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News

24 States Challenge Trump’s New Global Tariffs After Supreme Court Strikes Down Predecessor

By Matthias Binder March 5, 2026
Nevada and 19 other states sue over new global tariffs Trump imposed after Supreme Court loss
Nevada and 19 other states sue over new global tariffs Trump imposed after Supreme Court loss (Featured Image)
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Nevada and 19 other states sue over new global tariffs Trump imposed after Supreme Court loss

Contents
Supreme Court Ruling Sparks Tariff PivotMultistate Coalition Files SuitClashing Legal Arguments EmergeBroader Economic Stakes and Nevada Angle

Supreme Court Ruling Sparks Tariff Pivot (Image Credits: Pixabay)

A coalition of more than 20 states, including Nevada, launched a federal lawsuit on Thursday against President Donald Trump’s latest round of worldwide import duties, imposed shortly after the Supreme Court invalidated his prior tariff regime.[1][2]

Supreme Court Ruling Sparks Tariff Pivot

The U.S. Supreme Court delivered a major setback to the administration on February 20, ruling 6-3 that sweeping tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act exceeded presidential authority.[3] Justices determined the 1977 law did not authorize such taxes, applying the major questions doctrine to limit executive overreach on core congressional powers like taxation.[3]

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Four days later, Trump invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, an unused provision allowing up to 15% tariffs for five months to address balance-of-payments deficits.[1] Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant announced plans to raise initial 10% levies to the full 15% limit that week, targeting much of the world’s goods to combat trade imbalances.[1]

Critics highlighted the administration’s earlier stance: its Justice Department had argued Section 122 lacked application to trade deficits, viewing them as distinct from payments issues tied to the bygone gold standard era.[1]

Multistate Coalition Files Suit

Attorneys general from Oregon, Arizona, California, and New York spearheaded the complaint in the U.S. Court of International Trade in New York, joined by counterparts from Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin, plus governors of Kentucky and Pennsylvania.[1][4]

Nevada’s attorney general aligned with these Democratic-led offices, many of which had previously prevailed against the IEEPA tariffs.[1] The suit arrived one day after a judge ordered refunds for businesses hit by the old duties, amplifying calls for restraint.

Clashing Legal Arguments Emerge

Plaintiffs contended Section 122 applied only to narrow crises, not broad trade deficit remedies, rendering it obsolete without the dollar-gold link of past decades.[1] They cited a New York Federal Reserve study showing Americans shouldered nearly all prior tariff costs, averaging $1,200 annually per household.[1]

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  • Oregon AG Dan Rayfield: “The focus right now should be on paying people back, not doubling down on illegal tariffs.”[1]
  • Arizona AG Kris Mayes: “That is money out of the pockets of American families trying to buy groceries, pay rent and keep their small businesses afloat.”[1]

The White House countered that Trump acted within congressional bounds to tackle deficits. Spokesman Kush Desai affirmed: “The Administration will vigorously defend the President’s action in court.”[1]

Broader Economic Stakes and Nevada Angle

Legal experts offered mixed views. Peter Harrell of Georgetown University noted courts might grant more deference under Section 122 than IEEPA.[2] Surviving tariffs from Trump’s first term under Section 301 persist, underscoring varied presidential tools.

While Nevada-specific harms remained unspecified, the state joined amid warnings of higher costs for imports vital to businesses statewide. Oregon alone imported $28 billion in goods last year, with small firms like chocolate makers facing ingredient price hikes.[4]

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Tariff Authority Key Features Status
IEEPA (1977) Emergency powers for national security threats Struck down Feb. 20, 2026
Section 122 (1974 Trade Act) 15% tariffs for 5 months on payments deficits Now challenged
Key Takeaways
  • Supreme Court limited IEEPA, prompting Section 122 use.
  • 24 states argue misuse raises consumer costs without congressional input.
  • Case tests executive trade powers amid refund battles.

This escalating legal battle underscores tensions over trade policy’s constitutional bounds, with consumers potentially footing the bill. What impacts do you foresee for your state? Share in the comments.

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