China, Supreme Court and Trump
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China, tariffs and Trade
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For Michael Kersey, president of the American Lawn Mower Company, these solicitations represent an existential threat. “Tariff cheating is much, much worse than tariffs for us,” said Kersey, who began outsourcing production to China two decades ago and paid as much as 45% to bring those goods into the US over the last year.
The Supreme Court decision striking down President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs has added a wrinkle to already complicated U.S.-China relations.
2don MSN
Supreme Court tariff reversal cements China’s upper hand ahead of a critical meeting with Trump
The Supreme Court ruling that nullified global tariffs from United States President Donald Trump has created renewed uncertainty for many of its major trade partners – and a clear vindication for its biggest economic rival: China.
As the U.S. Supreme Court rules against Trump's tariffs, farmers and soybean producers have to live with the damage from trade wars.
The change surprised executives and foreign leaders, who had been expecting the 15 percent rate the president announced on Saturday.
Q4 2025 Management View CEO David Pacitti highlighted "solid fourth quarter and full year results driven by the excellent progress we made advancing our strategic priorities," with full year net sales of $701 million and adjusted diluted EPS of $0.
China says it is closely watching the US government's plans to push ahead with levies using other trade tools. President Trump announced 10% global tariffs after the Supreme Court struck down his original sweeping duties.
Trump's new blanket tariff, valid for 150 days, will take effect on February 24.