Good morning and welcome to the US politics liveblog.
In a late-night social media post, Donald Trump has claimed he has the “absolute right” to impose new tariffs after the supreme court ruled many of the import duties he imposed last year were illegal.
My colleague Callum Jones reports that the president attacked the court on Truth Social in a late night broadside on Sunday, accusing it of having “unnecessarily RANSACKED” the US – and failing to show him sufficient loyalty.
In February, the supreme court found that the Trump administration did not provide sufficient legal justification to use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) – a 1977 law designed to address national emergencies – for many of the tariffs the Trump administration had put on countries around the world.
Callum notes that the administration has scrambled in recent weeks to piece back together its controversial trade agenda and regain economic leverage.
In response, Trump swiftly imposed 10% tariffs on goods from much of the world under a different law, section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act. But these expire after 150 days, in July. While the president also vowed to raise this temporary duty to 15%, he has yet to do so.
US officials launched a string of trade investigations last week, which set the stage for the potential imposition of a new wave of permanent tariffs to take the place of those that were repealed.
In his Truth Social post on Sunday, Trump wrote:
Our Supreme Court has made these Countries very happy but, as the Court pointed out, I have the absolute right to charge TARIFFS in another form, and have already started to do so.”
Meanwhile, severe weather moving across much of the US means that the House will not be voting today, said Tom Emmer, the GOP House majority whip. The first votes in the chamber are now expected to take place on Tuesday.
Donald Trump is in Washington today. We can expect to see the president alongside vice-president JD Vance later. This will be the first time we’ve heard from both of them, together, since the war on Iran began. Their Oval Office meeting at 3.30pm ET is open to the press, so we’ll bring you the latest lines as that gets under way.
In between closed-door policy meetings and executive time, Trump will take part in a lunch with the Kennedy Center board members at 11.45am ET, and meet with the US ambassador to Japan, George Glass, at 4pm ET.
If anything else opens up we’ll provide updates here.
In his rant on Truth Social, although Trump praised the conservative justices on the bench who supported his justification for tariffs –Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh – but lambasted the other justices as “completely inept and embarrassing”.
It’s the latest example of the president’s attack on the judiciary for what he perceives as personal and political attacks on his policy agenda.
On social media, he also targeted James Boasberg, the DC-based federal judge who blocked the justice department subpoeans for Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell.
The president said that Boasberg suffers from “the highest level of Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS)” and “has displayed open, flagrant, and extreme partisan bias” against Republicans and the White House. A reminder that Boasberg was also the judge who ruled in April last year that he Trump administration appeared to have acted “in bad faith” when it used rarely invoked Alien Enemies Act to deport hundreds of Venezuelans to a mega prison in El Salvador.
Good morning and welcome to the US politics liveblog.
In a late-night social media post, Donald Trump has claimed he has the “absolute right” to impose new tariffs after the supreme court ruled many of the import duties he imposed last year were illegal.
My colleague Callum Jones reports that the president attacked the court on Truth Social in a late night broadside on Sunday, accusing it of having “unnecessarily RANSACKED” the US – and failing to show him sufficient loyalty.
In February, the supreme court found that the Trump administration did not provide sufficient legal justification to use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) – a 1977 law designed to address national emergencies – for many of the tariffs the Trump administration had put on countries around the world.
Callum notes that the administration has scrambled in recent weeks to piece back together its controversial trade agenda and regain economic leverage.
In response, Trump swiftly imposed 10% tariffs on goods from much of the world under a different law, section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act. But these expire after 150 days, in July. While the president also vowed to raise this temporary duty to 15%, he has yet to do so.
US officials launched a string of trade investigations last week, which set the stage for the potential imposition of a new wave of permanent tariffs to take the place of those that were repealed.
In his Truth Social post on Sunday, Trump wrote:
Our Supreme Court has made these Countries very happy but, as the Court pointed out, I have the absolute right to charge TARIFFS in another form, and have already started to do so.”
Meanwhile, severe weather moving across much of the US means that the House will not be voting today, said Tom Emmer, the GOP House majority whip. The first votes in the chamber are now expected to take place on Tuesday.

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