The Trump administration is aggressively rebuilding its tariff arsenal. Following the Supreme Court’s February 20 ruling striking down his global tariffs, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer has launched Section 301 investigations into 60 economies over forced labor practices.
🌍 THE TARGETS & THE TACTIC:
- The Scope: The 60-country list includes major allies (Canada, UK, EU, Australia, India) alongside rivals like China and Russia.
- The Dual Attack: Just one day prior, the USTR launched a separate Section 301 probe into 16 major trading partners over “structural excess capacity.”
- The Legal Pivot: Section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act is widely viewed as a “durable” legal tool that is much harder for domestic courts to overturn.
⏳ THE TIMELINE SQUEEZE:
After the Supreme Court defeat, Trump imposed a temporary 10% tariff under a 150-day emergency provision. That clock runs out in July. The USTR’s explicit goal is to conclude these investigations and propose new remedies (tariffs) before the temporary measure expires.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE:
This isn’t just about labor rights or manufacturing; it’s a rapid legal pivot to bypass the Supreme Court. The administration is establishing a legally resilient framework to reinstate structural global tariffs by this summer.
👇 Supply Chain & Trade Professionals: With 60 economies now under the microscope, how are you auditing your global supply chains to prepare for a potential July tariff shock?
