Saturday, February 21, 2026

Trump Raises Global Tariff Rate to 15% After Supreme Court Ruling

Trump Raises Global Tariff Rate to 15% After Supreme Court Ruling 
 
 
 

The court ruled Friday that the president's sweeping IEEPA tariffs were illegal.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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What to Know

President Donald Trump is instituting a 15% global tariff rate on imports coming into the U.S. The rate is higher than the 10% baseline rate announced Friday after the Supreme Court ruled against the tariffs that Trump imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Those levies, seen as critical to his economic agenda, had been knocked down by a lower court.

The White House has said that the 15% tariff rate is temporary, and that the administration plans to use different legal authorities to continue the president’s tariff regime. Until then, trade deals struck with other countries in response to the IEEPA tariffs are essentially nullified. 

Trump Reveals What He Will Do Next With Nations After Imposing 15% Global  Tariffs | US News - Times Now 

Trump Raises New Global Tariff to 15% ---- Beginning New Chapter of Economic Uncertainty

Trump raises worldwide tariffs from 10% to 15% in less than 24 hours!!!
On February 21, 2026, President Donald Trump announced he is raising a new global tariff to 15%, effective immediately. 
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This decision comes less than 24 hours after he initially proposed a 10% rate in response to a major legal setback from the U.S. Supreme Court
Trump’s new strategy consists of a one-two punch of replacement tariffs. 
1 First, the 15 percent global import tax, which legally is valid for just 150 days. 
2 Second, a flurry of new national security tariffs on individual industries and country-specific levies designed to combat alleged unfair trading practices. 
 
Key Details of the Announcement
  • Legal Basis: The 15% tariff is being imposed under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, a never-before-used provision that allows the president to address "large and serious balance-of-payment deficits".
  • Duration: This authority is temporary, lasting for a maximum of 150 days unless Congress authorizes an extension.
  • Scope: The tariff applies to nearly all imports from all countries, though specific exemptions include goods from Canada and Mexico (under USMCA), as well as certain pharmaceuticals, electronics, and agricultural products like beef.
  • Effective Date: The new global tariff regime is scheduled to take effect at 12:01 a.m. on Tuesday, February 24, 2026.

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Key Details of the Announcement
  • Legal Basis: The 15% tariff is being imposed under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, a never-before-used provision that allows the president to address "large and serious balance-of-payment deficits".
  • Duration: This authority is temporary, lasting for a maximum of 150 days unless Congress authorizes an extension.
  • Scope: The tariff applies to nearly all imports from all countries, though specific exemptions include goods from Canada and Mexico (under USMCA), as well as certain pharmaceuticals, electronics, and agricultural products like beef.
  • Effective Date: The new global tariff regime is scheduled to take effect at 12:01 a.m. on Tuesday, February 24, 2026.

Trump says he’ll raise tariffs to 15% after Supreme Court ruling

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On February 21, 2026, President
Donald Trump announced he is raising a new global tariff to 15%, effective immediately.
This decision comes less than 24 hours after he initially proposed a 10% rate in response to a major legal setback from the U.S. Supreme Court.

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Saturday that he wants a global tariff of 15%, up from 10% he had announced a day earlier after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down many of the far-reaching taxes on imports that he had imposed over the last year. 

After the Supreme Court decision, Trump made an unusually personal attack on the justices who ruled against him in a 6-3 vote, including two of those he appointed during his first term, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett. Trump, at a news conference on Friday, said that the situation is “an embarrassment to their families.”

He was still seething Friday night, posting on social media complaining about Gorsuch, Coney Barrett and Chief Justice John Roberts, who ruled with the majority and wrote the majority opinion. On Saturday morning, Trump issued another post declaring that his “new hero” was Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who wrote a 63-page dissent. He also praised Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, who were in the minority, and said of the three dissenting justices: “There is no doubt in anyone’s mind that they want to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

Trump’s announcement on social media was the latest sign that despite the court’s check on his powers, the Republican president still intends to ratchet up tariffs in an unpredictable way.  
Tariffs have been his favorite tool for rewriting the rules of global commerce and applying international pressure. 
 
The court’s decision on Friday struck down tariffs that Trump had imposed on nearly every country using an emergency powers law. Trump now said he will use a different, albeit more limited, legal authority.
  • He’s already signed an executive order
  • He wrote on social media that he was making the announcement “based on a thorough, detailed, and complete review of the ridiculous, poorly written, and extraordinarily anti-American decision on Tariffs issued yesterday.”
By a 6-3 vote, the justices ruled that it was unconstitutional for Trump to unilaterally set and change tariffs because the power to tax lies with Congress.

In addition to the temporary tariffs that Trump wants to set at 15%, the president said Friday that he was also pursuing tariffs through other sections of federal law which require an investigation by the Commerce Department.

He wrote on Saturday that “during the next short number of months, the Trump Administration will determine and issue the new and legally permissible Tariffs, which will continue our extraordinarily successful process of Making America Great Again.”

Could Trump's Tariff Revenues Fund a New U.S. Sovereign Wealth Fund? -  USFunds 

Federal data shows the Treasury had collected more than $133 billion from the import taxes the president has imposed under the emergency powers law as of December, and Trump has made many promises about what that money might go toward, such as paying down the national debt and sending dividend checks to taxpayers
The Washington Post - Breaking news and latest headlines, U.S. news, world  news, and video
The blockbuster Supreme Court ruling that invalidated President Donald Trump’s emergency tariffs ends one chapter of economic uncertainty and begins another.

Even as the nation’s high court determined Friday that the president had exceeded his authority by slapping tariffs on goods from just about every country in the world, Trump made clear at a White House news conference that he was determined to do so again, though this time within the bounds of the law.

Assembling that presidential “Plan B” will take months, meaning the tariff-fueled confusion that has weighed on the economy will linger as the November congressional elections draw nearer. . .

The Justice Department said in court filings last year that the government would provide refunds if the tariffs were struck down. But following the Supreme Court ruling, which provided no guidance on the issue, Trump warned that importers and the government “will end up being in court for the next five years” haggling over it.

That’s hardly the only legal question. On Saturday, Neal Katyal, the attorney who helped win the Supreme Court challenge, questioned the validity of Trump’s new 15 percent global rate, saying any “sweeping tariffs” should first be approved by Congress.

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Top stories

 

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Context: The Supreme Court Ruling
The 15% move followed a 6-3 Supreme Court ruling on February 20, 2026, which struck down Trump's previous "reciprocal" tariff program. The court ruled that the president exceeded his authority by using the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to bypass Congress. Trump responded by calling the decision "ridiculous" and "anti-American".
Economic and Legal Uncertainty
  • Refund Battles: The ruling has triggered a massive legal dispute over approximately $142 billion to $170 billion in duties collected in 2025 that companies are now seeking to have refunded.
  • Market Impact: Analysts from The Budget Lab at Yale suggest these tariffs could increase consumer prices by 0.6% in the short run and lead to a 0.3 percentage point rise in unemployment by the end of 2026.
  • International Reaction: Global trade partners have expressed concern, with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz describing the "constant uncertainty" as "poison" for the European and U.S. economies.
Trump tariffs as it happened: Supreme Court rules sweeping levies illegal,  President vows to impose 10% global tariff

Editorial cartoons (curated somewhat)

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 Editorial cartoons for Saturday, Feb. 21 | HeraldNet.com

Cagle Cartoons 

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 Steamrolled - by Michael de Adder - The Contrarian

Cagle.com 

PUNCHBOWL NEWS Read Back

 

THE TOP

Supreme Court crushes Trump’s tariffs

Welcome to The Readback, our weekend digest featuring the best of Punchbowl News this week – a quick roundup of all our scoops, analysis and Capitol Hill insight you won’t find anywhere else. We’ve also included a few of our favorite outside reads from the week.

Tariffs: The Supreme Court dealt a massive blow on Friday to President Donald Trump’s economic agenda, striking down a vast swath of the administration’s tariffs.

The decision immediately made waves on Capitol Hill. What was set up to be a quiet Friday with both chambers in recess instead became a rush to respond to a major court ruling.

For weeks now, members of Congress and aides had been anticipating the Supreme Court’s decision — waiting on edge for what the ruling would be, debating why it was taking so long and gaming out how to respond.

The Supreme Court case hung over the entire debate about Trump’s tariffs and trade agenda.

But now, it’s finally time to confront the fallout.

Democrats are quickly changing gears in their war against Trump’s tariffs to press for refunds of the revenue collected by the administration. This has become a huge political issue for Democrats, who are trying to use the tariffs to tie Republicans to rising prices.

After the high court’s decision, Trump announced he’d use Section 122 authority to levy 10% global tariffs. That authority will allow the president to impose tariffs for 150 days without congressional action. The president also said he’ll ramp up Section 301 investigations to apply additional tariffs.

Trump added he doesn’t need to work with Congress on tariff legislation. That will be a relief for many congressional Republicans, who’ve avoided the issue as Trump’s trade wars rage. Many in the GOP still dislike tariffs, but they’ve largely avoided breaking publicly with Trump on the issue and drawing his ire.

Still, the decision is already highlighting diverging views from congressional Republicans.

There are a few GOP lawmakers publicly supporting the decision.

Meanwhile, Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) is already seizing on it to demand another party-line reconciliation bill to codify Trump’s tariffs. There’s a lot of skepticism even among Republicans about another reconciliation package — for good reason. But supporters of the idea may draw on the tariff decision to make their case and tout a big pot of potential revenue.

What I’m watching: I’ve been doing weekly watches of “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” with some friends, and it’s way better than I expected.

– Laura Weiss

You can find The Readback in your inbox every Saturday at 8 a.m. And don’t hesitate to reach out to readback@punchbowl.news with feedback. Enjoy The Readback.

My Texas trip takeaways

I just returned from a four-day trip to Texas where I got to see the Senate race play out on the ground after a year of watching from afar.

It was great to be back on the trail. I was able to make it to campaign stops for the five major Senate candidates and ask each of them questions about the race.

I caught GOP Rep. Wesley Hunt in Dallas, Republican Sen. John Cornyn and Democratic state Rep. James Talarico in Austin, Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockett in Fort Worth and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton way out east in Tyler.

Anyone familiar with Texas geography knows that’s a LOT of driving. But I also got plenty of good tacos, so it evens out.

One thing that stood out to me on the trail: Democrats seem to be more fired up than the GOP.

Both Talarico and Crockett inspired massive crowds. The Talarico event I attended drew 1,000 people on a Tuesday evening, according to his campaign. And Crockett’s team said she pulled in 700 people to a church at 10:30 a.m. on a Thursday!

The GOP events I attended were smaller, probably closer to 100 people.

The last Trump midterm generated a lot of Democratic enthusiasm, and this one is likely to as well. That’s part of why both parties have made such a focus on electability. Democrats see a rare opportunity to win statewide in Texas. Republicans know they could be vulnerable in a good Democratic year. But both want the right candidate.

Cornyn and his allies have spent more than $60 million to try and stop Paxton because they believe he puts the seat at risk. This hasn’t really worked. It seems highly likely Paxton will take the first slot in the March 3 primary, and the race will drag out into a runoff.

Some Democrats and nearly all Republicans believe Crockett would be the least formidable nominee for her party. The NRSC even took credit for helping nudge her into the race.

But Crockett has far less money than Talarico, though her high name ID gave her a strong head start.

Here’s something I’ve been thinking about: Republicans believe any of their candidates could beat Crockett, even Paxton, who has serious ethical issues. Instead of spending $60 million to try to help Cornyn make it into a runoff, what if they spent a fraction of that to help Crockett keep pace with Talarico?

In Republicans’ minds, if Crockett is the Democratic nominee, then it doesn’t matter who wins the Republican primary. It seems more cost-effective to meddle in the Democratic primary, which is far less likely to go to a runoff.

This is especially true because Paxton would be favored to win a GOP primary runoff, as it tends to have a smaller and more conservative electorate. That means Republicans have only just begun their Cornyn rescue mission.

What I’m reading: I am about to start “Best Offer Wins,” a novel about the competitive DC real estate market by Marisa Kashino. My colleague Samantha Handler recommended it to me back in August, and it’s finally my turn to read it at the library! But I’m going to wait a bit longer because I left my Kindle at a hotel in Austin and it’s still making its way back to me in the mail.

– Ally Mutnick

Bingo! State of the Union style

President Donald Trump is set to deliver the first State of the Union speech of his second term on Tuesday night. You’ll remember that Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress last year was not technically a State of the Union.

While we can’t bet on what exactly will happen inside the House chamber, we can do our best to guess what Trump might say.

Will Trump mention his “great tariffs,” or will he bring up the “rigged Nobel Peace Prize?” And how many times will he say former President Joe Biden’s name?

Once again, we’ve made a game out of it, and you can play too! Re-introducing (drum roll, please): Power List Bingo.

You can find your bingo card tucked inside the Special Edition State of the Union newsletter, which will hit your inbox Tuesday morning. It includes some of Trump’s favorite phrases that he posts on social media or he uses most in his speeches or responses to reporters.

Play to see if your favorite Trumpism made the cut by watching the State of the Union at 9 p.m. on Tuesday and marking off any phrases Trump says. And be sure to share your card on social media using #thepunchlist and tagging us @PunchbowlNews.

What I’m watching: ”One Hundred Years of Solitude” on Netflix. The adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez’s novel is beautifully done. The visuals transport me right into Macondo from the comfort of my couch.

– Alicia Abelson

Trump Raises Global Tariff Rate to 15% After Supreme Court Ruling

Trump Raises Global Tariff Rate to 15% After Supreme Court Ruling        Barron's 28 minutes ago The court ruled Friday that the preside...