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Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs may be able to survive a legal challenge, thanks in part to a Japanese zipper company that sued the Nixon administration 50 years ago.
A federal judge agreed with Presidend Donald Trump’s assertion that he can use a 1970s law to unilaterally impose sweeping tariffs on other countries' goods.
President Donald Trump's bid to bring manufacturing of Apple's iPhone to the United States faces many legal and economic ...
Twelve states have urged a federal court to annul President Trump's tariffs on imports, arguing they are unlawful and ...
WASHINGTON — Twelve states on Wednesday urged a federal court to strike down President Donald Trump's sweeping taxes on ...
U.S. President Donald Trump's global trade war is an "illegal and abusive" use of power, said a lawyer representing small ...
Lawyers for Oregon and 11 states attorneys general argued no relationship exists between “extraordinary” threats Trump wants ...
President Trump's initiative to relocate iPhone manufacturing to the U.S. using tariffs faces significant legal hurdles and ...
The Oregon Department of Justice argued against federal tariffs at the U.S. Court of International Trade, raising concerns ...
The US president has imposed and modified tariffs on key trading partners such as China, Canada, Mexico, and the European Union over the last ...
"It may be a very dandy plan, but it has to meet the statute," the judge appointed by Ronald Reagan told the DOJ lawyer.
A lawsuit co-led by Oregon challenging four executive orders on tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump had its first hearing May 21 in the U.S. Court of International Trade.