After the Supreme Court gutted President Trump’s initial worldwide tariff plan earlier this year, the administration pivoted to Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974. They argued this statute gave the president emergency powers to handle “balance-of-payments” deficits. The court, however, wasn’t buying it. A divided three-judge panel ruled that the use of this specific law was an overreach, officially declaring that Trump’s “Plan B” fails because it ignores the legal limits of executive authority.
Why Section 122 Wasn’t Enough
Section 122 was originally designed as a narrow tool for currency emergencies, not a broad brush to paint a new trade landscape. The court ruled that the February proclamation was invalid. Judges Mark Barnett and Claire Kelly noted that these tariffs are simply “unauthorized by law.”
While the court ruled the tariffs illegal, the relief is currently limited to the plaintiffs who sued, Washington state, toy company Basic Fun!, and spice importer Burlap & Barrel. Even though the ruling isn’t a nationwide block yet, it creates a massive legal opening for the hundreds of thousands of other importers currently paying billions in duties.

The Economic Impact
The stakes couldn’t be higher for American small businesses. In March 2026 alone, businesses paid roughly $8 billion in these now-disputed tariffs. CEOs like Jay Foreman of Basic Fun! are calling this a major victory, citing the “financial and operational uncertainty” these taxes created for global manufacturing. For companies like Burlap & Barrel, these tariffs were a direct threat to their survival, making the “Plan B” failure a literal lifesaver.
“This decision is a decisive rejection of the administration’s attempt to use emergency authorities to bypass the regular trade process.” Tim Brightbill, Trade Attorney.
The Danger of “Rule by Proclamation”
The reason Trump’s “Plan B” fails is that you cannot run a modern economy like a personal fiefdom. Using a 50-year-old law intended for currency crises to slap a 10 percent tax on everything from toys to spices is a desperate move.
The administration is already looking at “Section 301” investigations to try to bring these tariffs back through a different door this summer. But this court ruling shows that the judicial branch is finally putting up a fight against the erosion of congressional power over trade. If the administration keeps “sprinting with scissors” on trade policy, the only people getting cut are the American business owners who are footing an $8 billion-a-month bill for a legal experiment that just failed its first major test.
With the court ruling the “Plan B” tariffs illegal, should the administration double down on an appeal, or is it time for Trump to negotiate with Congress on a trade policy that actually follows the law?




