Trump Endorses Sanctioning Russia Act 2025 as Supreme Court Tariff Case Looms

Following the bipartisan introduction of the 'Sanctioning Russia Act 2025' last week, Senator Lindsey Graham announced President Trump's approval of the bill via social media. It proposes 500% tariffs on goods from countries buying Russian energy products, threatening India's $85 billion annual US exports amid existing trade tensions and an impending Supreme Court ruling on tariffs.

On January 8, 2026—a day before the US Supreme Court is scheduled to rule on the Trump administration's use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) for global tariffs, including 50% on India—Republican Senator Lindsey Graham posted that President Donald Trump has greenlit the 'Russia sanctions bill.'

Building on the bill drafted with Senator Richard Blumenthal and backed after a White House meeting, the legislation imposes 500% tariffs on imports from countries knowingly trading in Russian-origin uranium and petroleum products. It also targets Russian President Vladimir Putin and select military commanders with restrictions, while slapping 500% tariffs on Russian products entering the US. This approach circumvents IEEPA legal challenges, where three lower courts have ruled against the administration.

India, without a US trade deal, faces the severest blow. It already suffers 50% US tariffs on labor-intensive sectors like textiles, footwear, and marine products. Experts predict 500% tariffs—potentially covering currently exempt electronics and pharmaceuticals—would halt India's $85 billion goods exports to the US. Unlike China's diversified portfolio, India's reliance on less tech-intensive goods leaves it exposed, undermining trade talks with the EU and ASEAN. Investments are stalling, per a Bank of America report, with the RBI selling $65 billion in reserves and the rupee down 7% amid tensions.

While recent data showed some Indian export resilience (e.g., telecom surges), the bill's escalation risks broader disruptions.

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President Donald Trump announced on February 21, 2026, that he would increase global tariffs from 10% to 15%, following a U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down his previous tariffs. The court ruled 6-3 that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorize such broad import taxes. The move comes amid divided reactions from Republicans and potential refunds of billions in collected duties.

The US Senate is set to vote next week on the 'Sanctioning Russia Act 2025', which could impose up to 500% tariffs on countries buying energy from Russia, including India. The bill aims to increase economic pressure on Russia amid the Ukraine war. India, reliant on discounted Russian crude oil, faces potential trade disruptions.

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Following the US Supreme Court's ruling against President Trump's IEEPA tariffs, his subsequent 15% global tariffs under alternative authority provide India new leverage in US trade talks, potentially aligning with its India-EU FTA ambitions.

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The US Supreme Court has ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) does not authorize the President to impose tariffs. This decision eliminates the reciprocal tariffs imposed so far, but it is not a reversal of US trade policy. For India, the importance of recent trade deals has increased.

In the India Today-CVoter Mood of the Nation survey, 45 percent of respondents called for reciprocal tariffs in response to US tariffs. The poll, conducted from December 8, 2025, to January 21, 2026, involved 36,265 people across demographics. India has handled the issue with restraint so far.

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Japan and other Asian trading partners are evaluating the fallout from U.S. President Donald Trump's new 15% global tariff, imposed under a different law hours after the Supreme Court invalidated his prior levies, as part of broader international reactions including Europe's coordinated response.

 

 

 

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