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Senate Republican takes a victory lap as Trump gets Supreme Court smackdown

Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) took a victory lap after the U.S. Supreme Court shot down President Donald Trump's tariffs.

The court ruled 6-3 that the 79-year-old president had unlawfully invoked the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose sweeping tariffs on global trade partners, and the 84-year-old McConnell signaled his agreement.

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Enraged Trump turns on his own Supreme Court picks: 'Embarrassment to their families'

President Donald Trump took a shot at two justices he nominated to be on the Supreme Court — Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett — after they ruled that he had illegally imposed massive tariffs.

"Are you surprised in particular by their decision today?" Trump was asked during a White House press conference on Friday.

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Trump claims Kavanaugh dissent gave him power to defy Supreme Court ruling

President Donald Trump imposed new across-the-board tariffs based on a dissent that accompanied a U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down his trade wars.

The 79-year-old president announced a 10-percent global tariff Friday in a news conference and simultaneously posted a Truth Social statement after the court ruled 6-3 that his previous duties unlawfully invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, but he quoted from Justice Brett Kavanaugh's dissent to claim other statutes granted him the authority to impose tariffs.

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Trump 'ashamed' of 'unpatriotic and disloyal' Supreme Court after tariff decision

President Donald Trump blasted members of the Supreme Court who ruled against his ability to impose tariffs in a 6-3 decision.

During a White House news conference on Friday, Trump said he was "ashamed of certain members of the court."

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‘I can destroy the country!’ Trump goes ballistic over Supreme Court ruling

President Donald Trump erupted at the Supreme Court on Friday after it ruled against his authority to impose sweeping tariffs, vowing to circumvent its decision with “alternatives” and lambasting the justices for their "ridiculous opinion,” which he claimed permitted him to "destroy" countries.

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 earlier on Friday that Trump acted outside his authority when imposing his sweeping tariffs, which his administration had justified under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). As such, a significant share of Trump’s tariffs have now been declared unlawful.

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'I wanted to be a good boy': Trump gripes about Supreme Court loss despite 'modest ask'

President Donald Trump slammed liberal justices after the Supreme Court ruled against his tariffs on Friday.

In his first public comments since the decision, Trump called the high court's ruling "deeply disappointing" and described his frustration following the 6-3 vote during a White House press briefing.

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Firm of Trump official's family denies report it stands to make fortune from tariff ruling

While President Donald Trump may very well be having his “worst day” in office after the Supreme Court ruled against his tariff policy on Friday, commentators cited a report that claimed the family of one top Trump official stands to profit handsomely from the court’s decision.

That top Trump official is Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who for 30 years led the financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald as its CEO, handing off control of the firm to his sons after joining the Trump administration last year. Lutnick has championed Trump’s tariffs in public, but Wired reported in July that the firm was "taking bets against them."

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Charlie Kirk Show admits consumers getting 'screwed' by non-refunded Trump tariffs

Following a Supreme Court decision on tariffs, Andrew Kolvet, co-host of The Charlie Kirk show, admitted that consumers would get "screwed" because President Donald Trump had no intention of refunding the effective taxes paid due to his illegal policies.

During Friday's edition of The Charlie Kirk Show, Kolvet argued that consumers paid only 20% of the cost of Trump's tariffs, even though The Wall Street Journal found it was at least 90%.

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Trump in for 'rude awakening' after Supreme Court order with more losses coming: analyst

President Donald Trump could face even more legal challenges after the Supreme Court struck down his tariffs, according to an analyst.

Ken Dilanian, justice and intelligence correspondent for MS NOW, pointed to how Trump has plenty of success with the high court and previous rulings in his favor — yet not this time.

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'Angry' Trump may launch war after having 'worst day' due to Supreme Court: ex-GOP insider

Former Republican lawmaker Adam Kinzinger issued a bleak warning Friday that, in the wake of the Supreme Court’s bombshell ruling on President Donald Trump’s tariffs, the president may very well ignite a regional war out of rage after having “clearly the worst day” of his second term.

On Friday, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 against the Trump administration regarding its authority to impose sweeping tariffs, and thus, essentially shuttered the president’s signature foreign trade policy. And, with Trump reportedly on the cusp of “pulling the trigger” on a “full-fledged war” with Iran, Kinzinger expressed fears that the court’s decision could send Trump over the edge.

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Bannon uses Supreme Court's 'stunning blow' for gold-hawking scheme: 'Be convinced today'

MAGA influencer Steve Bannon seized on the Supreme Court's decision to strike down President Donald Trump's tariffs to push gold purchases on his "patriot" viewers.

"I can't be more blunt that this is a bombshell," Bannon announced on Friday after the court's ruling. "So this is a stunning blow."

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Mike Johnson denies request for Jesse Jackson to lie in state at the Capitol

House Speaker Mike Johnson refused a request for the late Rev. Jesse Jackson to lie in honor at the U.S. Capitol, sources revealed.

Sources familiar with the matter told CNN that Johnson rejected the request, which was made on behalf of Jackson's family, by citing recent past precedent for right-wing activist Charlie Kirk and former Vice President Dick Cheney.

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Justice Brett Kavanaugh drops panicky dissent over 'mess' court made for Trump

In his dissent after a 6-3 majority clamped down on Donald Trump’s ability to bypass Congress and levy tariffs on a whim, Justice Brett Kavanaugh went beyond a legal and historical precedent argument and instead worried how the current administration will cope with the adverse ruling.

Kavanaugh, a Trump appointee, wrote a dissent where he broke with conservative Justices John Roberts, Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch and complained that the court did not consider the implications of how the Trump administration will refund the ill-gotten tariff money.

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