US court invalidates Donald Trump's 10% temporary tariffs

The US Court of International Trade ruled on Thursday that the 10% temporary tariffs imposed by Donald Trump in February are illegal.

The court found that the government could not rely on a 1974 trade balancing law to impose the broad surtaxes. The decision was made by a two-to-one majority of judges.

The three plaintiff companies are now exempt from the duties. The US government must repay the amounts collected over the past two months, plus interest.

The ruling, which can be appealed, currently applies only to the three companies involved. It sets a legal precedent that could allow other firms to challenge the measures.

This marks another setback for Donald Trump, who has made tariffs central to his policy since returning to the White House in early 2025.

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Illustration depicting new U.S. tariffs on imported metals and pharmaceuticals under Trump administration.
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Trump administration adjusts metal tariffs, imposes 100% pharmaceutical duty

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The Donald Trump administration announced on April 2 that it will impose 50 percent tariffs on imported steel, aluminum and copper based on the full value paid by U.S. customers. It also adjusted tariffs on derivative metal products and introduced a 100 percent duty on patented pharmaceuticals not made in the U.S. South Korea and others are exempt from the pharmaceutical tariff.

United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said the administration is pursuing new tariffs through ongoing investigations into unfair trading practices across more than 70 countries. The move follows Supreme Court and court rulings that blocked earlier broad tariff powers.

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An Ohio entrepreneur who imports sneaker accessories is trying to recover roughly $25,000 in duties after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in February that President Donald Trump’s broad “emergency” tariffs were not authorized under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. U.S. Customs and Border Protection opened an online claims system on April 20, but trade attorneys and policy analysts say the process remains paperwork-heavy and could leave some refund money unclaimed.

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