WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s power to unilaterally impose far-reaching tariffs is coming before the Supreme Court on Wednesday in a pivotal test of executive power with trillion-dollar implications for the global economy.
The Republican administration is trying to defend the tariffs central to Trump’s economic agenda after lower courts ruled the emergency law he invoked doesn’t give him near-limitless power to set and change duties on imports.
Read more: • How the U.S. Supreme Court’s tariff decision could impact Canada • B.C. forestry summit called as industry being hammered by U.S. fees • Carney asked Ford ‘a couple of times’ to pull anti-tariff ad, premier says
The Constitution says Congress has the power to levy tariffs. But the Trump administration argues that i

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