特朗普新关税计划在多州诉讼后重返法庭


州总检察长称,特朗普此举纯粹是为了”规避”最高法院的裁决。

By Breanne Deppisch
Fox News

发布时间:2026年3月5日 美国东部时间下午6:20 | 更新时间:2026年3月5日 美国东部时间下午6:28

周四,24名州总检察长联合对总统唐纳德·特朗普提起诉讼,试图阻止其新的10%关税生效——这一举措几乎确保特朗普新恢复的关税制度将在近年内第二次重返联邦法院。

诉讼于周四在美国国际贸易法院提起,原告包括来自纽约、俄勒冈、加利福尼亚和亚利桑那等24个州的总检察长。

州总检察长在诉讼中辩称,特朗普无权根据1974年《贸易法》第122节实施10%的关税,称这一做法只是为了”规避”上月最高法院以6-3票通过的裁决。该裁决阻止了特朗普利用《国际紧急经济权力法》(IEEPA)单方面实施去年4月宣布的10%全球关税制度。

特朗普对该裁决的回应是立即援引第122节,在短期内维持10%的关税。他当时还表示,政府正计划将某些国家的进口关税从10%提高到15%。

在诉讼中,州总检察长称特朗普”明确表示他将不惜一切手段实施全球关税”,并认为这是”不受限制的行政权力的行使”。

“与他非法使用IEEPA一样,总统再次行使了他本不具备的关税权限——涉及一项未授权他实施的关税的法律——以颠覆宪法秩序并给全球经济带来混乱,”他们补充道。

案件的下一步行动尚不清楚,但新的诉讼可能会遭到白宫和司法部的强烈反对。

这发生在特朗普继续将关税作为其第二个白宫任期的标志性经济政策之际。曾自称为”关税先生”的特朗普将这一问题描述为美国经济的”生死存亡”问题。

去年4月,特朗普宣布国家贸易紧急状态以援引IEEPA,称该法律是解决贸易不平衡、减少与主要贸易伙伴的赤字以及促进国内制造业和生产的手段。

此前,两个联邦法院——美国国际贸易法院(CIT)和美国联邦巡回上诉法院——阻止了特朗普使用IEEPA实施关税,促使政府去年将此案提交最高法院寻求紧急救济。(总部位于曼哈顿的国际贸易法院去年裁定,作为总司令,特朗普没有”无限权力”根据紧急法律实施关税。)

下级法院曾要求司法部解释,为何特朗普在国会制定了更具体针对关税的其他更狭义法律时,却援引了IEEPA。这些法律包括将关税限制在特定水平或设定受国会审查的时间框架的法律。

第122节关税在未经国会批准的情况下可维持长达150天。纽约州民主党参议员查尔斯·舒默上周在参议院表示,民主党核心小组不会批准扩大广泛的进口关税。

从法律角度看,政府也面临挑战。

一些经济学家以及州总检察长认为,传统的国际收支逆差与美国和其他国家之间的贸易逆差存在差异。

各州在诉讼中称:”与第122节公告相反,贸易逆差不是国际收支逆差。”

密歇根大学经济学家贾斯汀·沃尔弗斯去年在接受福克斯新闻数字版采访时表示,特朗普对贸易”逆差”的关注实际上基于一个常见的误解。

“我们有美元逆差——但我们有’商品’顺差,”他说。

沃尔弗斯解释道:”这意味着我们卖给中国少量商品,而他们卖给我们大量商品。”每一张流向中国的美元钞票,美国都能从中获得美国人想要购买的东西,比如T恤。

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布雷安妮·德皮施是福克斯新闻数字版的国家政治记者,报道特朗普政府,重点关注司法部、联邦调查局和其他国家新闻。她此前曾在《华盛顿 examiner》和《华盛顿邮报》报道国家政治,还为《政客》杂志、《科罗拉多公报》等媒体撰稿。您可以通过Breanne.Deppisch@fox.com向她发送线索,或在X上关注她@breanne_dep。

Trump’s new tariff plan barrels back to court following multistate lawsuit

State AGs said the effort from Trump is merely an attempt to ‘sidestep’ the Supreme Court’s ruling.

By Breanne Deppisch
Fox News

Published March 5, 2026 6:20pm EST | Updated March 5, 2026 6:28pm EST

A group of two dozen state attorneys general sued President Donald Trump on Thursday in an effort to block his new 10% tariffs from taking force — a move that all but ensures Trump’s newly revived tariff regime will end up back before the federal courts for the second time in nearly as many years.

The lawsuit was filed Thursday in the Court of International Trade by attorneys general from 24 states, including New York, Oregon, California, and Arizona.

The state attorneys general argued in the lawsuit that Trump lacks the authority to impose the 10% tariffs under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, describing the effort as merely an attempt to “sidestep” last month’s 6-3 Supreme Court ruling, which blocked Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, (IEEPA) to unilaterally stand up his 10% global tariff regime announced last April.

Trump responded to the ruling by immediately invoking Section 122 to keep the 10% tariffs in place in the near-term. He also said then that the administration is planning to increase the import duties from 10% to 15% for certain countries.

In the lawsuit, the state AGs said Trump “has made clear that he is going to impose worldwide tariffs by any means necessary,” and argued that the effort is “an exercise of completely unrestrained executive power.”

“As with his unlawful use of IEEPA, the President has once again exercised tariff authority that he does not have—involving a statute that does not authorize the tariffs he has imposed—to upend the constitutional order and bring chaos to the global economy,” they added.

Next steps in the case are unclear, though the new lawsuit is likely to be met with fierce opposition from the White House and Justice Department.

It comes as Trump has continued to embrace tariffs as the signature economic policy of his second White House term. Trump, who previously billed himself as the “Tariff Man,” has described the issue as “life or death” for the U.S. economy.

Last April, Trump declared a national trade emergency to invoke IEEPA, citing the law as a means to address trade imbalances, reduce deficits with key trading partners and boost domestic manufacturing and production.

Two federal courts — the U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT) and U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit — previously blocked Trump’s use of IEEPA to enact his tariffs, prompting the administration to kick the case to the Supreme Court last year for emergency relief. (The Manhattan-based Court of International Trade ruled last year that Trump, as commander-in-chief, does not have “unbounded authority” to impose tariffs under the emergency law.)

Lower courts had pressed the Justice Department to explain why Trump invoked IEEPA when other, more narrowly tailored statutes enacted by Congress more specifically address tariffs, including laws that cap tariffs at certain levels or set timeframes subject to congressional review.

Section 122 tariffs can remain in place for up to 150 days without congressional approval, and Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vowed on the Senate floor last week that the Democratic caucus would not approve an extension of the broad import duties.

Legally, the administration could have its work cut out for it as well.

Some economists — as well as the state AGs — argue that there is a difference between a traditional balance of payment deficit and the trade deficit between the U.S. and other countries.

“Contrary to the Section 122 Proclamation, a trade deficit is not a balance of payments deficit,” the states argued in their lawsuit.

Justin Wolfers, an economist at the University of Michigan, told Fox News Digital in an interview last year that Trump’s focus on the trade “deficit” is in fact based on a common misconception.

“We have a dollar deficit – but we have a stuff surplus,” he said.

“What that means is we sell China a small amount of stuff, and they sell us a large amount of stuff,” Wolfers explained. For every dollar bill that goes to China, the U.S. gets something for it that Americans want to buy, like T-shirts.

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Breanne Deppisch is a national politics reporter for Fox News Digital covering the Trump administration, with a focus on the Justice Department, FBI and other national news. She previously covered national politics at the Washington Examiner and The Washington Post, with additional bylines in Politico Magazine, the Colorado Gazette and others. You can send tips to Breanne at Breanne.Deppisch@fox.com, or follow her on X at @breanne_dep.

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