2026 SCOTUS Thread

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2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by BDKJMU »

Could post this in the ‘Trans in Sports’ or ‘Culture Wars’ threads, but since it’s before SCOTUS, thought I’d start a 2026 SCOTUS thread.

SCOTUS yesterday heard oral arguments on cases from Idaho and West Virginia, Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J., on laws barring boys/men from participating on girls/women's sports teams.
Alito asked Kathleen R. Hartnett, who is arguing on behalf of the Idaho student in the Supreme Court case, what it meant to be a "boy or a girl or a man or a woman" when it came to equal protection purposes. Hartnett agreed that a school may have separate teams for students "classified as boys and a category of students classified as girls." Hartnett also agreed there needed to be "an understanding of what it means to be a boy or a girl and a man or a woman."

"Sorry, I misunderstood your question. I think the underlying enactment, whatever it was, the policy, the law, we’d have to have an understanding of how the state or the government was understanding that term to figure out whether someone was excluded," Hartnett said. "We do not have a definition for the court. We’re not disputing the definition here.

"What we’re saying is the way it implies in practice is to exclude birth-sex males categorically from women’s teams and there is a subset of those birth-sex males where it doesn’t make sense to do so according to the state’s own interest."

Alito then asked, "How can a court determine whether there’s discrimination on the basis of sex without knowing what sex means for equal protection purposes?"

…… Alito then posed a hypothetical question to Hartnett about a boy who has never taken any kind of puberty blockers or other medication but believed they were a girl and whether a school can say the boy cannot participate on a girls’ sports team.

Hartnett suggested the hypothetical wasn’t necessarily what her side was arguing.

The issue at hand is whether laws in Idaho, and West Virginia, that prohibit transgender athletes who identify as women from playing on teams that match their gender identity, discriminate based on sex.…
:suspicious: Sounds exactly like what her side is arguing.
https://www.foxnews.com/sports/alito-pr ... us-hearing
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by kalm »

Ketchup stain cleanup in aisle 6…

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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by GannonFan »

kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 8:39 am Ketchup stain cleanup in aisle 6…

I haven't read the full decision yet, and while I thought it could go 9-0 the way it did, but more realistically 7-2 considering Alito and Roberts history, I'll take 6-3. Sounds like Kavanaugh was worried about the unwinding of it all but again, I haven't read it so I'll reserve judgement on his judgement.

As for kalm's Twitter reference, Barb McQuade, and I'm sure many lefties like her, are in shock about this judgement. Based on her comments, it's likely she hasn't been paying attention to the details of SCOTUS decisions and has just been running with the headlines. SCOTUS, under Roberts, has been very clear about the major questions doctrine and that the Executive branch, under Trump or under Biden, can't just extrapolate some new policy or regulation from something Congress said nothing about. If it's a major question (i.e. a lot of money or other significant shift in the economy or something else) and the power comes from Congress, the direction from Congress has to be fairly clear and explicit that they are giving that power. It worked against lefties when SCOTUS said Biden couldn't just wipe out student debt because he wanted to, and it worked against MAGA in this case when SCOTUS said Trump just could install a tariff just because he wanted to. Barb must've not been paying attention as this Court has been very clear about major question issues for years now.

As with all cases, the details are often more instructive and insightful than the headlines.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by kalm »

GannonFan wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 10:15 am
kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 8:39 am Ketchup stain cleanup in aisle 6…

I haven't read the full decision yet, and while I thought it could go 9-0 the way it did, but more realistically 7-2 considering Alito and Roberts history, I'll take 6-3. Sounds like Kavanaugh was worried about the unwinding of it all but again, I haven't read it so I'll reserve judgement on his judgement.

As for kalm's Twitter reference, Barb McQuade, and I'm sure many lefties like her, are in shock about this judgement. Based on her comments, it's likely she hasn't been paying attention to the details of SCOTUS decisions and has just been running with the headlines. SCOTUS, under Roberts, has been very clear about the major questions doctrine and that the Executive branch, under Trump or under Biden, can't just extrapolate some new policy or regulation from something Congress said nothing about. If it's a major question (i.e. a lot of money or other significant shift in the economy or something else) and the power comes from Congress, the direction from Congress has to be fairly clear and explicit that they are giving that power. It worked against lefties when SCOTUS said Biden couldn't just wipe out student debt because he wanted to, and it worked against MAGA in this case when SCOTUS said Trump just could install a tariff just because he wanted to. Barb must've not been paying attention as this Court has been very clear about major question issues for years now.

As with all cases, the details are often more instructive and insightful than the headlines.
Might want to look into McQuade’s history before you pass amateurish judgement toward her opinions.

She’s a former DOJ attorney and is currently a law professor at Michigan. I’m guessing she knows her shit.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by Caribbean Hen »

“It worked against lefties when SCOTUS said Biden couldn't just wipe out student debt because he wanted to”

One of Joey and the Radicals most infuriating stances because for me, it just encourages irresponsibility. JoJo’s dim mindset was so evident in his son Hunter Biden. America didn’t need more spoiled brats

What was the vote on this one? I’ll guess 7-2
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by Pwns »

Good. This trade war is retarded.

We need to team up with other countries to wage a trade war with China, not push our allies into China's arms.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by GannonFan »

kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 10:43 am
GannonFan wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 10:15 am

I haven't read the full decision yet, and while I thought it could go 9-0 the way it did, but more realistically 7-2 considering Alito and Roberts history, I'll take 6-3. Sounds like Kavanaugh was worried about the unwinding of it all but again, I haven't read it so I'll reserve judgement on his judgement.

As for kalm's Twitter reference, Barb McQuade, and I'm sure many lefties like her, are in shock about this judgement. Based on her comments, it's likely she hasn't been paying attention to the details of SCOTUS decisions and has just been running with the headlines. SCOTUS, under Roberts, has been very clear about the major questions doctrine and that the Executive branch, under Trump or under Biden, can't just extrapolate some new policy or regulation from something Congress said nothing about. If it's a major question (i.e. a lot of money or other significant shift in the economy or something else) and the power comes from Congress, the direction from Congress has to be fairly clear and explicit that they are giving that power. It worked against lefties when SCOTUS said Biden couldn't just wipe out student debt because he wanted to, and it worked against MAGA in this case when SCOTUS said Trump just could install a tariff just because he wanted to. Barb must've not been paying attention as this Court has been very clear about major question issues for years now.

As with all cases, the details are often more instructive and insightful than the headlines.
Might want to look into McQuade’s history before you pass amateurish judgement toward her opinions.

She’s a former DOJ attorney and is currently a law professor at Michigan. I’m guessing she knows her shit.
Then she should do better with her own headlines because she should know better. Her quote "At last. SCOTUS remembers that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch of government, to whom the Constitution assigns the power to levy taxes. " is factually incorrect in that SCOTUS has been very clear about the reassigning of powers via the major question doctrine. It's literally in the opinion itself. Again, with her credentials she should tweet better than that.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by UNI88 »




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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by kalm »

GannonFan wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 11:38 am
kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 10:43 am

Might want to look into McQuade’s history before you pass amateurish judgement toward her opinions.

She’s a former DOJ attorney and is currently a law professor at Michigan. I’m guessing she knows her shit.
Then she should do better with her own headlines because she should know better. Her quote "At last. SCOTUS remembers that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch of government, to whom the Constitution assigns the power to levy taxes. " is factually incorrect in that SCOTUS has been very clear about the reassigning of powers via the major question doctrine. It's literally in the opinion itself. Again, with her credentials she should tweet better than that.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by GannonFan »

kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 12:01 pm
GannonFan wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 11:38 am

Then she should do better with her own headlines because she should know better. Her quote "At last. SCOTUS remembers that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch of government, to whom the Constitution assigns the power to levy taxes. " is factually incorrect in that SCOTUS has been very clear about the reassigning of powers via the major question doctrine. It's literally in the opinion itself. Again, with her credentials she should tweet better than that.
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How is that nitpicking? She said, her own words, "At last. SCOTUS remembers that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch of government, to whom the Constitution assigns the power to levy taxes." Heck that was the bulk of her Tweet you shared. Based on recent SCOTUS rulings, and specifically on the major questions rulings, that's what SCOTUS has been doing for some time. SCOTUS has repeatedly held that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch. Her tweet leads people who may not know any better to think they haven't. Again, given her credentials, which could also sway people who don't know any better, to just assume she's correct. Unfortunately, her tweet is factually incorrect. :coffee:
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by GannonFan »

UNI88 wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 11:52 am


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And that is the unfortunate thing about where the Congress has devolved over the past, say 15 years. They don't seem to really pass or do anything. Relying on the SCOTUS to strike down Trump's tariffs, and the future ones that he's sure to turn to trying to get around this ruling and potential future ones, is effective but also really slow. How long did it take for this one to be ruled on. SCOTUS isn't meant to be a vehicle for rapid-fire decisions. Hopefully, after the mid-terms this year, we start seeing a return of Congress that actually does their job. However, I'm sure they'll be distracted with impeachment discussions until the Presidential elections in 2028 so I'm not holding out a lot of hope for the next Congress to advance the ball in any meaningful way.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by kalm »

GannonFan wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 12:35 pm
kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 12:01 pm

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How is that nitpicking? She said, her own words, "At last. SCOTUS remembers that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch of government, to whom the Constitution assigns the power to levy taxes." Heck that was the bulk of her Tweet you shared. Based on recent SCOTUS rulings, and specifically on the major questions rulings, that's what SCOTUS has been doing for some time. SCOTUS has repeatedly held that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch. Her tweet leads people who may not know any better to think they haven't. Again, given her credentials, which could also sway people who don't know any better, to just assume she's correct. Unfortunately, her tweet is factually incorrect. :coffee:
Even if your assessment is fair, you’re still arguing the minutia compared to the importance of the ruling.

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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by GannonFan »

kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 1:04 pm
GannonFan wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 12:35 pm

How is that nitpicking? She said, her own words, "At last. SCOTUS remembers that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch of government, to whom the Constitution assigns the power to levy taxes." Heck that was the bulk of her Tweet you shared. Based on recent SCOTUS rulings, and specifically on the major questions rulings, that's what SCOTUS has been doing for some time. SCOTUS has repeatedly held that Congress is a separate and co-equal branch. Her tweet leads people who may not know any better to think they haven't. Again, given her credentials, which could also sway people who don't know any better, to just assume she's correct. Unfortunately, her tweet is factually incorrect. :coffee:
Even if your assessment is fair, you’re still arguing the minutia compared to the importance of the ruling.

Image
Since I'm arguing over what you posted, doesn't that make what you posted minutia as well?? Aye caramba, the irony of you posting a forest through the trees meme to boot!

The importance of the ruling is exactly what I have said here many times before the ruling would come out - clearly SCOTUS was going to strike down the tariffs based on the shoddy basis the administration had for pre-supposing authority to issue them. It was folks like you that ignored the reality of past SCOTUS decisions and went with click-bait that the SCOTUS would do whatever Trump wanted. SCOTUS has been very clear on the balance of power over many rulings in the past two decades - this one wasn't that hard to read the tea leaves. Trump consistently lashes out in every direction hoping something sticks. It's literally his modus operandi. This was one of just many misses. Sadly, the Trump/kalm tariff system looks to be destined for the dustbin of history. In case that flew over your head, I was being sarcastic.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by kalm »

GannonFan wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 2:16 pm
kalm wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 1:04 pm

Even if your assessment is fair, you’re still arguing the minutia compared to the importance of the ruling.

Image
Since I'm arguing over what you posted, doesn't that make what you posted minutia as well?? Aye caramba, the irony of you posting a forest through the trees meme to boot!

The importance of the ruling is exactly what I have said here many times before the ruling would come out - clearly SCOTUS was going to strike down the tariffs based on the shoddy basis the administration had for pre-supposing authority to issue them. It was folks like you that ignored the reality of past SCOTUS decisions and went with click-bait that the SCOTUS would do whatever Trump wanted. SCOTUS has been very clear on the balance of power over many rulings in the past two decades - this one wasn't that hard to read the tea leaves. Trump consistently lashes out in every direction hoping something sticks. It's literally his modus operandi. This was one of just many misses. Sadly, the Trump/kalm tariff system looks to be destined for the dustbin of history. In case that flew over your head, I was being sarcastic.
Sarcastic? You?

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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by BDKJMU »

Last edited by BDKJMU on Fri Feb 20, 2026 5:50 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by UNI88 »

BDKJMU wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 5:28 pm
If I understand it correctly, the trump regime will need to tie tariffs to national security risks (Section 232) or specific unfair practices (Section 301) and support those claims that with evidence from formal investigations, They're less likely to withstand court challenges if they skip/shortcut the formal investigations and evidence and essentially say "trust us".
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by BDKJMU »

UNI88 wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 5:41 pm
BDKJMU wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 5:28 pm
If I understand it correctly, the trump regime will need to tie tariffs to national security risks (Section 232) or specific unfair practices (Section 301) and support those claims that with evidence from formal investigations, They're less likely to withstand court challenges if they skip/shortcut the formal investigations and evidence and essentially say "trust us".
The SCOTUS decision today just ended round 1.
Supreme Court kills Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs — but 4 other laws could resurrect them

……But the decision may not be the final word. From the Trade Expansion Act to the Trade Act of 1974 and even Depression-era statutes, multiple legal avenues remain that could allow Trump to reassert aggressive trade powers….

….On "Liberation Day" in 2025, Trump cited the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), drafted by former Rep. Jonathan Brewster-Bingham, D-N.Y., to declare an emergency situation in which foreign countries were "ripping off" the U.S.

With that avenue now closed by Roberts, Trump could try to use the same national security rationale to invoke the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which in part allows the Commerce Department to impose tariffs on "article[s]… imported… in such quantities or under such circumstances as to threaten or impair the national security."

Unlike the IEEPA, the JFK-era law has been tested in the courts, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has since built on his predecessor Wilbur Ross’ 2018 steel and aluminum tariffs imposed under the act, adding 407 more imports to the tariff list on the grounds that they are "derivative" of the two approved metals.

During his 2025 confirmation hearing, Lutnick voiced support for a "country by country, macro" approach to tariffs and agreed with the president that the U.S. is "treated horribly by the global trading environment."

While tariffs imposed under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act are not immediate and require the Commerce Department to conduct a formal investigation, the law provides a court-tested avenue for the president.

In the wake of Friday’s ruling, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and others celebrated the court’s affirmation that Trump cannot use "emergency powers to enact taxes," but Congress has previously approved another avenue to impose tariffs.

Then-Rep. Albert Ullman, D-Ore., crafted a bill signed by President Gerald Ford that expressly gave presidents broader authority to impose tariffs: the Trade Act of 1974.

A federal appeals court in September ruled against thousands of companies that challenged tariffs on China imposed under Section 301 of the Trade Act.

In this case, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, a Trump appointee, could seek retaliatory tariffs against countries with unfair trade barriers, according to Global Policy Watch.

An investigation, including negotiations with the targeted countries, would then ensue, and Greer could ultimately be cleared to impose trade restrictions if the probe finds that the U.S. is being denied trade agreement benefits or that such a deal is unjustifiable.

However, in most cases, imposed tariffs sunset after four years, according to reports.

In Trump’s favor, it could be argued that the same reasoning Roberts used to strike down the IEEPA authority could backfire on tariff opponents because the 1974 law explicitly gives the executive branch trade-restriction authority.

Another section of the Ford-signed law could also be used to unilaterally impose tariffs.

Section 122, the "Balance of Payments" portion of the law, allows Trump to temporarily enforce tariffs or import quotas in certain situations.

A president may impose tariff duties of up to 15% for 150 days against all or certain countries if they are found to be "maintain[ing] unjustifiable or unreasonable restrictions on U.S. commerce," according to the Retail Industry Leaders Association.

"This authority is intended to give the executive branch flexibility to respond quickly to trade practices that may harm U.S. economic interests or to correct significant balance-of-payments deficits," the trade group said in a June report.

However, reports show Section 122 has not been tested in court as extensively, which could lead to lawsuits and legal uncertainty.

Another potential policy option for Trump is one that drew sharp criticism when President Herbert Hoover signed it against the advice of economists early in the Great Depression.

The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, named for Republican Sen. Reed Smoot of Utah and Rep. Willis Hawley of Oregon, imposed tariffs on tens of thousands of imports in hopes of protecting American producers facing dire economic conditions.

Hawley’s great-granddaughter, Carey Cezar of Baltimore, told NBC News in 2025 that she voted for Kamala Harris and opposed Trump’s tariffs after her ancestor’s name resurfaced in public discourse.

Other critics of Smoot-Hawley say it is a key reason the Depression was so dire and expansive.

However, the law still provides a mechanism for the Commerce Department to determine when a good is being "dumped" on U.S. consumers or whether a foreign country is unfairly subsidizing an export to the U.S., and to respond with tariffs.

Additionally, while Trump has imposed tariffs largely on a country-by-country basis, Smoot-Hawley requires that levies be applied on a product-by-product basis.

A fifth avenue that is largely unreachable by Trump is the Fordney-McCumber Tariff Act of 1922.

Sen. Porter McCumber, R-N.D., and Rep. Joseph Fordney, R-Mich., passed a bill allowing Republican President Warren Harding to impose much higher tariffs than were standard at the time, in hopes of protecting U.S. farmers from a sharp decline in revenue following World War I.

In one of the first contemporary rebukes of protectionism, Fordney-McCumber was criticized for permitting tariffs as high as 50% on countries, including allies, which opponents said had the unintended consequence of hurting America’s ability to service its war debts.

Fordney-McCumber was eventually superseded by Smoot-Hawley, and any remaining provisions are considered obsolete following the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, signed by President Franklin Roosevelt to undo some of Congress’ trade restrictions.

The RTAA shifted tariff authority from Congress to the president, granting authority for bilateral negotiations aimed at lowering tariffs at the time.

That dynamic, often called "reciprocity," is being used in the Trump era not to lower tariffs but to raise them.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/suprem ... rrect-them
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by UNI88 »

BDKJMU wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 5:50 pm
UNI88 wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 5:41 pm
If I understand it correctly, the trump regime will need to tie tariffs to national security risks (Section 232) or specific unfair practices (Section 301) and support those claims that with evidence from formal investigations, They're less likely to withstand court challenges if they skip/shortcut the formal investigations and evidence and essentially say "trust us".
The SCOTUS decision today just ended round 1.
Supreme Court kills Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs — but 4 other laws could resurrect them

……But the decision may not be the final word. From the Trade Expansion Act to the Trade Act of 1974 and even Depression-era statutes, multiple legal avenues remain that could allow Trump to reassert aggressive trade powers….

….On "Liberation Day" in 2025, Trump cited the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), drafted by former Rep. Jonathan Brewster-Bingham, D-N.Y., to declare an emergency situation in which foreign countries were "ripping off" the U.S.

With that avenue now closed by Roberts, Trump could try to use the same national security rationale to invoke the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which in part allows the Commerce Department to impose tariffs on "article[s]… imported… in such quantities or under such circumstances as to threaten or impair the national security."

Unlike the IEEPA, the JFK-era law has been tested in the courts, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has since built on his predecessor Wilbur Ross’ 2018 steel and aluminum tariffs imposed under the act, adding 407 more imports to the tariff list on the grounds that they are "derivative" of the two approved metals.

During his 2025 confirmation hearing, Lutnick voiced support for a "country by country, macro" approach to tariffs and agreed with the president that the U.S. is "treated horribly by the global trading environment."

While tariffs imposed under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act are not immediate and require the Commerce Department to conduct a formal investigation, the law provides a court-tested avenue for the president.

In the wake of Friday’s ruling, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and others celebrated the court’s affirmation that Trump cannot use "emergency powers to enact taxes," but Congress has previously approved another avenue to impose tariffs.

Then-Rep. Albert Ullman, D-Ore., crafted a bill signed by President Gerald Ford that expressly gave presidents broader authority to impose tariffs: the Trade Act of 1974.

A federal appeals court in September ruled against thousands of companies that challenged tariffs on China imposed under Section 301 of the Trade Act.

In this case, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, a Trump appointee, could seek retaliatory tariffs against countries with unfair trade barriers, according to Global Policy Watch.

An investigation, including negotiations with the targeted countries, would then ensue, and Greer could ultimately be cleared to impose trade restrictions if the probe finds that the U.S. is being denied trade agreement benefits or that such a deal is unjustifiable.

However, in most cases, imposed tariffs sunset after four years, according to reports.

In Trump’s favor, it could be argued that the same reasoning Roberts used to strike down the IEEPA authority could backfire on tariff opponents because the 1974 law explicitly gives the executive branch trade-restriction authority.

Another section of the Ford-signed law could also be used to unilaterally impose tariffs.

Section 122, the "Balance of Payments" portion of the law, allows Trump to temporarily enforce tariffs or import quotas in certain situations.

A president may impose tariff duties of up to 15% for 150 days against all or certain countries if they are found to be "maintain[ing] unjustifiable or unreasonable restrictions on U.S. commerce," according to the Retail Industry Leaders Association.

"This authority is intended to give the executive branch flexibility to respond quickly to trade practices that may harm U.S. economic interests or to correct significant balance-of-payments deficits," the trade group said in a June report.

However, reports show Section 122 has not been tested in court as extensively, which could lead to lawsuits and legal uncertainty.

Another potential policy option for Trump is one that drew sharp criticism when President Herbert Hoover signed it against the advice of economists early in the Great Depression.

The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, named for Republican Sen. Reed Smoot of Utah and Rep. Willis Hawley of Oregon, imposed tariffs on tens of thousands of imports in hopes of protecting American producers facing dire economic conditions.

Hawley’s great-granddaughter, Carey Cezar of Baltimore, told NBC News in 2025 that she voted for Kamala Harris and opposed Trump’s tariffs after her ancestor’s name resurfaced in public discourse.

Other critics of Smoot-Hawley say it is a key reason the Depression was so dire and expansive.

However, the law still provides a mechanism for the Commerce Department to determine when a good is being "dumped" on U.S. consumers or whether a foreign country is unfairly subsidizing an export to the U.S., and to respond with tariffs.

Additionally, while Trump has imposed tariffs largely on a country-by-country basis, Smoot-Hawley requires that levies be applied on a product-by-product basis.

A fifth avenue that is largely unreachable by Trump is the Fordney-McCumber Tariff Act of 1922.

Sen. Porter McCumber, R-N.D., and Rep. Joseph Fordney, R-Mich., passed a bill allowing Republican President Warren Harding to impose much higher tariffs than were standard at the time, in hopes of protecting U.S. farmers from a sharp decline in revenue following World War I.

In one of the first contemporary rebukes of protectionism, Fordney-McCumber was criticized for permitting tariffs as high as 50% on countries, including allies, which opponents said had the unintended consequence of hurting America’s ability to service its war debts.

Fordney-McCumber was eventually superseded by Smoot-Hawley, and any remaining provisions are considered obsolete following the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, signed by President Franklin Roosevelt to undo some of Congress’ trade restrictions.

The RTAA shifted tariff authority from Congress to the president, granting authority for bilateral negotiations aimed at lowering tariffs at the time.

That dynamic, often called "reciprocity," is being used in the Trump era not to lower tariffs but to raise them.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/suprem ... rrect-them
How does it work for tariffs on:
- Canada where fentanyl was the given reason?
- Brazil where the US has a trade surplus?
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by BDKJMU »

President Donald Trump on Friday signed an order imposing a 10% "global tariff" following the Supreme Court's 6-3 decision that he does not have the authority to levy sweeping tariffs under a specific emergency powers law.

The order was issued under Section 122 and applies in addition to the standard tariffs that are already in place, the president announced during a White House press briefing Friday afternoon.

He also announced the launch of several Section 301 investigations and other inquiries aimed at shielding the U.S. from what he described as unfair trade practices by foreign governments and companies...
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump- ... s-disgrace

New year, new round. Ding ding.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

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BDKJMU wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 6:23 pm
President Donald Trump on Friday signed an order imposing a 10% "global tariff" following the Supreme Court's 6-3 decision that he does not have the authority to levy sweeping tariffs under a specific emergency powers law.

The order was issued under Section 122 and applies in addition to the standard tariffs that are already in place, the president announced during a White House press briefing Friday afternoon.

He also announced the launch of several Section 301 investigations and other inquiries aimed at shielding the U.S. from what he described as unfair trade practices by foreign governments and companies...
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump- ... s-disgrace

New year, new round. Ding ding.
For Section 122: Has the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) conducted investigations to determine if serious injury exists and issued reports with findings and recommendations?

For Section 301: Has the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) conducted investigations into the foreign practice and reported findings and recommended actions?

Presidential action are supposed to be based on those investigations and reports. Imposing the tariffs and then having the USITC and/or USTR investigate after they've been imposed is putting the cart before the horse.

A President who was thinking strategically would have started those investigations when the cases were first filed as a preemptive move.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by kalm »

UNI88 wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 7:04 pm
BDKJMU wrote: Fri Feb 20, 2026 6:23 pm
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump- ... s-disgrace

New year, new round. Ding ding.
For Section 122: Has the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) conducted investigations to determine if serious injury exists and issued reports with findings and recommendations?

For Section 301: Has the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) conducted investigations into the foreign practice and reported findings and recommended actions?

Presidential action are supposed to be based on those investigations and reports. Imposing the tariffs and then having the USITC and/or USTR investigate after they've been imposed is putting the cart before the horse.

A President who was thinking strategically would have started those investigations when the cases were first filed as a preemptive move.
Maybe he should have led with the easier solutions first and then work up to the harder ones.

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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

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Gorsuch Blasts Thomas, Alito, and Kavanaugh for Favoring Trump's Illegal Tariffs
Justice Neil Gorsuch, who joined today's majority opinion in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, tackled that query in the solo concurrence that he filed. "My dissenting colleagues have defended the major questions doctrine in the past," Gorsuch observed, referring to the legal doctrine which says that when the executive branch seeks to wield significant regulatory power, it must first point to an unambiguous delegation of such power by Congress to the executive.
...
Among those who voted against Biden in the 2023 student loan case were Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh. Today, however, those same three justices voted in support of Trump's tariffs.

In his concurrence, Gorsuch detailed the many ways in which the current views of his "dissenting colleagues" fell short. For example, the dissenters claimed that "Presidents have long been granted substantial discretion over tariffs." But that claim is contradicted by American history. "Americans fought the Revolution in no small part because they believed that only their elected representatives (not the King, not even Parliament) possessed authority to tax them," Gorsuch pointed out. And "Americans later codified these beliefs in the Constitution."

Then, in an even more damning move, Gorsuch detailed how Thomas, Alito, and Kavanaugh's past votes in similar major questions doctrine cases cannot be reconciled with their present votes in support of Trump's tariffs.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

Post by BDKJMU »

Postal Service can't be sued for intentionally not delivering mail, Supreme Court rules in 5-4 split
Justice Thomas: Sovereign immunity bars suing government without its consent

…The majority opinion, written by Justice Clarence Thomas, ruled the government's sovereign immunity bars claims for undelivered mail.

"The United States enjoys sovereign immunity and cannot be sued without its consent," Thomas wrote, citing the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) granting "sovereign immunity for a wide range of claims about mail."

"Specifically, the FTCA's postal exception retains sovereign immunity for all claims ‘arising out of the loss, miscarriage, or negligent transmission of letters or postal matter,’" he continued, adding, "This case concerns whether this exception applies when postal workers intentionally fail to deliver the mail. We hold that it does."

The case, U.S. Postal Service v. Konan, stemmed from a dispute between Texas landlord Lebene Konan and her local post office. Konan alleged that postal workers in Euless, Texas, intentionally withheld and returned mail addressed to her and her tenants at two rental properties she owned, causing financial harm and emotional distress.

After her administrative complaints failed, Konan sued the United States in federal court, asserting state law claims including nuisance, tortious interference and conversion. A federal district court dismissed her claims, citing the FTCA's postal exception, which preserves immunity for "any claim arising out of the loss, miscarriage, or negligent transmission of letters or postal matter."

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit revived the lawsuit, ruling the exception did not apply to intentional acts of nondelivery. The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case to resolve a split among federal appeals courts.

Reversing the Fifth Circuit, the high court held that the ordinary meaning of "loss" and "miscarriage" at the time Congress enacted the FTCA in 1946 encompassed mail that fails to arrive at its destination, regardless of whether the failure was negligent or intentional.

"A 'miscarriage of mail' includes failure of the mail to arrive at its intended destination, regardless of the carrier's intent or where the mail goes instead," Thomas wrote.

The decision vacates the Fifth Circuit's ruling and sends the case back for further proceedings, though the justices did not decide whether all of Konan's claims are barred.

"We hold that the postal exception covers suits against the United States for the intentional nondelivery of mail," Thomas concluded. "We do not decide whether all of Konan's claims are barred by the postal exception, or which arguments Konan adequately preserved.

Sotomayor wrote the dissenting opinion, arguing that the postal exception was meant to cover negligent mistakes, not intentional misconduct.

"Today, the majority concludes that the postal exception captures, and therefore protects, the intentional nondelivery of mail, even when that nondelivery was driven by malicious reasons," she dissented.

Justice Neil Gorsuch joined the three liberal justices – Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson – in the dissent.

The ruling underscores the limits of the FTCA's waiver of sovereign immunity and narrows the circumstances in which individuals can seek damages for mail-related harms, even when they allege deliberate wrongdoing by postal employees.
https://static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/ ... 1_7648.pdf
https://www.foxnews.com/us/postal-servi ... -5-4-split
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

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A win for sanity.
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Re: 2026 SCOTUS Thread

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9-0.
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