The Supreme Court may have ruled against President Trump's use of emergency economics law for tariffs on Friday, but patriots shouldn't panic – Justice Brett Kavanaugh just handed Trump a roadmap to keep hammering foreign competitors who've been ripping off American workers for decades.

In theLearning Resources, Inc., et al v. Trumpdecision, the high court limited one specific tariff mechanism, but legal experts are celebrating what Justice Kavanaugh revealed in his analysis: Trump has multiple other constitutional and statutory powers to implement his America First trade agenda.

"The president obviously has tariff power," Kavanaugh emphasized in his opinion, pointing to several legal authorities Trump can invoke. These include Section 232 national security provisions, Section 301 unfair trade practice responses, and general presidential trade authorities that have been on the books for decades.

This is exactly what Trump promised during his campaign – using every legal tool available to stop foreign nations from exploiting American businesses and workers. While the Deep State and their corporate allies tried to tie his hands with this lawsuit, the Supreme Court actually confirmed the president's broad constitutional authority over international trade.

The ruling comes at a perfect time as Trump's trade team, led by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, prepares comprehensive tariff packages targeting countries that have been stealing American jobs and technology for years. China's intellectual property theft, Europe's agricultural protectionism, and Mexico's energy subsidies are all now firmly in the crosshairs.

Democrats and their globalist allies in big corporations are already crying about "trade wars," but working-class Americans know the truth: we've been in a trade war for decades – we just weren't fighting back.

The question now isn't whether Trump can implement tariffs – Kavanaugh just confirmed he absolutely can. The question is which foreign competitors will feel the heat first as America starts winning again on trade.

Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.

Source: Next News Network