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The United States Court of International Trade, which oversees disputes related to international trade and customs law, has previously ordered President Donald Trump to halt additional customs duties imposed on various countries.
On Wednesday, a three-judge panel of the Manhattan Court of New York City ruled that Trump exceeded his jurisdiction by imposing unreasonable import duties on goods entering the United States, and ordered an immediate halt to the customs duties, Reuters wrote.
Trump had been aggressively imposing tariffs while declaring a 'national economic emergency'. The court has interpreted Trump's action as unfair when the US Congress (Federal Parliament) has constitutional special rights to regulate foreign trade.
"The court does not say that the additional customs duties imposed by the President in the name of obtaining economic benefits are a wise or potentially effective measure, but they are unjustified because federal law does not allow them to be implemented," the three-judge bench said.
With this order, CNN has mentioned that Trump will stop the customs duties imposed on China, Mexico and Canada at the beginning of this year by saying that the drug "fentanyl" will be stopped from entering the United States. After the order, Trump imposed 30 percent on imports from China, 25 percent on Mexico and Canada, and 10 percent on most goods entering the United States.
However, it does not affect the 25 percent customs duty imposed on autos, auto parts, steel or aluminum under Article 232 of the 'Trade Expansion Act', unlike the customs duty regime imposed by Trump as president using special powers.
Within minutes of the US International Trade Court's order, Reuters noted that the Trump administration "filed an appeal to the US Court of Appeals, questioning the court's jurisdiction."
