Trade Partners Stay After Court Blocks Tariffs: U.S. Trade Chief

2026-02-22 23:33 By Farida Husna 1 min. read

U.S.

Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said Sunday that none of Washington’s trade partners have indicated plans to withdraw from existing agreements, despite a Supreme Court ruling that invalidated a broad portion of President Trump’s tariff program.

On Friday, Trump introduced a temporary 10% tariff after the court struck down his earlier duties, which were imposed under an economic emergency law.

He also ordered new investigations under alternative statutes that officials say could pave the way for fresh tariffs on multiple trading partners.

A day later, he raised the temporary levy to 15%, the legal maximum.

Separately, the EU has the tools to retaliate against the latest U.S.

tariffs, France’s trade minister Nicolas Forissier told the Financial Times.



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Trade Partners Stay After Court Blocks Tariffs: U.S. Trade Chief
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said Sunday that none of Washington’s trade partners have indicated plans to withdraw from existing agreements, despite a Supreme Court ruling that invalidated a broad portion of President Trump’s tariff program. On Friday, Trump introduced a temporary 10% tariff after the court struck down his earlier duties, which were imposed under an economic emergency law. He also ordered new investigations under alternative statutes that officials say could pave the way for fresh tariffs on multiple trading partners. A day later, he raised the temporary levy to 15%, the legal maximum. Separately, the EU has the tools to retaliate against the latest U.S. tariffs, France’s trade minister Nicolas Forissier told the Financial Times.
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