WASHINGTON —
For a few hours on Friday, congressional Republicans seemed to get some relief from one of the largest points of friction they have had with the Trump administration. It didn't last.
The Supreme Court struck down a significant portion of President Donald Trump's global tariff regime, ruling that the power to impose taxes lies with Congress. Many Republicans greeted the Friday morning decision with measured statements, some even praising it, and GOP leaders said they would work with Trump on tariffs going forward.
But by the afternoon, Trump made clear he has no intention of working with Congress and will instead go it alone by imposing a new global 10% import tax. He's doing so under a law that restricts the tariffs to 150 days and has never been invoked this way before. That decision could not only have major implications for the global economy, but also ensure that Republicans will have to keep answering for Trump's tariffs for months to come, especially as the midterm elections near.
''I have the right to do tariffs, and I've always had the right to do tariffs,'' Trump said at a news conference, adding that he doesn't need Congress.
Tariffs have been one of the only areas where the Republican-controlled Congress has broken with Trump. Both the House and Senate at various points had passed resolutions intended to rebuke the tariffs being imposed on trade partners like Canada. It's also one of the few issues where Republican lawmakers, who came of age in a party that largely championed free trade, have voiced criticism of Trump's economic policies.
''The empty merits of sweeping trade wars with America's friends were evident long before today's decision,'' Sen. Mitch McConnell, the former longtime Senate Republican leader, said in a statement, adding that tariffs raise the prices of homes and disrupt other industries important to his home state of Kentucky.
How Democrats plan to leverage Trump's trade war