2025-11-06 00:00:00 Presiden Donald Trump, yang telah menyatakan bahwa masalah ini adalah masalah âHIDUP ATAU KEMATIAN,â memilih untuk tidak menghadiri sidang Mahkamah Agung pada hari Rabu mengenai tarif miliaran dolar yang dikenakannya, namun pengacaranya menyampaikan kasus tersebut dengan cara yang sama beraninya.
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Follow President Donald Trump, who has declared it a matter of âLIFE OR DEATH,â opted against attending Wednesdayâs Supreme Court hearing over his billion-dollar tariffs, but his lawyer presented the case in similarly audacious terms.
âPresident Trump determined that our exploding trade deficits had brought us to the brink of an economic and national security catastrophe,â US Solicitor General D.
John Sauer said, layering his arguments with warnings about the âruthless trade retaliationâ and âruinous economic and national security consequencesâ Americans would face if the court struck down Trumpâs tariffs.
Sauer exhibited his usual rapid-paced, overconfident style at the courtroom lectern as he seemed to channel Trump.
He faced considerable skepticism from justices for his assertion of unilateral tariff power, yet key justices also poked holes in the challengersâ arguments.
At the end of nearly three hours of intense argument â in which Sauer was twice encouraged to slow down â the case appeared close.
Lower courts have ruled against Trump, and the momentum remains with the challengers: a New York-based wine importer, Illinois educational-toy maker and a group of states.
All three of the liberal justices (Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson) looked ready to strike down the sweeping tariffs, and three of the six conservatives voiced reservations.
Yet Sauer has previously pulled out surprising results, as in 2024 when, serving then as Trumpâs personal lawyer, he won him substantial immunity from criminal prosecution.
Related article Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts, left, and former Chief Justice of the United States William Rehnquist.
Reuters William Rehnquist, his clerk John Roberts and the Supreme Court precedent at the center of Trumpâs tariffs case Whatever the majority view when the justices left the elevated bench Wednesday, important negotiations and their own internal advocacy will now occur behind closed doors.
If past practice holds, the nine justices will vote on Friday in a small room off the chambers of Chief Justice John Roberts and then begin drafting opinions, a process likely to take weeks.
Roberts, who is apt to want to write the opinion for the court in a case of this magnitude, sent conflicting signals.
At the outset, he questioned Sauerâs interpretation of a 1981 case the administration has highlighted and likened the imposition of tariffs to the regulation of taxes, âcoreâ powers of Congress under the Constitution.
But Roberts also undercut part of lawyer Neal Katyalâs arguments on behalf of the small businesses suing the administration for the tariffs that have brought the US Treasury an estimated $90 billion while upending global markets and, in the US, hiking costs for businesses and hurting consumers.
âThe tariffs are a tax, and thatâs a core power of Congress.
But theyâre a foreign-facing tax, right?
And foreign affairs is a core power of the executive,â Roberts told Katyal.
âAnd I donât think you can dismiss the consequences.â Roberts also observed that the tariffs, which the justices allowed to remain in effect as the litigation continued, have proved their usefulness to Trump in foreign affairs.
âOne thing is quite clear, is that the foreign-facing tariffs ⦠were quite effective in achieving a particular objective,â Roberts said.
âI donât think you can just separate it.
When you say, âWell, this is a tax, Congressâ power,â it implicates very directly the presidentâs foreign affairs power.â Related video AP/Getty Images video Hear key question from Chief Justice John Roberts about Trumpâs tariffs Justice Amy Coney Barrett, another of the skeptical conservatives who could be a decisive vote against Trump, suggested at points that she was inclined to find the administration had exceeded its authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
IEEPA, as the 1977 law is known, has previously been used to impose economic penalties but has never been used for tariffs.
By its text, the law authorizes the president to âregulate ⦠importationâ of goods to deal with a national emergency arising from an âunusual and extraordinary threatâ to the national security, foreign policy or economy of the US.
âCan you point to any place in the code â or any other time in history â where that phrase, together âregulate importationâ has been used to confer tariff imposing authority?â Barrett asked Sauer.
He offered several examples, but Barrett sounded unconvinced; she remarked, âNone of those cases talked about it as conferring tariff authority.â Yet, like Roberts, she expressed doubts about some of Katyalâs claims.
She homed in on the potential difficulty of unwinding the billions of dollars collected under potentially invalid tariffs.
âIf you win, tell me how the reimbursement process would work.
Would it be a complete mess?â Barrett said, adding, âIt seems to me like it could be a mess.â The presidentâs voice in the courtroom At the lectern in the well of the courtroom, Sauer wears the traditional somber gray morning coat but cuts a pugnacious figure.
He has a distinctive gravelly voice and a forceful style, gesturing with both hands, leaning in, his shoulders rising as he speaks.
A former college wrestling champion (at Duke University), he also was a Rhodes scholar and attended Harvard law school before serving as a clerk to the late Justice Antonin Scalia.
In Sauerâs arguments, it is often difficult to draw a line between policy declarations and legal reasoning.
Before the dispute reached the justices, Sauer sent a letter to a US appeals court asking that the tariffs remain in place during the litigation, mimicking one of the presidentâs oft-used rhetorical phrases.
âOne year ago, the United States was a dead country, and now, because of the trillions of dollars being paid by countries that have so badly abused us, America is a strong, financially viable, and respected country again,â Sauer wrote.
A few weeks later, as he appealed the case to the Supreme Court, Sauer attributed that âdead countryâ declaration to Trump.
Sauer, who will turn 51 next week, has been in sync with Trump since he began defending him in late 2023 during Trumpâs personal battle against charges brought by special counsel Jack Smith.
Trump was accused of election fraud, conspiracy and other offenses in protest of the valid results that gave the 2020 presidential election to Joe Biden.
Sauer persuaded the Supreme Court to give Trump substantial immunity, and the case never went to trial.
After Trump won reelection, one year ago Wednesday, he named Sauer to the prestigious post of US solicitor general, the federal governmentâs top lawyer before the Supreme Court.
Sauer has already argued at the high court on behalf of the administration, but Wednesdayâs hearing over the centerpiece of Trumpâs economic agenda marks the most important appearance to date of Trumpâs second term.
In his written brief and as he began in person on Wednesday, Sauer leaned heavily on a 1981 case, Dames & Moore v.
Regan, in which the justices upheld President Jimmy Carterâs reliance on IEEPA to use frozen Iranian assets as a âbargaining chipâ to win the release of 52 American hostages.
âIn Dames & Moore against Regan, this Court held that IEEPAâs sweeping and unqualified language grants the Presidentâs actions the strongest presumption of validity and the widest latitude of judicial interpretation,â Sauer said.
That Dames & Moore decision was written by then-Justice William Rehnquist in a session when Roberts happened to be a law clerk to Rehnquist.
And the chief justice seemed eager to set Sauer straight on the limited reach of the case.
âCounsel, you â youâve already mentioned Dames & Moore three times, which surprises me a little because the court in Dames & Moore went out of its way to say that it was issuing a very narrow decision it pretty much expected to apply only in this case,â Roberts said, going on to list a few choice phrases from the decision explaining exactly that.
âMaybe I can put it this way,â Sauer rejoined.
âWe donât dispute that Dames & Moore is, as you state, a narrow opinion.
However, it addressed certain principles that we think are equally applicable here.â Among those principles, Sauer argued, is that the presidentâs IEEPA power is vast, and that actions in the realm of foreign affairs should be presumed valid.
What is a real crisis, anyway?
Justices on the left and right questioned the administrationâs assertion of an emergency arising from an âunusual and extraordinaryâ threat, since trade deficits have existed for decades and no other president has sought to impose tariffs under the IEEPA.
Justice Neil Gorsuch, the third conservative who sounded dubious of Sauerâs positions, queried how far the Trump view of a threat could take the administration.
And he did it with a hypothetical that, first, induced Sauer to try to find common ground with Gorsuch.
âCould the President impose a 50-percent tariff on gas-powered cars and auto parts to deal with the unusual and extraordinary threat from abroad of climate change?â asked Gorsuch, raising a scenario that could occur with an administration with progressive priorities.
Responded Sauer, âItâs very likely that that could be done, very likely.â âI think that has to be the logic of your view,â Gorsuch said.
But then Sauer, hewing once more to Trump policy, interjected: âI mean, obviously, this administration would say thatâs a hoax, not a real crisis.â Gorsuchâs retort: âIâm sure you would.â Supreme Court Donald Trump Tariffs Supreme Court justices See all topics Facebook Tweet Email Link Link Copied!
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