Federal Circuit Declares Trump Tariffs Unlawful, Affirming Consumer Watchdog's Constitutional Concerns
23 hours ago
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled today that the Trump administration's use of emergency powers to impose tariffs exceeded the limits of federal law. The decision marks a pivotal moment in the ongoing legal effort to restore constitutional checks and balances to presidential trade actions—and echoes key arguments raised by Consumer Watchdog in its amicus brief in V.O.S. Selections, Inc. v. Trump.
In a significant per curiam opinion with a 7-4 majority, the court concluded:
The Court further held that the President's orders were "invalid as contrary to law" (id.), and emphasized that the power to impose tariffs or taxes lies firmly with Congress:
The ruling highlights the sweeping economic consequences of the government's theory. The Court noted:
"This is an important decision for both constitutional accountability and economic fairness," said William Pletcher, litigation director at Consumer Watchdog. "The Court properly rejected the idea that any president can bypass Congress and impose tariffs at will under the banner of emergency powers."
The Court declined, however, to extend the preliminary injunction that had temporarily halted enforcement of the tariffs. It remanded that issue for further consideration under new standards announced by the U.S. Supreme Court:
While the ruling strikes a clear legal blow to unchecked executive tariff authority, the court declined to extend the injunction that had temporarily blocked the tariffs in this case. As a result, the unlawful measures technically remain in effect unless further judicial or administrative action follows.
"This ruling affirms the legal limits on executive power, but the impact on consumers and businesses continues," said Pletcher. "The court made clear that these tariffs go beyond what the law allows, but without ongoing relief, families and businesses are still feeling the weight of tariffs the Court has now declared unlawful. We'll continue pushing to ensure this legal victory has real-world consequences, so consumers get relief from these tariffs. This decision lays essential groundwork, but the work isn't done."
Consumer Watchdog has filed similar amicus briefs in the Ninth and D.C. Circuits challenging the misuse of emergency economic powers to impose domestic economic penalties—including tariffs—without congressional approval or public accountability. The organization argues that such actions amount to a regressive, opaque tax regime imposed beyond what the Constitution allows.
Read the briefs here and here.
Consumer Watchdog is represented by Alan Morrison, Lerner Family Associate Dean at George Washington University Law School, and attorneys from Morris, Manning & Martin LLP.
Read the court's opinion here.
More on Consumer Watchdog's efforts to protect consumers from unauthorized tariffs: https://consumerwatchdog.org/tag/tariffs
Contact: Will Pletcher, (310) 392-2632; [email protected]
SOURCE Consumer Watchdog
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