunds in those cases. The decision comes after earlier Supreme Court rejection of Trump’s broader tariff regime under emergency powers, and is expected to be appealed by the administration.
Court Rejects Trump Tariffs Unlawful
The US Court of International Trade has struck down President Donald Trump’s 10% global tariffs, ruling that they were imposed without proper legal justification under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974. In a split 2–1 decision delivered on May 7, 2026, the court held that the administration misapplied the law by treating routine trade deficits as a “balance of payments crisis,” which is the legal threshold required for emergency tariffs under the statute.
The tariffs, introduced on 24 February 2026, were part of a broader shift in Trump’s trade strategy after the Supreme Court of the United States had earlier struck down similar measures imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).
According to recent court filings and reporting, the administration attempted to pivot quickly to Section 122, which allows temporary tariffs of up to 150 days, arguing that the US faced a $1.2 trillion trade deficit and currency pressures.
However, judges rejected this reasoning. The majority opinion stated that Congress intended Section 122 for exceptional financial crises linked to structural balance-of-payments instability, not for broad economic policy responses to long-standing trade deficits.
The court also warned that accepting the government’s interpretation would give the executive branch “effectively unlimited tariff authority,” undermining constitutional trade powers vested in Congress.
Limited Ruling, Major Implications
The case was brought by a coalition of 24 states, most led by Democratic attorneys general, along with small businesses affected by the tariffs. Plaintiffs argued that the tariffs were designed to bypass the Supreme Court’s earlier ruling on emergency tariffs and lacked proper statutory backing.
According to recent reporting by Reuters and court summaries, the ruling provides direct relief only to specific plaintiffs, including companies such as Basic Fun! and Burlap & Barrel, and one participating state, Washington. The court ordered refunds for tariffs collected from these parties within five days, but stopped short of blocking enforcement for all importers nationwide.
The ruling also comes at a politically sensitive moment, as the tariffs were already scheduled to expire in July 2026. While the immediate economic impact is limited, legal experts say the decision significantly weakens the administration’s ability to rely on Section 122 as a trade enforcement tool. The US Department of Justice defended the tariffs in court, citing persistent trade imbalances and national economic vulnerability, but economists testified that these conditions did not meet the statutory definition of a crisis.
Legal Battle Over US Tariffs
This ruling is the latest chapter in an escalating legal battle over presidential trade authority. Earlier in February 2026, the Supreme Court ruled that tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) were unconstitutional, stating that Congress not the president holds primary authority over taxation and import duties. That decision forced the administration to seek alternative legal pathways for imposing tariffs.
Within days, Trump invoked Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act and imposed a blanket 10% tariff on most imports, marking an unprecedented use of the statute, which had never before been applied at such scale. As detailed in court filings, critics argued that the administration was “contorting” the definition of balance-of-payments deficits to justify a broad trade policy shift rather than responding to an actual currency or financial crisis.
Following the May 7 ruling, analysts note that the administration is likely to pursue further appeals, potentially moving the case to the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals, which has previously reviewed tariff-related disputes. Officials have also indicated that alternative trade provisions, including Section 301 investigations into unfair trade practices, may be used to reintroduce similar measures under a different legal framework.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
This ruling reinforces an important democratic principle: even strong economic decisions must remain within the limits of law and constitutional authority. While governments often face pressure to respond decisively to trade deficits or economic shifts, such actions must be grounded in clear legal mandates and transparent reasoning. Otherwise, policy risks becoming unstable, inconsistent, and open to misuse.
At a time when global trade tensions already affect supply chains, prices, and livelihoods across countries, unpredictability in tariff policy can create unnecessary uncertainty for businesses and workers alike. What is needed instead is not unilateral escalation, but structured dialogue, evidence-based policymaking, and stronger international cooperation.
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