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    HomeAmericaSupreme Court plans rulings for January 14 as Trump's tariffs remain undecided

    Supreme Court plans rulings for January 14 as Trump’s tariffs remain undecided

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    By Andrew Chung

    WASHINGTON, Jan 9 (Reuters) - ​The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to issue its next rulings on January 14 as several major cases remain pending including the legality of President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs. 

    The court indicated on ⁠its website on Friday that it could release decisions in argued cases when the justices take the bench during a scheduled sitting next Wednesday. The court does not announce in advance what cases will ‍be decided.

    The justices issued one ruling on Friday in a criminal case. 

    The challenge to Trump's tariffs marks a major test ​of presidential powers as well as of the court's willingness to check some of the Republican president's far-reaching assertions of authority since he returned to office in January 2025. The outcome will also impact the global ​economy. 

    During arguments in the case heard by the court on November 5, conservative and liberal justices appeared to cast doubt on the legality of the tariffs, which Trump imposed by invoking a 1977 law meant for use during national emergencies. Trump's administration is appealing rulings by lower courts that he overstepped his authority. 

    Trump has said tariffs have made the United States stronger financially. In a social ‌media post on January 2, Trump said a Supreme Court ruling against the tariffs would be a "terrible ‌blow" to the United States. 

    Trump invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose so-called "reciprocal" tariffs on goods imported from individual countries - nearly ​every foreign trading partner - to address what he called a national emergency related to U.S. trade deficits. He invoked the same law to impose tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico, citing the trafficking ‌of the often-abused painkiller fentanyl and illicit drugs into the United States as a national emergency.

    The challenges to the ⁠tariffs in the cases before the Supreme Court were brought by businesses affected by ‌the tariffs and 12 U.S. states, most of them ​Democratic-governed. 

    Other important cases are also awaiting rulings at the court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, including a challenge to a key section of the Voting Rights Act, the landmark 1965 federal law enacted by ⁠Congress to prevent racial discrimination in ⁠voting. 

    Another involves a challenge on free speech grounds to a Colorado law banning psychotherapists from conducting "conversion therapy" ​that aims to change an LGBT minor's sexual orientation or gender identity. 

    (Reporting by Andrew Chung and John Kruzel in Washington; Additional reporting by David ‌Lawder and Jan Wolfe; Editing by Will Dunham)

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