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SCOTUS Throws a Tariff Curveball, Did SOTU move the Needle & 2 Olympians-Patriotism vs. Paycheck Week In Review

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1. Supreme Court Tariff Decision

  • A predicted 5–4 ruling upholding presidential tariff authority was incorrect; the Court ruled 6–3 against the administration’s use of one specific tariff statute (AIPA).
  • Majority held that the statute allowed banning imports but not charging tariffs—a conclusion strongly criticized in the dissents (Kavanaugh, Thomas).
  • Despite the ruling, the impact is expected to be limited, as the President has multiple other statutes still available to impose tariffs.
  • A new 10–15% tariff was quickly announced using alternate legal authority.

The administration still retains broad power using:

  • Section 338 (1930 Tariff Act) – allows tariffs up to 50% for discriminatory treatment.
  • Section 122 (Trade Act of 1974) – 15% tariffs for 150 days (renewable).
  • Section 301 (Trade Act of 1974) – addresses unfair foreign trade practices.
  • Section 232 (Trade Expansion Act of 1962) – tariffs for national‑security threats.
  • Section 201 (Trade Act of 1974) – safeguard tariffs for import surges.
  • Litigation may unfold for years, potentially costing billions over refunded or contested tariffs.
  • China and Democrats were portrayed as celebrating the ruling, implying political dimension rather than policy substance.
  • Administration aims to use tariffs as leverage for better trade deals, not as permanent protectionism.

2. State of the Union (SOTU) Speech Impact

  • Speech viewed as effective, more disciplined, and likely helpful for midterm momentum.
  • Highlighted major administration achievements:
    • Border control and sharp decline in illegal crossings.
    • Crime reductions (e.g., murder and overdose rates reportedly down by ~20%).
    • Economic relief themes like no tax on tips and overtime.
  • Strong emotional moments involving veterans, Olympians, and American heroes created bipartisan resonance.
  • Speaker Johnson and congressional Republicans portrayed as unusually unified.
  • Coordination with the President seen as stronger than in previous cycles.

3. The Olympic Contrast: Alysa Liu vs. Eileen Gu Alysa Liu

  • Daughter of a Chinese refugee who fled Tiananmen Square.
  • Target of CCP intimidation and espionage on U.S. soil.
  • Required 24/7 FBI protection before the Beijing Olympics.
  • Despite pressure, competed for Team USA and won gold.
  • Story framed as patriotic, resilient, and emotionally powerful.

Eileen Gu

  • Also U.S.-born with Chinese heritage.
  • Chose to compete for China after being offered substantial financial incentives.
  • Criticism focused on choosing a communist regime over the U.S., though the speakers avoided personal attacks.

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