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Tag: Executive overreach

  • Trump has a habit of asserting broad, unreviewable authority

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    In separate attacks this month, the U.S. military blew up two speedboats in the Caribbean Sea, killing 14 alleged drug smugglers. Although those men could have been intercepted and arrested, President Donald Trump said he decided summary execution was appropriate as a deterrent to drug trafficking.

    To justify this unprecedented use of the U.S. military to kill criminal suspects, Trump invoked his “constitutional authority as Commander in Chief and Chief Executive” to protect “national security and foreign policy interests.” That assertion of sweeping presidential power fits an alarming pattern that is also apparent in Trump’s tariffs, his attempt to summarily deport suspected gang members as “alien enemies,” and his planned use of National Guard troops to fight crime in cities across the country.

    Although Trump described the boat attacks as acts of “self-defense,” he did not claim the people whose deaths he ordered were engaged in literal attacks on the United States. His framing instead relied on the dubious proposition that drug smuggling is tantamount to violent aggression.

    While that assumption is consistent with Trump’s often expressed desire to kill drug dealers, it is not consistent with the way drug laws are ordinarily enforced. In the absence of violent resistance, a police officer who decided to shoot a drug suspect dead rather than take him into custody would be guilty of murder.

    That seems like an accurate description of the attacks that Trump ordered. Yet he maintains that his constitutional license to kill, which apparently extends to civilians he views as threats to U.S. “national security and foreign policy interests,” transforms murder into self-defense.

    Trump has asserted similarly broad authority to impose stiff, ever-changing tariffs on goods imported from scores of countries. Last month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit rejected that audacious power grab, saying it was inconsistent with the 1977 statute on which Trump relied.

    The Federal Circuit said the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which does not mention import taxes at all and had never before been used to impose them, does not give the president “unlimited authority” to “revise the tariff schedule” approved by Congress. The appeals court added that “the Government’s understanding of the scope of authority granted by IEEPA would render it an unconstitutional delegation.”

    Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act (AEA) against alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua has also run into legal trouble. This month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit concluded that Trump had erroneously relied on a nonexistent “invasion or predatory incursion” to justify his use of that 1798 statute.

    Trump argued that the courts had no business deciding whether he had complied with the law. “The president’s determination that the factual prerequisites of the AEA have been met is not subject to judicial review,” Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign told the 5th Circuit.

    Trump took a similar position in the tariff case. As an opposing lawyer noted, it amounted to the claim that “the president can do whatever he wants, whenever he wants, for as long as he wants, so long as he declares an emergency.”

    Trump also thinks his presidential powers include a mandate to protect public safety by deploying the National Guard, with or without the approval of state or local officials. In pursuing that plan, he claimed at a Cabinet meeting last month, he has “the right to do anything I want to do,” because “I’m the president of the United States.”

    As Trump sees it, that means “if I think our country is in danger—and it is in danger in these cities—I can do it.” In effect, Trump is asserting the sort of broad police power that the Constitution reserves to the states.

    If Trump’s crime-fighting plan provokes legal challenges, he is apt to argue that his authority is not only vast but unreviewable. That dangerous combination is emerging as a hallmark of his administration.

    © Copyright 2025 by Creators Syndicate Inc.

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    Jacob Sullum

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  • The rationale for the federal circuit’s ‘radical left’ tariff decision is fundamentally conservative

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    After the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled against his tariffs last week, President Donald Trump repeatedly condemned the decision, which he preposterously warned will ruin the country unless it is overturned by the Supreme Court. “It would be a total disaster for the Country,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post on Friday. “If allowed to stand, this Decision would literally destroy the United States of America.” He reiterated that claim on Sunday: “Our Country would be completely destroyed, and our military power would be instantly obliterated,” he said, adding that “we would become a Third World Nation, with no hope of GREATNESS again.”

    Trump’s prophecies of doom were not the only implausible aspect of his comments. He described the appeals court as “Highly Partisan,” implying that its reasoning was driven by political affiliation, and said the majority was “a Radical Left group of judges,” implying that the result was dictated by ideology rather than a careful consideration of the facts and the law. Trump reflexively criticizes judges who rule against him in language like this, to the point that he has stripped ideological labels of all meaning. In this case, his complaints are especially hard to take seriously.

    The Federal Circuit’s tariff decision addressed two lawsuits, one brought by several businesses and one filed by a dozen states. Both sets of plaintiffs argued that Trump exceeded his statutory authority when he relied on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose stiff taxes on imports from scores of countries.

    Seven members of the 11-judge panel agreed. And while it is true that six of those judges were appointed by Democratic presidents (Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden), the majority also included Alan D. Lourie, who was nominated by George H.W. Bush in 1990. Notably, Lourie was also one of four judges who went further than the majority, arguing that IEEPA “does not authorize the President to impose any tariffs” (emphasis added).

    Four judges dissented, saying the plaintiffs “have not justified summary judgment in their favor on either statutory or constitutional grounds.” Two of the dissenters were appointed by George W. Bush, and two were appointed by Obama.

    These breakdowns do not support Trump’s contention that the judges chose sides based on partisan considerations, as opposed to an honest assessment of the statutory and constitutional issues. That explanation looks even less plausible as applied to the May 28 Court of International Trade (CIT) decision that the Federal Circuit reviewed. Three CIT judges, including one nominated by Ronald Reagan and one nominated by Trump himself, unanimously concluded that the president’s tariffs were not authorized by IEEPA.

    When you consider the reasoning underlying these decisions, the claim that they can be explained only by anti-Trump animus or allegiance to a “Radical Left” ideology looks even sillier. Both courts noted that Trump’s use of IEEPA, which does not mention tariffs at all, was unprecedented and involved an assertion of authority that implicated the “major questions” doctrine, which aims to uphold the separation of powers.

    According to the Supreme Court, that doctrine applies when the executive branch asserts powers of vast “economic and political significance.” In such cases, “the Government must point to ‘clear congressional authorization’ for that asserted power,” the Federal Circuit noted. “The tariffs at issue in this case implicate the concerns animating the major questions doctrine as they are both ‘unheralded’ and ‘transformative.’” The Supreme Court “has explained that where the Government has ‘never previously claimed powers of this magnitude,’ the major questions doctrine may be implicated.”

    Trump claimed to have discovered a heretofore unnoticed delegation of unlimited tariff authority in a statute that is nearly half a century old. That claim, the Federal Circuit concluded, “runs afoul of the major questions doctrine.”

    Far from the invention of “Radical Left” judges, the major questions doctrine stems from a series of Supreme Court decisions spearheaded by conservative justices. The late Antonin Scalia, whom Trump has described as the very model of a “great” jurist, explained the rationale for the doctrine this way in the 2001 case Whitman v. American Trucking Associations: “Congress, we have held, does not alter the fundamental details of a regulatory scheme in vague terms or ancillary provisions—it does not, one might say, hide elephants in mouseholes.”

    The Supreme Court has applied that logic in several decisions rejecting assertions of agency authority, including the Food and Drug Administration’s attempt to regulate tobacco products without explicit congressional authorization, the national eviction moratorium imposed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the COVID-19 vaccine mandate that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration tried to impose on employers in 2021, and the Biden administration’s student debt relief plan. Whatever you might think of those decisions, they are hardly evidence of a “Radical Left” mindset.

    As in those cases, the central question in the tariff case was whether Congress had actually delegated the broad powers claimed by the executive branch. Another issue was whether Congress could, consistent with the Constitution’s separation of powers, delegate such authority. In addition to concluding that IEEPA did not authorize Trump’s tariffs, the Federal Circuit noted that “the Government’s understanding of the scope of authority granted by IEEPA would render it an unconstitutional delegation.”

    The rationale for that ruling is not, by any stretch of the imagination, the product of “Radical Left” thinking. It is conservative in the best sense, aiming to preserve the structure of government established by the Constitution.

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    Jacob Sullum

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  • The federal circuit’s tariff ruling highlights the audacity of Trump’s power grab

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    In ruling against the sweeping tariffs that President Donald Trump purported to impose under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit did not settle the question of whether that law authorizes import taxes. Nor did it uphold the injunction that the Court of International Trade (CIT) issued against the tariffs on May 28. But the Federal Circuit agreed with the CIT that the tariffs are unlawful, and its reasoning highlights the audacity of Trump’s claim that IEEPA empowers him to completely rewrite tariff schedules approved by Congress.

    The decision addresses two challenges to Trump’s tariffs, one brought by several businesses and one filed by a dozen states. Both sets of plaintiffs argued that Trump had illegally seized powers that belong to Congress.

    The Constitution gives Congress, not the president, the power to “lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises.” And although Congress has delegated that authority to the president in “numerous statutes,” the Federal Circuit notes in an unsigned opinion joined by seven members of an 11-judge panel, it has always “used clear and precise terms” to do so, “reciting the term ‘duties’ or one of its synonyms.” Furthermore, Congress always has imposed “well-defined procedural and substantive limitations” on the president’s tariff powers.

    IEEPA, by contrast, “neither mentions tariffs (or any of its synonyms) nor has procedural safeguards that contain clear limits on the President’s power to impose tariffs.” Yet under Trump’s reading of the statute, it empowers him to impose any tariffs he wants against any country he chooses for as long as he deems appropriate, provided he perceives an “unusual and extraordinary threat” that constitutes a “national emergency” and avers that the import taxes will “deal with” that threat.

    To justify his tariffs, Trump declared two supposed emergencies, one involving international drug smuggling and the other involving the U.S. trade deficit. The former “emergency,” he said, justified punitive tariffs on goods from Mexico, Canada, and China, with the aim of encouraging greater cooperation in the war on drugs. The latter “emergency,” he claimed, justified hefty, ever-shifting taxes on imports from dozens of countries, which he implausibly described as “reciprocal.”

    Leaving aside the question of whether it makes sense to characterize drug trafficking and trade imbalances, both of which are longstanding phenomena, as “unusual and extraordinary” threats, Trump’s attempted power grab is striking even for him. “Since IEEPA was promulgated almost fifty years ago, past presidents have invoked IEEPA frequently,” the Federal Circuit notes. “But not once before has a President asserted his authority under IEEPA to impose tariffs on imports or adjust the rates thereof. Rather, presidents have typically invoked IEEPA to restrict financial transactions with specific countries or entities that the President has determined pose an acute threat to the country’s interests.”

    Trump claims to have discovered a heretofore unnoticed tariff power in an IEEPA provision that authorizes the president to “regulate…importation.” And that power, he avers, is not subject to any “procedural and substantive limitations” except for the pro forma requirement that he declare a national emergency based on a foreign threat. As the Federal Circuit dryly observes, “it seems unlikely that Congress intended, in enacting IEEPA, to depart from its past practice and grant the President unlimited authority to impose tariffs.”

    Trump’s assertion of that authority “runs afoul of the major questions doctrine,” the Federal Circuit says. According to the Supreme Court, that doctrine applies when the executive branch asserts powers of vast “economic and political significance.” In such cases, “the Government must point to ‘clear congressional authorization’ for that asserted power,” the appeals court notes. “The tariffs at issue in this case implicate the concerns animating the major questions doctrine as they are both ‘unheralded’ and ‘transformative.’” The Supreme Court “has explained that where the Government has ‘never previously claimed powers of this magnitude,’ the major questions doctrine may be implicated.”

    The Federal Circuit was unimpressed by the government’s citation of United States v. Yoshida International, a 1975 case in which the now-defunct Court of Customs and Patent Appeals approved a 10 percent import surcharge that President Richard Nixon had briefly imposed in 1971 under the Trading With the Enemy Act (TWEA). Although Nixon relied on a different statute, the government’s lawyers noted, the court concluded that the phrase “regulate importation” in TWEA encompassed tariffs.

    Even assuming that conclusion was correct, the Federal Circuit says, Yoshida “does not hold that TWEA created unlimited authority in the President to revise the tariff schedule, but only the limited temporary authority to impose tariffs that would not exceed the Congressionally approved tariff rates.” Trump, by contrast, claims IEEPA gives him carte blanche to set tariffs, regardless of what Congress has said.

    “The Government’s expansive interpretation of ‘regulate’ is not supported by the plain text of IEEPA,” the Federal Circuit says. “The Government’s reliance on the ratification of our predecessor court’s opinion in [Yoshida] does not overcome this plain meaning.” The appeals court adds that “the Government’s understanding of the scope of authority granted by IEEPA would render it an unconstitutional delegation.”

    Four judges agreed with the majority that IEEPA “does not grant the President authority to impose the type of tariffs imposed by the Executive Orders.” But they went further in a separate opinion, arguing that the statute does not authorize the president to impose any tariffs at all.

    As Reason‘s Eric Boehm notes, the appeals court nevertheless vacated the CIT’s injunction and remanded the case for further consideration in light of the Supreme Court’s June 27 decision in Trump v. CASA. In that June 27 ruling, the Court questioned universal injunctions that judges had issued in two birthright citizenship cases “to the extent that the injunctions are broader than necessary to provide complete relief to each plaintiff with standing to sue.”

    Although the Supreme Court “held that the universal injunctions at issue ‘likely exceed the equitable authority Congress has granted to federal courts,’” the Federal Circuit notes, “it ‘decline[d] to take up…in the first instance’ arguments as to the permissible scope of injunctive relief. Instead, it instructed ‘[t]he lower courts [to] move expeditiously to ensure that, with respect to each plaintiff, the injunctions comport with this rule and otherwise comply with principles of equity’ as outlined in the opinion. We will follow this same practice.”

    On remand, the Federal Circuit says, “the CIT should consider in the first instance whether its grant of a universal injunction comports with the standards outlined by the Supreme Court in CASA.” The CIT, in other words, is tasked with deciding what sort of order is appropriate to grant the plaintiffs “complete relief.” Alternatively, as Boehm suggests, Congress could intervene by asserting the tariff authority that Trump is trying to usurp.

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    Jacob Sullum

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