The IEEPA was written to provide presidents with “a temporary boost in power” (Brennan), while preventing the use of seismic emergency powers, allegedly implied by Congress, to address chronic conditions. Otherwise, as a justice wrote in 1952, “emergency powers would tend to kindle emergencies.” Besides, as a percentage of GDP, the overall U.S. trade imbalance is significantly less than 20 years ago (Brennan).

A brief from a broad spectrum of economists argues: Even if the IEEPA permits imposing tariffs (it has never been so used), tariffs would not “deal with” (IEEPA language) trade deficits. Besides, over the past 50 years, in any given year, most countries have run trade deficits, as the United States did for all but three years between 1800 and 1870, while it was industrializing. Furthermore, the net effects of higher tariffs on trade balance are generally “small and insignificant.”

…..

How the court decides this case will diminish either presidential power or the court’s stature. The court might flinch from impeding an elected executive’s core agenda. (It flinched regarding Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act.) The court prudently husbands its perishable prestige, which undergirds its power.

If, however, the court protects itself by protecting this president’s unexampled claim to uncircumscribed discretion, this question will linger: For what more momentous controversy might the court be hoarding the prestige that enables it to do its duty to police the excesses of the political branches?

Eric Boehm reports on yet other American businesses falling victim to Trump’s tariffs punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports. A slice:

“If the Supreme Court decides one person, the president, is allowed to flip the switch on tariffs overnight, every day, any day they want, that is going to create such a volatile and unstable and untrustworthy market,” Johnson predicts. “We can’t build a business around that. We can’t plan for that.”

Board game makers have been hit particularly hard by Trump’s tariffs, which have raised the cost of importing just about everything. Cephalofair is based in California, but like many other businesses in the industry, Johnson’s company relies on contractors in China and Vietnam to make the tokens, pawns, cards, and other physical elements of its games.

Manufacturing all those parts in the U.S. is not possible if game companies want their products to be competitively priced. With high tariffs in place, the costs compound quickly. Nathan McNair, the co-owner of Pandasaurus Games, broke down the math in a post on his company’s website. The added cost of the tariffs makes every step more complicated, from design to sales, and can even change what games a company chooses to make in the first place. “This has not just squeezed our margin; this has substantially increased our risk,” he concluded.

Jeremiah Johnson tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome):

Tariffs might be pissing off every international ally America has and driving up the cost of living for working people, but at least they’re also killing manufacturing in this country, so who can say if they’re bad or not.

GMU Econ alum Anne Bradley, writing in the Washington Post, explains what shouldn’t – but, alas, what today nevertheless does – need explaining: no government can begin to run grocery stores as well as the market ‘runs’ grocery stores. A slice:

When you distort prices, eliminate the profit motive and minimize incentives, you undermine the foundation of how a complex economy, composed of millions of individuals making choices, directs scarce goods and services to their best uses and simultaneously generates abundance. Asking a group of unqualified government bureaucrats to determine prices, quantities and demand is wildly unrealistic, even for Kansas City’s Sun Fresh government-backed grocery store in Missouri — which recently closed due to high crime and low profitability, despite receiving significant public funding. The cruel joke of socialism is that it always starts with “free stuff” and ends with no stuff. Not only is there no free lunch, there is no lunch.

Reason‘s Nick Gillespie is correct: “Mamdani’s socialist mayorship will make New York a worse place to live and do business.”

The Wall Street Journal‘s Dominic Green describes “the MAGA right’s antisemitism problem.” A slice:

The right has a racism problem. This doesn’t mean that the Trump voter coalition is full of racists. Rather, the racism is concentrated in a faction of MAGA’s online leadership. They call themselves “America first.” Their detractors call them the “woke right.” These people mirror the woke left’s self-obsessed identity politics and fantasies of malign Jewish influence.

They are a problem for anyone who wants to sustain the 2024 voter coalition in the 2026 midterms and in 2028. They will be a problem for Vice President JD Vance, because they want him to be the 2028 Republican nominee. If they succeed in making racism respectable again, they will be the ruin of America.

The woke right has a toehold in Congress, notably in Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene of Georgia, who has rescinded her speculation about Rothschild conspiracies and Jewish space lasers but now claims that Israel exerts “unique influence and control” over her congressional colleagues. But most of its leaders are online entrepreneurs. They include the wicked uncles Tucker Carlson and Steve Bannon, who have adapted to online incentives, and the digital natives of the “alt-right” class of 2016, such as Candace Owens and Nicholas Fuentes.

Also rightly decrying the illiberalism and ignorance of alt-righters such as Tucker Carlson is National Review‘s Jim Geraghty.

GMU Econ alum Dave Hebert writes insightfully about government statistics and government.

“Expert failure” is clearly having a moment. Pollsters, Wall Street analysts, tech futurists… all are facing demands to reckon with getting it wrong. Economics, though, seems to be getting special attention. Lately, this has metastasized into Orweillian skepticism of government data itself. It’s one thing to argue that economists have misread numbers. It’s quite another to claim that the numbers themselves are lies.

Believe me, I understand the reflex. If it’s true that the government fails at so many things it sets out to do, why trust its statistics? But this cynicism commits a category error: confusing the government’s inability to solve economic problems with its capacity to solve technical problems. Understanding this distinction explains why we can simultaneously distrust economic planning efforts while also trusting, e.g., the Bureau of Labor Statistics to provide employment figures.

Briefly, economic problems involve mutually exclusive ends and trade-offs. Should we use titanium to build railroad tracks or golf clubs? Should corn become ethanol or be used to feed cattle? Markets solve these through prices, profits, and losses. Governments, as F.A. Hayek demonstrated, are fundamentally incapable of evaluating the trade-offs involved. Technical problems, by contrast, have a singular goal in mind. Build the railroad tracks, feed the cattle, and count the total number of jobs in the US. No trade-offs are involved in these problems, it’s just a matter of execution.