Trump Implements New 10% Global Tariff Following Supreme Court Ruling

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Arabic version: ترامب يفرض تعريفة عالمية جديدة بنسبة 10% بعد حكم المحكمة العليا

US President Donald Trump’s new global tariffs have come into effect at 10% after the Supreme Court blocked many of his sweeping import taxes on Friday. Just hours after last week’s ruling, the president signed an executive order to impose the new levy from 24 February.

According to BBC News, Trump has threatened to raise the tariff to 15%, but has not yet issued an official directive to increase the rate. The administration is applying the levy under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows the president to impose the charge for 150 days without congressional approval.

The executive order said the temporary import duty was intended to “address fundamental international payments problems and continue the Administration’s work to rebalance our trade relationships to benefit American workers, farmers, and manufacturers”. Trump has argued that tariffs are necessary to reduce America’s trade deficit – the amount by which imports exceed exports. But the deficit reached a fresh high last week, widening by 2.1% compared to 2024 and hitting roughly $1.2 trillion (£890bn).

The Supreme Court’s decision, which was a 6-3 ruling, found that Trump had overstepped his powers when he introduced sweeping global tariffs last year using the IEEPA. Following this ruling, Trump expressed his discontent, calling it “ridiculous, poorly written, and extraordinarily anti-American”. In response to the ruling, he warned of potential higher tariffs on countries that “play games” with recent trade deals.

Countries around the world are now evaluating what tariffs and trade deals would stand following the decision. The UK said no reciprocal action was “off the table” if the US did not honour its tariff deal with the UK, but added that “no one wants a trade war”. The European Union said it would suspend its ratification of a deal struck over the summer. India also said it would defer previously scheduled talks to finalise a recent agreement.

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