WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on most countries around the world can remain in place while a federal appeals court decides on their future.

The U.S. Court of International Trade ruled the duties were unlawful last month.

The lower court ruled that Trump’s use of an emergency powers law to impose his “Liberation Day” reciprocal tariffs exceeded his authority and his fentanyl-related tariffs against Canada didn’t target the issue. Read More

As his trade war faces legal pushback, Trump has other tariff tools he could deploy

LILLEY: Mark Carney offers words – Pierre Poilievre's words – but we need action

The decision blocked the devastating duties but the Trump administration filed emergency motion to stay the trade court’s ruling soon after.

The U.S. Court of Appea

See Full Page