475 comments

  • SyneRyder 6 hours ago

    Here's a gift link to access it if you don't have a subscription:

    https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy/judge-orders-government-...

  • satvikpendem 6 hours ago

    Cantor Fitzgerald, formerly led by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and is now run by his son, went to various companies that were affected by tariffs and bought the rights to their potential tariff refunds for 20% of the value on the expectation that it'd be struck down by the courts.

    Now they stand to make huge returns of 3 to 5x for being correct on that bet, while, of course, consumers get nothing. Now if this isn't insider trading (by the literal Commerce Secretary), I don't know what is.

    • hammock 5 hours ago

      Source? I saw this claim going around but the one actual source supporting the claim was more like “we have the cash to buy them if folks are willing to sell them” and didn’t go any further than that.

      Via Newsweek, Cantor Fitzgerald has affirmed it “never executed any transactions or taken risk on the legality of tariffs.”

      https://www.newsweek.com/howard-lutnick-sons-may-make-money-...

      • burkaman 4 hours ago

        This is contradicted by Cantor Fitzgerald documents obtained by Wired which said "We’ve already put a trade through representing about ~$10 million of IEEPA Rights and anticipate that number will balloon in the coming weeks".

        - https://www.wired.com/story/cantor-fitzgerald-trump-tariff-r...

        So we don't really know, someone is lying. I'd prefer to let the congressional investigation play out, but if I had to guess right now I would believe Wired over Cantor Fitzgerald.

    • danielmarkbruce 6 hours ago

      This is wrong. It's not insider trading. Lutnick didn't have inside information. His son just had a brain. Anyone who read the case knew which way the court was going, it was the least surprising decision ever. Perhaps the only surprising thing is that the court ever heard it.

      • burkaman 5 hours ago

        He presumably did not have access to the court's opinion before it was released, but he did have access to internal White House legal opinions before the tariffs were announced ("Mr. President this is illegal and very likely to be overturned by the courts"), and he obviously had access to the entire federal legal team during the court cases.

        I can't prove that there was any White House advisory memo before the tariffs were announced, but hypothetically, would this not be considered material nonpublic information? It seems the same as a corporate insider dumping stock because a company lawyer privately told them "we're definitely going to lose this case".

        • bryanrasmussen 25 minutes ago

          >but he did have access to internal White House legal opinions before the tariffs were announced

          yes but the opinion that it was illegal was the received wisdom by everybody with any sort of legal expertise in the subject. It would have been completely insane if the white house staff didn't believe the same. So I guess I'm actually surprised at the white house staff believing what everybody else did?

        • gruez 5 hours ago

          >I can't prove that there was any White House advisory memo before the tariffs were announced, but hypothetically, would this not be considered material nonpublic information?

          Was the hypothetical "White House advisory memo" produced using any proprietary information? If not, why should it be any different than if I hired a bunch of top lawyers to produce a private report for me?

          • mandevil 5 hours ago

            Because this hypothetical memo was paid for by our tax dollars, not your own private money! That means it belongs to the American people, not individuals for their private gain. Using it for your own gain would be theft from the American public.

            In this hypothetical case, of course. There is no evidence that such a memo exists. But if it did...

            • jMyles 5 hours ago

              > That means it belongs to the American people, not individuals for their private gain.

              This is a strong case that there ought not to be any such thing as a secret opinion or confidential advice from the White House OLC - and I agree with that opinion if that's what you're saying.

              But it doesn't transform the information contained therein to nonpublic.

              I'm not saying this whole thing wasn't a total scumbag move - it was - but it's not quite the same crime as insider trading.

              • hvb2 2 hours ago

                > But it doesn't transform the information contained therein to nonpublic.

                The legal opinion itself was non public? If they couldn't use that they would first have to put up the money to pay the legal fees to find out how likely their bet was to pay off.

                And just to put this in writing too, I would be shocked if we don't find out later that a lot of the volatility was a way for a few people to make a lot of money. You can make a lot of money when there's more volatility. So all the flip flopping on tariffs yes/no might very well be manipulating markets...

              • hnfong 2 hours ago

                Not saying you're wrong, but note that in general attorney-client privilege is kind of important as well.

            • airstrike 5 hours ago

              A travesty, to be sure, but not insider trading.

          • burkaman 4 hours ago

            Yes, because it was produced by the same people that are going to argue the case in court. You can hire the best lawyers in the world but they will still have to speculate on what arguments the government is going to make, and whether there are confidential communications showing evidence that there was some consistent rational justification for the tariffs and not just the president's public posts that leader X was mean to him on the phone so he imposed a tariff.

          • Ajakks 4 hours ago

            What a week argument - your still making excuses for this nonsense. Ridiculous.

        • phkahler 5 hours ago

          So a Whitehouse insider is going to get a bunch of tarrif refund money?

          • vel0city 4 hours ago

            Not just a Whitehouse insider, the guy actively doing the policy he was probably being advised was illegal and would be overturned.

            And also probably one of the guys most pushing for this policy which was probably advised would likely be overturned.

            Tariff policy is ultimately implemented by the Secretary of Commerce. This isn't some random other staffer in the Whitehouse that heard these policies wouldn't go, it was the guy actively doing it likely stands to make significant financial gains for his actions being found to be illegal.

            The level of corruption on that is just absolutely mindblowing.

        • rayiner 5 hours ago

          You’re piling speculation on speculation. First of all, there was no such memo saying the tariffs were “very likely to be overturned.” The Supreme Court decision was 7-3, with two Bush appointees voting to uphold the tariffs. The appellate court decision was 7-4, with two Obama appointees and two Bush appointees dissenting. Second of all, there is no evidence that this legal analysis was leaked to Cantor.

          • Ajakks 4 hours ago

            Who cares? The Treasury Secretary shouldn't have family profiting off fixing illegal policy the Treasury Secretary enacted. That should never happen. It is wrong, it doesn't explicitly spelled out.

            • vel0city 3 hours ago

              Commerce* Secretary. Lutnick is the Secretary of Commerce which implements tariff policy. Bessent is the Treasury Secretary.

          • burkaman 3 hours ago

            The two answers I'm hearing to my question so far are that either this decision was so obvious that anyone could have predicted it without insider information, or that this was a split decision that the administration could not have predicted ahead of time.

            You're right that maybe there never was any internal memo, just thought this was funny.

        • danielmarkbruce 5 hours ago

          White House legal opinions aren't any better than other legal opinions. Opinions are not "information".

          • burkaman 4 hours ago

            I understand your position but I disagree. If I were trying to predict whether the government is going to win in court, I think reading what the government's own lawyers think about the case would be valuable. If it were possible to pay for this I think people would, that's why I think it is material. Some random person's opinion is not relevant information, but the opinion of people directly involved in a case is.

            • Maxatar 4 hours ago

              Yes it absolutely is valuable to have access to expert opinions and people do pay money to acquire opinions from experts.

              But expert advice, even if material, is not the same as insider information.

            • danielmarkbruce 4 hours ago

              That's fine, to each their own on trying to make predictions. I did try to predict it, did it accurately (along with many others, this wasn't the hardest thing ever), and wouldn't have had any interest in any internal memo.

              It's a public arena on things like this. I don't think even the justices themselves have "material inside information" until a little ways through the hearing, and people are trying to predict the outcome well before that. On the surface that might sound absurd, but it isn't.

          • LPisGood 3 hours ago

            The non-publicly known strategy they intend to use in court is “information”

          • vkou 2 hours ago

            Is a lawyer working on a case allowed to short the stock of his client?

            Why not?

            (Hint: it creates a perverse incentive to see your side lose the legal argument for your own personal gain.)

            And in this case, it's the actual secretary doing it. Who has significant influence on the outcome of the case (largely in the negative - nothing he can do can make the government more likely to win it, but stuff he did has the capacity to make the government more likely to lose it.)

          • dboreham 4 hours ago

            The Lebowski conjecture.

        • seizethecheese 3 hours ago

          Prediction markets already had it as more likely than not that the court would rule against the tariffs

      • philipov 6 hours ago

        In the business, even the appearance of impropriety is damaging. People who work in finance aren't allowed to trade the same stocks as their company is trading, whether they have any inside info or not. The assumption is that simply by being close to a source of information, you are compromised. The same restrictions should apply to those close to government. By being family, he is compromised by default.

        • danielmarkbruce 5 hours ago

          Wrong. People who work in finance (I spent years there) are allowed to trade stocks their company is trading. There is a process to get approval. The equities division at an IB might be trading every single name in the S&P500. If you sit in the investment banking division and that division isn't doing anything related to a name, you are likely to get approval.

          In this case, the idea that Cantor can't do something because the former head is now in a government job is crazy. No one "in the business" thinks Cantor is suddenly hobbled.

          • Ajakks 4 hours ago

            Oh - so the kid went out and he got permission to do this?

            Where is that? Who approved his request?

          • Calavar 3 hours ago

            > In this case, the idea that Cantor can't do something because the former head is now in a government job is crazy. No one "in the business" thinks Cantor is suddenly hobbled.

            That's not the idea, and it almost seems like a straw man to be honest. The actual idea is that the current head of Cantor can't do something because he's a direct relative of a high ranking government official whose powers and job duties present a conflict of interest for this specific set of transactions.

            • danielmarkbruce 2 hours ago

              Cantor Fitzgerald is an investment bank. Rather than claim a straw man, think about what they do and how it interacts with the administration. Everything they do is heavily regulated. If they couldn't do anything that gave an appearance of a conflict, they literally couldn't do a single thing that makes up their business and would be hobbled.

              • anang an hour ago

                I think a lot of people feel like people who have one foot in a heavy regulated industry shouldn't have their other foot in the regulatory body that regulates that industry.

              • hvb2 an hour ago

                > Rather than claim a straw man, think about what they do and how it interacts with the administration.

                Uh, essentially betting against a policy your former head put in place isn't a typical thing?

                You would absolutely steer clear of this. There's plenty of other things they could be doing, no?

                Just to make the point. This is such a typical thing investment banks do, that (especially) they are the ones doing it and nobody else?

        • yunohn 3 hours ago

          Almost all companies issuing stock to employees also ban them and their family members and fellow house residents from trading in the same stock to avoid insider style improprieties and the SEC has frequently prosecuted such cases. Wild that congress and WH staff have zero such restrictions even in 2026!

          • danielmarkbruce 2 hours ago

            Nope, wrong. Most companies have black out dates around earnings releases. Otherwise, good to go.

            (and/or have an explicit approval workflow that effectively does the above).

        • lenerdenator 5 hours ago

          > In the business, even the appearance of impropriety is damaging.

          It was damaging.

          In 2015.

          And then for a bit between 2021 and 2024.

          Now it's not again.

          You have to enforce these sorts of gentlemen's agreements. Just saying "it's damaging" isn't enough to actually make it damaging.

        • gruez 5 hours ago

          >People who work in finance aren't allowed to trade the same stocks as their company is trading, whether they have any inside info or not

          But the supreme court is a separate branch of government from the executive, so the analogy doesn't really hold. To claim otherwise would require Lutnick playing some 4d chess where he's publicly pro tariffs, but secretly anti-tariffs and was sandbagging the government's legal defense (can he even do that?), all the while not tipping Trump or the MAGA base off for being disloyal.

      • Terr_ 2 hours ago

        > It's not insider trading.

        One might argue it should fall under a different technical label, but whatever label one uses (A) it stinks of corruption and (B) it's only the tip of the iceberg.

        People entrusted with government authority to do work for the public shouldn't be personally profiting from how they decide to wield that authority. Imagine a policeman that arrests people while placing bets about how long that person will be jailed, what they'll be charged with, or whether they'll be convicted.

        The objection that "it's unfair, they know something other bettors don't" occurs first not because it's the biggest issue, but because it's easier to prove.

        The bigger problem is making improper decisions with their work-powers in order to personally profit, a trust and separation which they've already destroyed by placing the bets in the first place.

      • seydor 6 hours ago

        is it not a conflict of interest if you facilitate the legislation of tarrifs that you knew are illegal?

        • gruez 5 hours ago

          >if you facilitate the legislation of tarrifs that you knew are illegal?

          Did they know it was illegal? Any more than say, the Biden administration "knew" that forgiving student loans were illegal?

          • anon7000 5 hours ago

            They literally spent a decent chunk of money spinning up a line of business that could only make money if the tariffs were illegal.

            • garyfirestorm 3 hours ago

              > Did they know it was illegal

              it doesnt have to be black and white. they knew enough to spin up a business that when it is overturned they could make money... which means they knew the probability was high.

          • seydor 5 hours ago

            even if they were not sure 100%, the fact that introducing the legislation is connected to him making money is a conflict of interest.

          • nkassis 5 hours ago

            That's not really the comparable here, you need to find a person with vested interest in the outcome of the student loan forgiveness program.* Someone that was working within the agency responsible for the program and actively was in the discussions where the legality was discussed. Then made a scheme to financially get rewarded. Not only that used his son as a way to create the illusion of separation.

            * And not just a borrower that wouldn't be anywhere similar to this level of conflict.

        • danielmarkbruce 6 hours ago

          No, it's not a conflict of interest. It's perhaps dumb, or morally bad, or several other things.

          • cj 6 hours ago

            > dumb, or morally bad

            This is easy to say in hindsight. There was a non-zero chance the decision could have went the other way. Also, companies aren't stupid. They don't buy insurance against things that are impossible.

            And the supreme court doesn't hear cases that are 100% obviously illegal.

            • danielmarkbruce 5 hours ago

              It was non-zero but close to zero.

              Companies don't want to deal with the headache for many things. It's not a given over what time horizon and how much work is involved to get the refund. It's totally sensible to sell the claim for 70 cents on the dollar for example.

              The supreme court absolutely hears cases that are obvious. They do it for several reasons - to create clarity, to narrow scope, to set a very clear precedent, and other reasons.

              • rayiner 5 hours ago

                It wasn’t “close to zero.” The Supreme Court split 6-3, with two Trump appointees voting against him. And the Federal Circuit, which is the most boring appellate court and not political at all, split 7-4, with two democratic appointees and two republican appointees voting to uphold the tariffs.

                This was a case that split both the liberal and conservative blocs. Obama’s former SG, Neal Katyal, went up there and argued for limiting presidential power over the economy. One of the justices quipped about the irony of Katyal’s major contribution to jurisprudence being revitalization of non-delegation doctrine, which has always been a conservative focus.

                • danielmarkbruce 5 hours ago

                  Did you read the ruling? Read Clarence Thomas's dissent. It's not clear if he actually thinks what he wrote, or he just voted that way so he could write a dissent and make a strange legal point which probably doesn't carry water but sort of maybe could one day maybe.

                  If it were close, I think he would have voted the other way. The folks on the court appear extremely inclined to take the other side on things just as a mental exercise, or to be able to write something on the record that they find interesting.

                  It was close to zero.

                  • rayiner 5 hours ago

                    Did you read the ruling? And the appellate court decision below?

                    Thomas joined fully with Kavanaugh’s dissent. He wrote separately to articulate his view of the scope of non-delegation doctrine. He pointed out tariffs and taxes are different, in that tariffs implicate international relations, which is primarily within the province of the president. His analysis is extremely cogent. I was actually talking with my wife (we’re both Fed Soc people) that the administration should have pushed that angle much harder in the argument.

                    Did you read the Federal Circuit en banc decision? You don’t get two Obama appointees to vote in favor of the Trump’s administrations unprecedented tariffs when the legal issue “isn’t close.”

                    • danielmarkbruce 4 hours ago

                      Yes, I read them all.

                      And, surely you understand that many see using the due process clause to make his argument was a stretch. Just saying "his analysis is extremely cogent" doesn't make it so.

            • bumby 4 hours ago

              I think the issue is that someone working in public office had influence to affect that probability, and their relatives stood to gain from it.

              I don’t know enough about the ethics laws to know if it was strictly illegal, but it does create a smell.

              Suppose a county engineer has influence on whether oil drilling will be allowed (they don’t make policy but consult those who do), and prior to approval their relatives buy up a lot of land in the area. That engineer may not have been the deciding factor, but it seems like it runs afoul of ethics laws/standards.

            • PaulDavisThe1st 5 hours ago

              They weren't buying insurance. There's no insurance payout for the companies. They got a small amount of money in hand, and lost the chance to reclaim any of the tariff refund. That isn't insurance.

              Also, the SCOTUS is not a criminal court, it is a constitutional court. If a case is heard there, both sides have not agreed on "obvious illegality". That is unsuprising since in general one side (in this case, the administrative branch of the US Government) is being accused of illegal behavior - when it comes to constitutional rather than criminal questions, most parties do not just accept their guilt, but push as far as they can towards exoneration.

              Frequently, however to everybody else, the case concerns obvious illegality.

              • gus_massa 4 hours ago

                I agree, it's like "reverse insurance". I'm not sure what is the name.

                In insurance, you pay [-$10] to avoid a potencial negative risk [-$100].

                Here you get money [+$10] instead of waiting for a potencial positive benefit [+$100].

                Very slightly related https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_mortgage

            • jcranmer 5 hours ago

              > And the supreme court doesn't hear cases that are 100% obviously illegal.

              There is an argument in about two months' time as to whether or not the Birthright Citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment actually guarantees birthright citizenship in the US. There is no serious legal argument in favor of the interpretation being advanced by the Trump administration, that it does not. And yet here we are.

          • rayiner 6 hours ago

            It’s sleazy because Lutnick’s son bet against the administration Lutnick was in, and against one of Trump’s signature policies. I’d be furious if I was Trump.

            • leviathant 5 hours ago

              You're upsetting the kind of people who leave their shopping carts in the parking lot instead of putting them away when they're done.

      • rayiner 5 hours ago

        What’s happening is that the deal stinks, and people aren’t precisely analyzing exactly why it stinks so they’re just using it to confirm their priors.

        The deal stinks because Cantor bet against the administration that its former head is a part of, and against the signature policy of the president its former head serves.

      • jstummbillig 5 hours ago

        Cool! How much money did you yourself make on this (given that it was entirely obvious, and not leveraging knowledge seems silly)?

        • danielmarkbruce 4 hours ago

          A lot. If you remember all the tariff announcements in the first months of 2025, the stock market tanked and it was an easy buy. The market then reasonably quickly realized many of these tariffs weren't going to persist. The payoff was fast, and the reason you didn't see a massive uptick in the market when the ruling came out was because it was already priced in at that point.

          Just because something isn't obvious to you, it doesn't mean it wasn't obvious to a lot of people.

          • jstummbillig 2 hours ago

            To buy after a market dip requires roughly zero specific conviction or insight regarding this supreme court ruling and its consequences.

            • danielmarkbruce 2 hours ago

              If the market dip is directly caused by X, and you think X is going away or misunderstood, it's specific conviction.

              In this case X was the tariffs. You are out of your depth.

        • vntok 4 hours ago

          Why would you assume the parent would have both a betting addiction and enough side money available to make it worthwhile?

      • bogtog 4 hours ago

        > This is wrong. It's not insider trading. Lutnick didn't have inside information. His son just had a brain. Anyone who read the case knew which way the court was going, it was the least surprising decision ever. Perhaps the only surprising thing is that the court ever heard it.

        If this was so obvious, wouldn't there have been more competitors pushing down the value of it?

        • danielmarkbruce 4 hours ago

          Think about how to actually pull this trade off. It isn't pushing a button on your trading app. Competitors cant enter this competition easily.

          • adampunk 3 hours ago

            I thought his son just had a brain?

            • danielmarkbruce 2 hours ago

              And a small army of folks to do his bidding. Cantor has over 10k people, he's the chairman.

      • hedora 4 hours ago

        The people selling the debt thought there was a ~ 20% chance the money would be collected.

        Is there any proof he didn't have insider information? With this administration + court, it's rare when some sort of fraud, bribes, or protection money payments aren't at play.

        • seizethecheese 3 hours ago

          Prediction markets were at something like 60% that the court would rule against the tariffs

      • raincole 5 hours ago

        It's not insider trading, but surely it's a conflict of interesting? If you ignore all the specific name calling, isn't it still quite wrong that one minister can financially bet against the administration?

        • andsoitis 5 hours ago

          > isn't it still quite wrong that one minister can financially bet against the administration?

          Why?

          • chrisXOXO 2 hours ago

            Because it encourages him to work against the administration.

      • bix6 4 hours ago

        No chance you’d make this trade unless you had some unique insight to even consider setting it up in the first place.

      • khy 5 hours ago

        Could this open Cantor Fitzgerald up to class action law suits from consumers who ultimately paid the refunded tariffs?

        • hedora 4 hours ago

          I'd imagine it'd open the federal government to such a suit.

          It stole money from consumers in the form of illegal tariffs, then refunded the money to people with no obvious relationship to the victims.

        • dboreham 4 hours ago

          Doubtful since any sane person knew the tariffs were not legal and would eventually be overturned.

      • dav43 4 hours ago

        If his son had half a brain he wouldn’t be trading in this quasi derivative

      • thisisit 5 hours ago

        You mean the guy who kept talking about bringing back jobs to US - jobs requiring Americans to screw iPhone parts - wasn't debating in bad faith, like you are doing here? I am shocked, I tell you. I am really shocked.

      • reactordev 5 hours ago

        Divestiture applies to the household.

      • loudmax 4 hours ago

        The mental gymnastics people are performing in order to convince themselves that this isn't the most corrupt administration the US has seen in modern history is staggering.

        If a fraction of the level of skepticism these people applied to Hunter Biden and Hillary Clinton were applied to Trump and his cronies, they'd be demanding impeachment.

      • apercu 4 hours ago

        Oh? You have some sort of insider knowledge here?

      • insane_dreamer 5 hours ago

        Technically it might not be "insider trading" since most information (we assume) was public knowledge.

        But members of the government being able to trade on matters of government policy is exactly how government corruption works. Previous administrations understood this was important to prevent (Carter putting his peanut farm in a blind trust, the Bush's did the same) but now Trump has made clear corruption is just totally fine (why else become president or a government official).

      • baq 5 hours ago

        such hopeful naivety was passable early 2025. having seen 1% of the epstein files, you'd have to be acting in bad faith to say there was no collusion.

      • behringer 5 hours ago

        Yeah it's not insider trading. It's just that someone on the inside engaged in trade... Cmon guys you know there's a difference!

        • vntok 4 hours ago

          You're right, trading by insiders is not necessarily inside trading. Look it up, it's a pretty interesting nerdsniping blackhole.

    • happyopossum 5 hours ago

      You've been sucked in by an online lie and are spreading it as fact:

      "Amid online claims Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick’s sons, Brandon and Kyle Lutnick, senior executives at Cantor Fitzgerald, could benefit from the Supreme Court’s tariff ruling, a firm spokesperson told Newsweek it has “never executed any transactions or taken risk on the legality of tariffs.""

      [0] https://www.newsweek.com/howard-lutnick-sons-may-make-money-...

      • pests 4 hours ago

        Not according to the letter obtained by WIRED, as written about up thread.

      • p_j_w 4 hours ago

        They’ve denied being involved in naked corruption, I suppose we have no choice but to take them at their word.

    • ok_dad 3 hours ago

      Similar to how Noem gave a contract for 143 million to an 8 day old company with an address at her former political operative’s home.

      The admin is just here to literally steal tax dollars.

    • petcat 6 hours ago

      Is it insider trading to bet on a Supreme Court verdict? It's not like it was a slam dunk. The decision was 6-3.

      • indoordin0saur 6 hours ago

        Yeah, because he's the son of the commerce secretary, so (supposedly) has access to the internal deliberations within the government.

        • danielmarkbruce 6 hours ago

          No, because "the government" isn't one blob. The court system is separate from the administration. And the supreme court justices aren't giving the internal deliberations to someone in the administration, especially when the administration is one of the parties in the case.

          • mothballed 5 hours ago

            .... what? 3 of the justices were nominated by Trump. You think the people appointing them didn't have internal deliberations before they were appointed, including about things Trump had thought about like tariffs? Even FDR knew the 'separation' was a farce, that's how he magically got the court to go along with progressive programs they prior didn't support, after the 'Switch in time that saved nine.'

            SCOTUS largely functions as a post-facto legitimization machine for those that appoint them. They do not interpret the constitution so much as serve as god-people in funny costumes that provide the cultural message from god that the actions of their political persuasion were legal (or illegal) even in cases where a historical and literal reading of the constitution would otherwise find you with no way to find them legitimate if not for man in black robe say so.

            ------ re: "2 of 3" below due to throttling--------

            A vote to refund here was not a vote against the admin, it was a vote to simplify the laundering of the tax. It was a vote to put the money straight into the coffers of admin insiders like Lutnick et al financial engineering scheme. Meanhwile it did not invalidate tariffs, as Trump immediately pivoted to a different tariff structure.

            As a second note, the profit here was actually not dependent nearly as much on the vote as the insider information. The fact the best any rebuttal can come up with is the vote might have been 'wrong' is basically totally defaulting to the insider trading element which means you are totally yielding the underlying premise.

            That is, the only 'vote' against the admin in this case would be one that went against their insider information. Failure to note this is how the justices and admin have swindled you and the public. The very posing of this comment of rayiner et al reveals how they tricked you.

            • jcranmer 4 hours ago

              > what? 3 of the justices were nominated by Trump. You think the people appointing them didn't have internal deliberations before they were appointed, including about things Trump had thought about like tariffs?

              They were nominated in Trump's first term, which had a very qualitatively different cabinet assembled around Trump, one much less focused on sycophancy and pleasing Trump. I don't think anybody in Trump's cabinet 6 years ago was thinking about the potential powers a president had in being able to change tariffs based on how he felt waking up in the morning, much less interrogation of judicial candidates based on how willing they were to go along with that.

            • rayiner 5 hours ago

              But 2 of those 3 voted against Trump! And 2 of the ones who voted for him were nominated by a free-trader republican.

            • gruez 5 hours ago

              >.... what? 3 of the justices were nominated by Trump. You think the people appointing them didn't have internal deliberations before they were appointed, including about things Trump had thought about like tariffs?

              Given that the 2/3 justices appointed by Trump voted against the tariffs, what's the implication here? That Trump deliberately picked anti-tariff justices just so he can engage in a rube goldberg plan to enact tariffs, buy tariff refunds on the cheap, and then have them revoked?

              • mothballed 5 hours ago

                Trump can profit either way, the key is the insider knowledge to bet for or against them. Admin insiders financially engineered where they profited from refunds.

                Any vote towards what the insider information pointed to was a vote 'for' the admin as they had financially engineered their winnings based on that. And meanwhile Trump immediately turned to a new tariff structure. The vote they gave was the strongest vote in favor of the admin insiders they could have given, and meanwhile didn't actually stop Trump from continuing on with the scheme.

            • irishcoffee 5 hours ago

              > 3 of the justices were nominated by Trump.

              You can blame RBG for one of those. It fascinates me that Biden made the same mistake RBG did, I’ll always wonder how different the would would be if she had stepped down and the democratic party had held a real primary.

              I don’t like trump, I think he stinks. The democratic party has a few own-goals in this current game.

              • petcat 5 hours ago

                I can't blame Ginsurg. She was still capable of performing her duties even at the end. She resisted an overtly political retirement and it wasn't even clear if a compatible replacement would be confirmed even if she did retire early.

                It's unfortunate how it went, but I respect her decision.

                • andsoitis 5 hours ago

                  You don’t think her ego got in the way?

                  • petcat 4 hours ago

                    I think she had a principled perspective not to politicize her role as a Supreme Court Justice. Maybe her ideology was wrong.

              • rayiner 5 hours ago

                > I don’t like trump, I think he stinks. The democratic party has a few own-goals in this current game.

                You guys should have nominated Amy Klobuchar as VP so you had a credible backup when it became apparent that Biden was too old to run again. That’s a mistake that’s going to continue holding you back, since Biden made South Carolina the first primary state: https://www.masslive.com/politics/2025/06/2028-dem-frontrunn....

                As Obama said, “never underestimate Joe’s ability to fuck things up.”

                • irishcoffee 5 hours ago

                  I don’t have a “you guys” :)

              • expedition32 5 hours ago

                Important to note that Republican does not automatically mean "Trumpist".

                Ofcourse most American politicians are pathetic losers who immediately cave but judges are generally people who are used to dealing with thugs.

                And if you ever wondered why judges cannot be fired by the Executive branch now you know.

            • parineum 5 hours ago

              > .... what? 3 of the justices were nominated by Trump. You think the people appointing them didn't have internal deliberations before they were appointed, including about things Trump had thought about like tariffs?

              Following that logic, it make sense that those 3 voted with the administration.

              Oh wait...

              • mothballed 5 hours ago

                I don't see how a vote against is a vote against the administration. The whole point here is their corruption machine profited more off the justices voting against the tariff and for refunds. The tariffs were a mechanism to feign a tax for public purpose but then 'refund' them turning it into a tax to private business and Lutnick's financial engineering. Funneling the money straight into corrupt private enterprise via 'refund' is even easier for Trump than having to launder it through public coffers.

                The key is whether they had insider information given their association with these justices.

                • danielmarkbruce 5 hours ago

                  >> SCOTUS largely functions as a post-facto legitimization machine for those that appoint them. They do not interpret the constitution so much as serve as god-people in funny costumes that provide the cultural message from god that the actions of their political persuasion were legal (or illegal) even in cases where a historical and literal reading of the constitution would otherwise find you with no way to find them legitimate if not for man in black robe say so.

                  You keep changing what you are saying.

                  • mothballed 2 hours ago

                    (1) they likely to have insider information.

                    (2) Is that SCOTUS functions as a legitimization process

                    (3) Is that de-legitimizing this particular tariff regime, while trump immediately pivots to a new tariff, is a best case scenario for the admin insiders as it lets them profit immensely from refund corruption while still pivoting immediately to a new tariff. The vote was one in favor of the Trump insiders.

                    (4) It is hilarious that the best counter your argument et al includes is just glossing over the insider aspect, which means you're just yielding the entire underpinning to this thread to me, which is more than enough to satisfy the premise on its own even if you reject this particular vote as being in the service of the admin insiders.

                    Of course, if you just smugly quote half of what I said and keep ping ponging one side or the other when I study the other half, citing muh changed argument, then you can play this fraudulent argument that pretends I "changed" what I said. This reveals your argument as a deliberate fraud so I will leave you the last word to lie further to the ether, rest assured I will not read whatever non-sense follows.

        • petcat 6 hours ago

          You're saying that he had access to all of the Supreme Court Justices' chambers?

          • indoordin0saur 6 hours ago

            You don't need to have access to everything for it to be insider trading, just more than the general public. Lutnick would know what case they are making to the court, perhaps the confidence of the attorneys in winning as well as information on how the case was going.

            • tacticalturtle 5 hours ago

              Supreme Court transcripts of arguments are posted to supreme court.gov the same day the arguments are made:

              https://www.supremecourt.gov/oral_arguments/argument_transcr...

              There’s no secret sauce here - their guess as to how the case is going is as good as any outside observer, and based on the questions made by the justices.

            • parineum 5 hours ago

              All of that is based on public knowledge, including the confidence of attorneys.

      • rayiner 6 hours ago

        And the en banc appellate court decision was split 7-4, with two republican and two democratic appointees voting to uphold the tariffs.

        This was a very complex decision that ideologically divided the courts.

      • kowalej 6 hours ago

        I'm shocked you can't see how this is a potential conflict of interest. You don't need to know the exact outcome of the SC decision to have confidence that things will land in your favor. There are certainly all kinds of high level discussions with legal experts in the White House that could have hinted this outcome as likely. The real question is whether there's any personal involvement still with Cantor or this was something launched without influence. If there was influence though, there will of course be denials and bold-face lying (just like with the Epstein involvement).

      • spamizbad 6 hours ago

        You don't need a crystal ball to understand a conservative supreme court would require the government to refund what amounts to an illegal tax on American businesses. If you stick your hand into a fire you don't need to speculate as to whether you'll get burned.

    • snowwrestler 6 hours ago

      Could you go into detail about what you think happened? The tariffs were public knowledge, and the suits to invalidate them were public knowledge. Are you saying you think the Supreme Court justices secretly communicated to the Commerce Secretary how they intended to rule on the case, far in advance of publishing their ruling?

      • myrmidon 6 hours ago

        I'll turn this around: Do you think it is acceptable for policymakers, lawmakers or people involved in such a process to reap profits more or less directly with (partially non-public) knowledge they've acquired?

        Because I think not. And I feel pretty strongly about this. The conflict of interest is so glaringly obvious that it should be completely self-evident why every voter should want to prevent, ban and punish any such action.

        I feel that anyone involved in this tariff insurance business should be able to prove without a shadow of doubt that they had no political insider knowledge about the whole thing, and I'm extremely skeptical that this is the case (just from the pople involved alone!).

        • irishcoffee 5 hours ago

          You mean these policymakers?

          “ House kills effort to release all congressional sexual misconduct and harassment reports”

          https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/house-kills-effort...

          • myrmidon 5 hours ago

            Yes?

            I frankly do not understand your argument: "Some policymakers are sleazy (yes?), so it should be fine for all of them to leverage influence/access into personal gain" (?!)

            This does not make sense to me.

        • NetMageSCW 5 hours ago

          >with (partially non-public) knowledge they've acquired

          What partially non-public information did he have? Be specific.

          • myrmidon 4 hours ago

            > What partially non-public information did he have? Be specific.

            How would I know? I'm neither Lutnick nor his son.

            My point is that there is an extremely obvious conflict of interest here. If your family business is directly affected by decisions and information of the public office that you hold, then the very obvious risk is that you are going favor official decisions that help your business (possibly to the detriment of the majority), and that you leverage non-public information for personal gain.

            For this specific case, insider knowledge could be a precise understanding on the "shakiness" of the initial tariffs combined with an insider picture of ongoing legal cases against them (progress and expected success rate).

            I'm not saying that Lutnick & sons comitted some kind of crime, but if you let your family business overlap with your public office this much, then the resulting scrutiny is more than justified, and you could make a strong point that such a situation should be avoided in the first place.

      • wutwutwat 6 hours ago

        That would be insane. That would mean people in the government talk to each other and also that they have conversations or make deals behind closed doors or that one or god forbid all of them are corrupt, which is utter nonsense!

        Probably just a good guess. At least it wasn't based on intimate knowledge of things based on being in a position extremely close to everyone involved in all of it. Sheesh.

    • hedora 4 hours ago

      If there was any justice at all left in this country, a class action lawsuit with the entire US population as the class would arrange for the tariff refunds to go to individuals, not companies.

      That'd neatly address this particular instance of insider trading, and probably many other similar schemes that didn't make it into the press.

    • semiquaver 5 hours ago

        > Now if this isn't insider trading (by the literal Commerce Secretary), I don't know what is.
      
      I agree that you don’t know what insider trading is.
    • lowercased 6 hours ago

      might not be 'insider trading' with respect to the court decision, but Lutnick had influence with the president and could affect tariffs being paid by the various companies who were squeezed in to considering selling (or actually selling) their tariff refund rights. And tariffs changed many times over months, so... looking at what companies actually sold to CF might reveal some patterns that raise eyebrows. But nothing will be done about it.

    • b112 3 hours ago

      Well it's not, but that aside, how would consumers ever get a refund?

      Show up with a banana peel at a grocery, and say you want a tariff refund for the banana you paid cash for, 6 months ago?

      There's no tracking for almost all of tariff affected purchases.

      • qingcharles an hour ago

        FedEx, I believe, have stated they will refund all consumers who paid them the tariffs, which they then paid to the gov. Nothing yet about the fees also incurred by consumers to pay the tariffs, but there are at least two class actions filed already on this subject, IIRC.

      • HWR_14 3 hours ago

        Consumers wouldn't. Importers will.

        • b112 an hour ago

          Indeed. And the concept of passing any refund on is just untenable. My example is to highlight how unreasonable such an expectation is.

          And while this specific tariff situation is silly, and annoying, it's been going on forever. There were cases of tariffs on lumber from Canada, with presidents of all stripes. Some were fought, won in court, and nary a person questioned "where is the refund for the consumer".

    • barelysapient 6 hours ago

      This assumes companies would have refunded consumers.

      Obviously if a company did this, refunding consumers was the last thing on their mind.

      • HarHarVeryFunny 6 hours ago

        Best case consumers may be refunded for tariffs directly charged to them by shipping companies like FedEx and DHL (USPS too, but can you really see them having the competence to do this?!).

        What consumers will presumably never be refunded for are the increased prices they've been paying for imports of any kind (from Walmart, Amazon, grocery store) where someone else was the importer.

      • 6510 5 hours ago

        It will trickle down!

    • sillysaurusx 6 hours ago

      That’s smart though. If you don’t want to lose your rights to tariff refunds, don’t sell them. Would the alternative be to forbid companies from selling those rights in this case?

      As for whether consumers should get anything, I’m sympathetic. It’s a matter of implementation though. How would you refund so many people? You’d have to quantify how much overhead they’ve paid in tariffs, and that seems like an IRS-scale job. Dealing with it at the scale of individual companies is at least tractable.

      • jacquesm 6 hours ago

        It's not smart, it's extortion by someone connected to the state and self dealing.

        If you think this is smart then you may as well go around clubbing old ladies over their heads, as long as you don't get caught it's like free money right?

        The alternative is not to forbid companies from selling those rights, the alternative is to undo this deal and pay the whole amount back to those that originally forked it over and who needed to sell these 'rights' in order to keep their companies alive.

        • koolba 6 hours ago

          How is it extortion? They could have gotten a different deal from anybody else or no deal at all. Nobody was twisting there arm or forcing them to deal with this one company to sell their tariff claims.

          • matthewdgreen 6 hours ago

            If two companies come to you with an offer to sell the refunds, and one has strong ties to a central figure in the administration — which can, in the future, subject or exempt you from new tariffs and otherwise use the Federal government’s powers to mess with you - are you truly free to choose either offer? Or is there a risk and a benefit to taking the one that’s tied to the administration? (And frankly, can you even be certain either way?) This kind of conflict (even the appearance of this kind of conflict) is why we generally don’t want government officials or their families to be profiting directly off the policies they oversee. It is at best unseemly, and that’s being kind.

            • eszed 3 hours ago

              Thank you. Yes, this is the reason to be concerned. Not because it's extortion, or anything else like that, but because having to evaluate a counterparty's degree of connection to the State before doing a deal is not the way that free enterprise or open markets are supposed to work. Lutnik Jr's involvement puts every other bidder for these contracts at a disadvantage (even if it's illusory, and he's not personally acting badly), and distorts pricing signals. It's unfair not (or not primarily / directly) to customers, but to the rest of the legitimate players within an industry.

              Yes, I know this isn't the first time this has happened, and that people likewise benefit from connections to governments led by other political parties. Those instances are also bad!

            • koolba 5 hours ago

              > If two companies come to you with an offer to sell the refunds, and one has strong ties to a central figure in the administration — which can, in the future, subject or exempt you from new tariffs and otherwise use the Federal government’s powers to mess with you - are you truly free to choose either offer?

              Yes, because tariffs, like all taxes in the USA, are not imposed on individual people or entities. They’re on industries and specific materials.

              If a company truly thought the chance of winning was low and needed the money now, they would pick the best offer. Regardless of who is making it.

              • matthewdgreen 3 hours ago

                This is naive. For larger firms, targeted product and industry-specific tariffs can be a game-changer. For example, Trump created a set of exemptions related to smartphones built in China that weren't officially aimed at Apple, but since Apple sells approximately 50% of US smartphones (for a much larger slice of profit) and 80% are made in China, this disproportionately affected a single company. But there are other areas where the administration can also use Federal power: see, for example, Trump's use of Federal approval to block the Netflix/WB merger as one example.

          • krsw 5 hours ago

            This is basically the government doing a protection racket. I swear, the amount of neoliberals in here lauding the move is a recession indicator. Did we all forget what corruption is?

            • jacquesm 3 hours ago

              Corruption is so endemic now that people stop seeing it. This was the same in the former USSR, when I was there I would be utterly amazed by the degree to which everybody had normalized corruption, it was not considered anything wrong or special at all, it was just the way business was done. You could effectively buy your way into or out of anything.

        • gruez 6 hours ago

          >It's not smart, it's extortion by someone connected to the state and self dealing.

          Where's the extortion? The "it's a nice shop you got there..." racket only works if you can strongly influence whether the damages occur (ie. you tell your goons to attack the shop, or not). So far as I can tell however, that's not the case, because Trump wanted the tariffs to stay, and was sad that they got revoked. Going back to the mob analogy, it would be like if the mob boss asked for protection money, the goons didn't damage the shop, the mob boss was sad that the shop didn't get damaged, and then went to to find some other way to damage the shop (ie. section 122 tariffs).

          • jacquesm 6 hours ago

            You think businesses as a rule can all survive a 15 to 100% surcharge on their products without running into liquidity issues?

            • gruez 6 hours ago

              The stocks of major retailers haven't cratered, so maybe? You're going to have to present some figures rather than just asking rhetorical questions.

              • jacquesm 5 hours ago

                You have to present figures when you're arguing the hard-to-prove side of something not when it's plain obvious that business are not in a position to deal with such shocks in the market without having to reach for capital. This is not normal. Typical operating margins of business is anywhere from 5 to 20% with outliers in the digital domain but that's not the part that we are talking about here.

                Anyway, you want figures, well, here are some figures:

                https://marketrealist.com/why-did-700-bu/

                I'm sure there are other sources, better ones, worse ones but they all tell roughly the same story: willy nilly tarrifs have a negative effect on one's ability to operate a business. Businesses like predictable, stable climates to operate in.

                • NetMageSCW 5 hours ago

                  There’s a long way from businesses like predictable stable climates (and that ship has long sailed) and business won’t survive. There’s no reason to believe the latter is true.

                  • jacquesm 3 hours ago

                    At a guess you are not operating a business that adds value to real goods subject to overnight surprise tariffs then.

            • bluGill 6 hours ago

              Those are a sunk cost at this point though. The business likely is better off having sold and got the money now - vs risking they will never get a refund.

          • hedora 3 hours ago

            Extortion rackets come in many forms.

            For example, NCR (National Cash Register) used to have their sales people "accidentally" break competitive machines (dropping them on the floor was common -- these were old precision mechanical adders), then offer an NCR machine as a "free" replacement.

            You could argue this wasn't extortion. What are the damages? The replacement machine was higher value, so the shop was "made whole", and was only temporarily without a cash register. Of course, the competitor got screwed out of support contracts + renewal, and it was made very clear to the stores they had to play ball. (Unless they wanted to buy a replacement, and watch it also get smashed.)

            It's the same with the tariffs:

            Adopt a bunch of Trump dictated policies, or they steal your money (the mechanism is not providing exemptions). Later, they "refund" the payments (so, no further court action), but somehow the money does not go back to the people that it came from.

            Ignoring the businesses that sold their rights to collect, all sorts of prices have skyrocketed in the last year. The consumers that are paying the increased amounts at retail are not going to see a cent of this settlement. Where is my check?

            Also, it's unclear how many Supreme Court justices changed their votes because of the sold rights to collect refunds. The company involved gave a lot of money to Trump and conservative campaigns, and many of the justices are in his pocket. It's also unclear if they bribed the justices directly, since that's not public data.

            On top of that, when these "securities" were sold, it could have been made clear that they would come with favoritism in the future. Did businesses that paid up get special exemptions? Were they threatened with intimidation that then didn't happen because they sold the rights?

            All of the above is standard practice with this administration. They had the benefit of the doubt, but burned through it years ago.

        • AnimalMuppet 6 hours ago

          Self-dealing by someone connected to the state, yes. Extortion, no.

          It takes a fair amount of money to take a court case to the Supreme Court. You can pay it all (and still maybe lose), or you can let the law firm have part of what you win. This happens all the time in the US legal system. It's not extortion; it's essentially venture funding by the law firm. (Yes, I'm aware of the pattern in the previous sentence, but I'm in fact a human, and not even LLM-assisted.) If the company doesn't want to play that way, they don't have to. They can pay the full cost of the lawsuit themselves.

      • podgietaru 6 hours ago

        Wasn't the whole point of selling your right to refunds that the initial tariff was so onerous to businesses that they needed a cash injection to stay afloat.

        Don't sell your right to your tariff refund is one of those things that sounds good in principle, but falls apart when you apply some sense to it.

        • gruez 6 hours ago

          >Wasn't the whole point of selling your right to refunds that the initial tariff was so onerous to businesses that they needed a cash injection to stay afloat.

          No? You also do it for certainly. "One bird in hand beats two in the bush" and all that. You see this occurring outside of tariff refunds, with businesses selling debts to debt collectors for pennies on the dollar, or bond holders selling high risk bonds (eg. Argentina) for steep discounts.

        • phil21 5 hours ago

          Is a 20 cent on the dollar or so payment for the new tariff expense really going to save a company that much on the bubble?

          I'm sure there are a few exceptional cases, but that doesn't seem to me like it would be the typical cases. A company needing to pay $100 in tariffs but then the $20 of cash infusion being the thing that saves the day seems rather unlikely.

          I'd say it's more likely this was a profit center to more companies than it was a life line. As in they passed the tariff down to their consumers, and also collected the 20% as a cash payment to juice the bottom line.

          More common though would be simply a way to help defray some costs and provide certainty.

          • NetMageSCW 5 hours ago

            I really hope those companies that passed the tariff to consumers are required to refund the increase to those same consumers, regardless of whether they sold their refund or not.

      • hermanzegerman 6 hours ago

        It's enriching himself on the taxpayers expense.

        Or would you trust someone on advising you, that has a pretty huge financial interest in proposing you policies that will fail because they are illegal?

        • NetMageSCW 5 hours ago

          What evidence do you have that those tariffs were proposed by him?

      • bhouston 6 hours ago

        > That’s smart though. If you don’t want to lose your rights to tariff refunds, don’t sell them. Would the alternative be to forbid companies from selling those rights in this case?

        Definitely smart, but also sure looks like an insider play / corruption / self-dealing.

        • Ajedi32 6 hours ago

          The commerce secretary has no control over what the Supreme Court does. Anyone could have read the law and decided whether they thought the tariffs were legal or not.

          • hermanzegerman 6 hours ago

            The commerce secretary has in this case a huge conflict of interest in pushing for these illegal policies in the first place

            • AnimalMuppet 6 hours ago

              The commerce secretary wasn't the one pushing for them in the first place. The president was.

              I mean, look, there's plenty of conflicts of interest, and stuff that sure looks like graft, and claims of people making insane amounts of money off of stuff. But in this case, the commerce secretary's options were 1) do the tariffs or 2) get fired. Minion? Sure. Minion without the self-respect or ethics to quit when they were being told to do unconstitutional stuff? Also sure. Pushing these policies, as though they had agency in the matter? No.

          • simmerup 6 hours ago

            But he does know that Trump had no plan to contest the supreme court or make new laws

            • NetMageSCW 5 hours ago

              Trump doesn’t have those powers.

      • vincnetas 6 hours ago

        i guess there would be much more initiative for Lutnik not to refund (ignore courts order, or drag them out like in other cases) if no one would have sold their rights to refund.

      • izacus 5 hours ago

        Calling outright corruption at the expense of citizens as "smart" is quite a statement of morality O.o

        • pocksuppet 5 hours ago

          In this economy, morality is dead. There is only profit extraction.

      • nkohari 6 hours ago

        I don't think anyone is disagreeing it's a shrewd decision by the corporations, just that it shouldn't benefit the Secretary of Commerce. We're a long way from having to put your peanut farm in a blind trust to avoid the perception of corruption.

      • UncleMeat 6 hours ago

        Imagine instead if the government didn't do the illegal thing in the first place. Or if the supreme court had not intervened on the initial stay of the tariffs to allow them to go into place while the suit proceeded.

        The fact that businesses were put in a position to make this choice is outrageous in the first place.

      • coldpie 6 hours ago

        > It’s a matter of implementation though. How would you refund so many people?

        This was the point of the tariffs, wasn't it? The White House now has a $130B slush fund to distribute more or less however they want, with no accountability because accountability is by-design impossible. Sure maybe half of it will go where it ought to as a fig leaf, but a very large chunk of that cash will be making its way to Trump's loyalty crew.

        • magicalhippo 6 hours ago

          > The White House now has a $130B slush fund to distribute more or less however they want, with no accountability because accountability is by-design impossible.

          The government knows exactly who paid what in duties, otherwise they couldn't tell if you were trying to avoid duties.

          So they know exactly who to pay back and how much.

          • coldpie 6 hours ago

            > The government knows exactly who paid what in duties

            No, they have a record of who handed the money over to the government. This does not tell you who paid the duties. There's going to be a whole lot of Trump toadies & business owners in the chain, siphoning cash from refunds before they work their way back to the people who actually paid them. And that's not even getting into the open corruption & fraud that will be happening as part of this as well.

            • magicalhippo 5 hours ago

              > No, they have a record of who handed the money over to the government. This does not tell you who paid the duties.

              The entity that handed over the money to the government is the entity that paid the duties, and is the one the government must refund.

              If an entity has passed those costs on does not change that, and does not turn the 130B into a slush fund.

              However I agree that consumers will be likely be royally screwed by this debacle, that much was obvious from the start.

              • coldpie 5 hours ago

                If the government charges the importer $20 and the importer charges me $20, then I am in effect the one who paid the duty. If the refund goes to the importer, and it does not come back to me, then the government and the importer have colluded to rob me of $20. This isn't an accident, the owners of the import companies who will benefit from this theft were almost certainly all Trump supporters.

                In reality, half of the funds will go to that. Maybe even some tiny portion of it will genuinely make its way back to the people who actually paid the duties. This is the fig leaf to which I referred. The other half will go to Trump toadies in the form of "mistakes," fraud, corruption, skimming, unclaimed funds, etc. This is the slush fund to which I referred.

                In the end, all of it is going to Trump toadies. It's a $130B transfer of wealth to Trump's financial backers.

                • phil21 2 hours ago

                  That’s not how commerce works.

                  You agreed with your supplier on a price. You paid it.

                  Doesn’t matter that part of the price was tariffs or component costs or labor. Doesn’t matter if your supplier gets a tax rebate or a kickback from an upstream supplier after the fact. These things are entirely immaterial to the meeting of the minds when you execute the contract for sale.

                  The only moderately fuzzy case is going to be if there is an outright line item for “tariff charge” - I always thought companies were being a bit reckless explicitly adding these as line items due to this exact uncertainty. Very few companies are going to have a perfect 1:1 ratio here so there is some definite business risk in doing so.

                  And no, not even close to all companies that were charged tariffs are “trump toadies” - that’s an absurd claim on its face. The ones I know hurt the most and nearly put out of business due to needing to raise prices certainly were not. And there is zero way they could afford refunding at a 1:1 ratio now.

                  • coldpie 2 hours ago

                    > Doesn’t matter if your supplier gets a tax rebate or a kickback from an upstream supplier after the fact.

                    It does matter if the tax that was gathered was illegal, as it is here. The illegally gathered funds should go back to the entity that paid the tax, not the middleman who ferried it from here to there. The unclear method for how to accomplish this is where the grift will be coming in.

                    > not even close to all companies that were charged tariffs are “trump toadies”

                    I did not claim this. I claimed most of the money that will be refunded will go to Trump toadies.

                    • phil21 an hour ago

                      > I did not claim this. I claimed most of the money that will be refunded will go to Trump toadies.

                      That would require most of the money collected being from trump toadies to begin with. Anyone that regularly imports goods as a matter of business will also be requesting their refunds. Only a tiny fraction sold their rights.

                      > It does matter if the tax that was gathered was illegal, as it is here. The illegally gathered funds should go back to the entity that paid the tax.

                      The entity that paid the tax was the one that wrote the check to the federal government. They chose to (or not) pass all or a portion of those costs down to their customer. The customer in the end chose to purchase the goods or not.

                      If your landlord charges you $100/mo more in rent due to a property tax that was later reassessed due to a mistake, they are under no legal obligation to refund you that money. You chose to rent at the higher price.

                      Simply put: Your recourse was at the time of transaction. After that it’s no longer your money. Plenty of companies get refunded errant taxes paid years later due to law being misapplied or even found outright illegal. This is no different.

                      The only marginally interesting legal question here is going to be the companies that separated it out as a line item. I imagine this will be roughly as enforceable as “fuel surcharges” are on airline tickets - where the surcharge has nothing to do with the actual real time cost of Jet fuel. It will likely devolve all the way down to specific clauses in contracts, most of which will not cover this to start with. So it may as well be a “I’m wearing black socks today” tax as a line item would be my guess. Very interested in the first few test cases though!

                      • coldpie an hour ago

                        > Your recourse was at the time of transaction

                        These illegal taxes weren't only on optional goods. I couldn't opt out of buying everything for a full year. I disagree that it's OK for the government to force everyone in the country to give a $130B gift to business owners via an illegal action, the vast majority of which will be going straight to the wealthiest companies & people, and/or Trump's personal supporters. It's just straight-up theft.

                • Detrytus 4 hours ago

                  Maybe I'm naive, but if court orders tariff refunds cannot it also order that the importer must return it to individual buyers? That's only fair, right? Companies don't get to keep the money. If they want to sue government for some extra compensation for their trouble they can do that separately.

    • syllogism 4 hours ago

      The corruptions of this administration are legion, but this isn't one of them. Unless you can point to something Lutnick did to create this outcome, I don't see how he had a better view of the whole thing than anyone else.

      • hedora 4 hours ago
      • caconym_ 3 hours ago

        Isn't Lutnick literally the chief architect of Trump's tariff policy? I can hardly imagine anybody more responsible for creating this outcome besides Trump himself, who would presumably have appointed somebody else if Lutnick hadn't been available.

        > I don't see how he had a better view of the whole thing than anyone else.

        Given the above, you really don't think Lutnick had a "better view" of the likely outcomes and timelines, including the Trump admin's planned and gamed out responses to certain outcomes, than the average Joe on the street? I think that's extremely, uh, naive.

    • mrwh 5 hours ago

      The executive class are out to get as much as they can as quickly as they can while the music plays, then retire to whatever luxury boltholt they can prepare. It's FIRE with private islands, and without even a figleaf of noblesse oblige any more.

      • tencentshill 5 hours ago

        Worse. They tend to stick around due to their inability to stop taking until they die.

      • gruez 5 hours ago

        >The executive class are out to get as much as they can [...]

        This is just hollow populist anti-elite rhetoric. Who do you think sold them the tariff refunds? They're not buying them from granny who didn't know any better. They bought it from other executives who knew, or at least ought to know what was at stake.

        • bcrosby95 5 hours ago

          Lol. Granny paid for the tarrif then the refund was sold by an elite to an elite for 20 cents on the dollar.

          Everyone wins except granny.

          To be fair, I think some companies didn't raise prices because they thought they would be overturned.

        • wiseowise 2 hours ago

          Jesus Christ, how pathetic you are. I severely doubt you’re just a bored billionaire, which leaves only the option of a bootlicker. Why do you simp for them? Do you expect a bread crump to fall off the table? Or are you a temporarily embarrassed millionaire thinking you belong to them?

    • mustyoshi 4 hours ago

      Just about everyone on the left has been saying these tariffs were illegal since day one.

      It's not insider trading that they acted on that consensus.

    • leggerss 5 hours ago

      This type of financialization should be illegal

    • Supermancho 6 hours ago

      This is collusion between the offices of POTUS, SCOTUS, and corporate friends that looks like insider trading, from a zoomed in lens.

      • dmix 5 hours ago

        You're saying Trump doesn't want tariffs? And the SCOTUS judges who went on record supporting executive powers to tariff was all just a big insider trading scam? And corporations were willing to risk a hundred of billions in tariffs fees on the odds it might get refunded just because some finance company might get a small cut of refunds?

        • Supermancho 5 hours ago

          To clarify, POTUS being short for the group POTUS in-crowd of the actual POTUS and cabinet, who act in sync.

          I'm saying the public tide shifted and the legal reality set in that they weren't going to get sympathetic rulings...which they don't care about anyway since it's not their money and the tariff threats already had any desired effects sought.

          POTUS was floated the idea that they could enrich themselves, so the decision was made, communicated to the Secretary of Commerce and to the SCOTUS judges.

          > And corporations were willing to risk a hundred of billions in tariffs fees on the odds it might get refunded just because some finance company might get a small cut of refunds?

          Nothing to do with them. Narcissists don't worry about the future of others, except as a narrative to sell their personal ambitions.

          Some people don't believe the administration is that flippant. I think it's obvious they are having fun.

    • energy123 6 hours ago

      For it to be insider trading, he would have had to have access to private information from the Supreme Court, which seems unlikely.

      • jacquesm 6 hours ago

        Why is that unlikely? It would seem to be a very easy thing to accomplish. For instance, he could just ask.

        • gruez 6 hours ago

          >For instance, he could just ask.

          Or just pay attention to the oral arguments. The justices seemed very skeptical of the Trump administration, and betting markets reacted accordingly.

      • seanmcdirmid 6 hours ago

        They could have used inside government legal analysis that other people didnt have. You could have predicted this with higher certainty if you knew the justices well enough.

        • NetMageSCW 5 hours ago

          Coulda woulda shoulda.

          They could have just been smarter than average and found an angle others didn’t see that paid off for them.

          • seanmcdirmid 3 hours ago

            Ya, that's why this will be impossible to show off as insider trading.

    • beeforpork 5 hours ago

      > while, of course, consumers get nothing

      This would have been the case no mattern what.

    • abustamam 3 hours ago

      The CF rabbit hole is wild. Somehow he manages to make a lot of money during tragedies and economic downturns.

      I don't buy into the conspiracies, but it is quite odd how he always manages to come up on top.

      https://www.reddit.com/r/911archive/comments/1r5rkk3/howard_...

    • GaryBluto 6 hours ago

      > Now if this isn't insider trading [...], I don't know what is.

      Correct.

    • rbanffy 6 hours ago

      I believe, with huge disappointment, that this level of corruption has been normalised in this administration and that nothing will come out of this.

      • rootusrootus 6 hours ago

        Look how many comments in this discussion are scrambling to support the corruption. It’s very normalized, to the point where we don’t call it corruption any more, we call it good business.

      • candiddevmike 6 hours ago

        Yea, I'm done hearing "the wheels of justice turn slowly..." bullshit. People have had their lives ruined, far quicker, for far less.

        • jacquesm 6 hours ago

          The wheels of justice don't turn at all once you reach $1B or so. Their speed is essentially inversely proportional to the net worth of the individual under scrutiny. And if you're really rich you get to buy your own laws through a thing called lobbying. So you will get even more rich.

        • coldpie 6 hours ago

          Life in prison for every single person working under this administration is the moderate position.

          • GaryBluto an hour ago

            I'm sure plenty of wrathful extremists thought they held a moderate position too.

          • amanaplanacanal 5 hours ago

            After this is all over, we probably need to do something about presidential pardon power. Getting a constitutional amendment through is hard, but I don't see another option.

    • throw_rust 4 hours ago

      I fail to see the problem, people voted for this, did they not?

    • theptip 4 hours ago

      The reading I’ve done elsewhere suggests that it’s far from a done deal that companies will be able to extract refunds from the government. For example if doing so offends Trump and causes him to try to extract concessions elsewhere. Or if the government simply drags their feet on various ways.

      “Trump’s buddy’s son offers 20c/$” does not seem like a terrible deal for getting your money out.

    • bell-cot 5 hours ago

      > ...bought the rights to their potential tariff refunds for 20% of the value...

      So - with umpteen $billion on the line, and all the big-shot lobbyists and Washington insiders and experts that all those huge companies had on payroll to advise them - they decided to sell at 20 cents on the dollar.

      Theory: When the far-smarter-than-us money bets big, they might know the actual odds.

    • phillipharris 5 hours ago

      But... who would make a bet with a counterparty like that? Hello, I'm a trump administration insider, here to make a bet with you about the future of one of Trump's policies. You'd have to be pretty stupid.

    • jmyeet 6 hours ago

      Cantor Fitzgerald lost most of its staff in the World Trade Center on 9/11. Lutnick sued American Airlines, eventually settling for $135 million [1]. He claimed this would largely go to the family of hte victims.

      Turns out most (if not all) of it went to the senior executive team, wtih himself being the primary beneficiary [2].

      This is also the same Howard Lutnick who the DoJ accidentally released a photo of with Jeffrey Epstein [3]. People noticed and they removed it. People noticed that too so they restored it.

      Just so we're all clear who Howard Lutnick is.

      [1]: https://www.reuters.com/article/busine.ss/judge-approves-ame...

      [2]: https://x.com/FinanceLancelot/status/2022877480516813077

      [3]: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/27/howard-lutni...

    • rayiner 6 hours ago

      Cantor Fitzgerald is sleezy, but you’ve got the reason wrong. They’re sleezy because they bet against the administration.

      But it’s not “insider trading.” They didn’t have insider information on how the courts were going to rule—especially where it was a 6-3 split with three conservatives siding against the administration. And a split in the appellate court as well, with two republican and two democrat appointees siding for the administration.

      And Cantor had nothing to do with imposing these tariffs in the first place. Trump loves tariffs. He has been wanting to do these tariffs since the 1980s. He imposed tariffs in his first term and campaigned on imposing them now.

      So you’re taking a story about Cantor Fitzgerald displaying disloyalty to Trump and trying to turn it into a “corruption” story that makes no sense.

    • gruez 6 hours ago

      >Now they stand to make huge returns of 3 to 5x for being correct on that bet

      ...assuming they held those rights on their books, rather than selling it off to other hedge funds.

    • actionfromafar 6 hours ago

      But they are sticking it to the libs, so it’s all worth it?

    • NickC25 6 hours ago

      You forgot to mention that Mr. Lutnik is also a close personal friend of a pedophile-turned-Mossad-agent-turned-pedophile named Jeffrey Epstein and visited his island. Mr. Lutnik deliberately and purposefully lied to congress about it, and faced no charges for lying to congress.

      In a just world, someone like that would be jailed indefinitely and made to publicly take stand about his activities, and called out to his face during depositions about his lies.

      • rootusrootus 6 hours ago

        Yeah that’s never going to happen. Nobody in this administration will ever be under oath on the topic. Now they suddenly think Slick Willie is trustworthy because he said he had know knowledge of Trump doing anything wrong. What a world.

        • PaulDavisThe1st 4 hours ago

          Presumably you don't consider a House panel to be under oath (since Lutnick, a part of this administration, will be appearing before one) ?

        • NickC25 3 hours ago

          Sadly, you're right on the money here, nobody will ever spill the beans.

          Problem is Willie knows everything (he was the president for fuck's sake) and is just lawyer-speaking his way out of admitting that he along with multiple former presidents (including the current one) were/are compromised by a hostile nuclear-armed foreign actor's (read: "ally's") intelligence agency. He can't sing, or the whole charade comes apart.

          The contagion fallout is massive. This involves several of the wealthiest people on the planet, tech leaders, business leaders, politicians in powerful countries...and involves several major geopolitical actors...and involves some unspeakably disgusting actions to children.

    • nyeah 5 hours ago

      That's some third-world shit.

    • willmadden 4 hours ago

      What they sold isn't a security regulated by the SEC. There is no "insider trading". There aren't enough facts to determine if what his sons did was ethical and/or legal.

    • SilverElfin 5 hours ago

      It’s not that surprising. The entire tariff saga was one trading opportunity after another for insiders who knew which announcements were going to come out.

      Lutnick is a particularly corrupt individual though. He’s in the Epstein files like Trump and Musk and Thiel. But he also took over Cantor by suing the widow of Cantor after his death. And now he hands the company to children and has no shame about openly nepotistical decisions like this.

  • trymas 5 hours ago

    Side topic, but this number puts into how crazy it was for trump[0] to go on tariff war against enemies and friends alike. All the propaganda and extortionist language about how all countries will pay up to USA.

    Astronomical tariffs in some cases, trade wars and dramas, alienate all allies and from all of this they got only $130B ?

    $7T of spending, $1.77T in deficit[1] and they planned to fix this hole with $100B?!

    Masterminds!

    …and now they need to refund it.

    NB: also puts into perspective how numb I became about reading AI and AI related sums of money, and how crazy actually those numbers are.

    [0] off course many knew that it’s crazy way before it happened.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_United_States_federal_bud...

    • microtonal 5 hours ago

      Astronomical tariffs in some cases, trade wars and dramas, alienate all allies and from all of this they got only $130B ?

      Maybe that was never the point. You present it as retaliation against 'countries that are out to get us'. Introduce the tariffs, companies pay the tariffs by increasing prices for consumers, get the inevitable loss in court, return the tariff money to the companies.

      You just transferred $130B of wealth from citizens to companies.

      Bonus: people are now used to the higher prices, so post-tariffs your profits are also higher.

      • foxyv 3 hours ago

        They also put out of business a bunch of upstart businesses that could threaten their oligopoly. In addition they acquired huge tracts of agricultural land for cheap from all the farms that went bankrupt.

      • 0cf8612b2e1e 3 hours ago

        It was also used to frame why the new tax cuts were justified, even though the optimistic math never worked out either.

        • jijijijij 2 hours ago

          Don't forget blatant insider trading every time new tariffs were announced. It's really a win-win-win situation for the US oligarchy.

      • MattDamonSpace 5 hours ago

        The whole point is “$130B is chump change for the problems caused” and that’s true if companies as well

        • functionmouse 4 hours ago

          Companies will make far more than 130b off this. There's no way they only raised prices just enough to cover the 130b and the labor required for the internal policy changes. This was a justification for price gouging. Which they will not stop doing.

      • hollywood_court 4 hours ago

        Sounds like the opposite of trickle down economics.

        • I-M-S 3 hours ago

          Trickle down economists were right, they just got the direction wrong

      • WesleyJohnson 4 hours ago

        I had the same thought. Even if it wasn't the original intent, it sure is a preferable outcome.

      • bluegatty 2 hours ago

        No, they are not that smart.

        Even if the tariffs are not a lot, they are potent negotiating leverage.

        They def knew they were lying about much they were collecting

        They def knew they were lying about who is paying

        They lied to the public about that and got a bit of extra creme in the bag but the effect was mostly leverage, which 'kind of worked'.

        They could have very effectively used illegal tariffs to actually do 90-deals-in-90 days, knowing the case would take time to draw out.

        But - they have no plan.

        Trump does not think 9 months ahead - he has grudges, grievances, and he pursues whatever grievance he wants to that day.

        He doesn't forget and will push his staff to go against old enemies

        The point is not to improve the economy, bring back jobs - the point is to 'Look Tough' and 'Stick it to the Libs and Foreigners' and to get elected again, failing that, rig the elections (note, his secret signed Executive order with all sorts of things regarding elections)

        The 'high visibility' of ICE is not a bad thing for him - it very much in purpose to show MAGA base that he's cracking liberal, immigrant and brown people heads.

        Jamming those Somalis on the concrete is exactly the optics he wants for his base.

        It was only until people started dying when newsmax/fox started questioning the legitimacy and some support is lost - and not even that much among the base.

        Same thing with tariffs: he will play grievance, the 'Liberal Courts' are against, him blah blah and MAGA will be fine with it.

        The problem is that Core MAGA is maybe really only 20% and Soft MAGA another 15% and that's not enough to win.

        But it's almost.

        Narrative, performance, grievance, populism, social media, information sphere - that's it.

        It's Post-Truth.

        People keep talking about these through the lens of the 'issues', it's completely wrong headed - policies don't matter, only perception etc.

        Reality does have a way of sneaking through though, and 'hardball reality' can change minds. People do understand Epstein, tariffs when they pay attention, unemployment, prices, 'war mostly bad' etc. etc..

        This is White House Reality TV, not really policy and that's the best way to understand it.

        The entire Cabinet have completely been unable to explain the tariff policy - they keep changing their views there is no consistency - it's the same with the war in Iran - everyone's saying different things, objectives are unclear.

        It's irrational too think that there is 'policy' here, this is whim, impulse, populism.

    • jonathanlydall 4 hours ago

      Maybe I don't understand as I'm an outsider, but as per my recent comment on this topic [0], I fail to see the logic of how "other countries" pay the US when the tariffs are paid by the importer and not the other country which is exporting.

      I do acknowledge that import taxes can in theory help local industries, especially if the other countries are subsidizing exported goods.

      [0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47238951

      • epolanski 3 hours ago

        Tariffs almost never make sense, unless it's an industry that's super important for your own survival.

        Capitalism is about efficiency, and eventually there are going countries where producing certain items will always be more efficient. East asian countries have spent decades innovating and investing in their manufacturing capabilities.

        Also, one thing that grinds my nerves are the narratives of trade balances that only focus on physical goods but conveniently ignore services.

        US exports trillions in software, ai, music, videogames, financial services, cloud, and that's conveniently ignored.

        Eventually tariffs come back biting those who issue them, because the moment your local industries don't need to compete anymore to survive, they have no incentives to innovate.

      • nkrisc 2 hours ago

        Tariffs are a cost a country incurs upon itself to protect industries that are critical, not for their profits, but for the capabilities they offer.

        It's paying more for something just to keep it domestically available for purposes of national security.

      • edaemon 3 hours ago

        It's nonsense, that's why it's hard to understand.

      • sonotathrowaway 3 hours ago

        Next time you wonder why a Trump supporter has a bad argument, remind yourself there was a nonzero number of them who literally drank bleach and Lysol after he told them too.

    • hightrix 4 hours ago

      > tariff war against enemies

      This is an interesting way to frame a tax on Americans, but it aligns with this administrations actions.

    • thinkcontext 2 hours ago

      The $130B is only part of the economic costs of the tariffs. Many companies and people changed their buying behavior, either paying more to a domestic company or maybe a company in a country with a lower tariff rate or changed their behavior to not require an item all together. We've also heard about small companies that have gone out of business.

      I'm not an economist but I assume economists are writing papers about this kind of thing to estimate the effects.

    • blitzar 3 hours ago

      I am old enough to remember when the great minds at DOGE found $10T a year of fraudulent Social Security spending which would have cut the total governement spending from $7T a year to negative $3T.

      The DOGE refund cheque is of course, in the mail.

    • aduffy 5 hours ago

      They need to refund it *with interest*, according to filings cited in the article.

      • mejutoco 4 hours ago

        6-7 percent interest.

    • lokar 5 hours ago

      Friends? America has no friends, only client states.

      • lokar 4 hours ago

        I'm serious. The Trump/MAGA view of foreign policy is that the US sits at the top, we owe friendship to no one. We engage with other nations transactionally, zero sum, with the US always getting more.

        • kubelsmieci 4 hours ago

          Don't antropomorfize countries. Countries can't have friends. There are only common interests. Or opposite.

          • lokar 4 hours ago

            I said "Trump/MAGA", which is the person and controlling faction in US politics

          • davedx 4 hours ago

            How about people?

            • lokar 4 hours ago

              I think it's legitimately hard to say. Most Americans know very little about international affairs, and care even less. I think interpreting broad opinion surveys can be fraught.

              So, who do you count? everyone? only the informed? only people with strong views? Or do you assume people support the views and actions of the people they voted for?

        • epolanski 3 hours ago

          This isn't the Trump/MAGA foreign policy, american exceptionalism is a century old and only gotten stronger. If anything MAGA is the full blown expression of this phenomenon.

          The difference was that in the past US understood that you "rule" better when you surround yourself with enemies.

          Now the policy is to dictate conditions left and right.

          • lokar 3 hours ago

            From the 2nd half of the 20th century until Trump there was the view that the US lead a large group of "western" democracies (in the sense that Japan is "western") in a loose coalition that was NOT zero sum. The US provided a lot of benefits to others, this collaboration produced an overall surplus[1], which the US got a large share of.

            The new view seems to be based on a zero sum, transactional view of international affairs. In this mode every interaction must clearly benefit the US more than any other participant. We have to clearly "win" every time.

            [1] and this is not even counting 2nd order "surplus" from things like no longer having to fight world wars.

    • superxpro12 5 hours ago

      The rest is financed by debt. The theft-class stole the rest from the govt thru debt, and expect the rest of us and the following generations to deal with the fallout while they sit on top of their obscene gobs of cash insulated from the fire they created.

    • perfectstorm 2 hours ago

      this reminds me of the Indian government's (read Modi's) demonetization efforts of 2016 which caused 80+ deaths and huge headaches for the common people. In the end, more than 99.3% of the demonetized money came back in circulation. Elect a clown, expect a circus. true for the oldest democracy in the world and also true for the largest democracy.

    • levzettelin 3 hours ago

      > Astronomical tariffs [...] and from all of this they got only $130B ?

      Which is it? A number can't be small and large at the same time.

      • californical 3 hours ago

        To steel-man their sentence, it’s a large number to extract from US citizens, nearly $500/person. But it’s a small number in terms of government deficit and current spending

    • arrosenberg 3 hours ago

      The point is to bankrupt the country so the robber barons can buy up all the assets for pennies on the dollar.

    • usefulcat 4 hours ago

      I had the same thought, but really I think a lot of it is just spectacle for his more gullible followers.

      I mean, FFS--we have a nominally Republican candidate who campaigned on raising taxes and was elected anyway!

      You'd have to be pretty gullible to think that raising taxes on imported goods won't result in price hikes at the checkout counter.

    • satvikpendem 5 hours ago

      "Trump brags in Oval Office that his billionaire pals made a killing in stocks after he pulled the plug on tariffs"

      > “He made $2.5 billion, and he made $900 million! That’s not bad!” Trump said, pointing to financial investor Charles Schwab and then NASCAR team owner Roger Penske.

      https://sg.news.yahoo.com/trump-brags-oval-office-billionair...

    • dude250711 3 hours ago

      > All the propaganda and extortionist language about how all countries will pay up to USA.

      Sounds a bit like Brexit.

    • guywithahat 31 minutes ago

      I mean 130 billion is a significant amount of money, and it's more remarkable given the tax is unnoticeable to the average consumer and primarily impacted foreign manufacturers (either forcing them to move to the US or more friendly countries). The deficit wasn't built in two years and I don't think it could be solved in two years either.

    • arunabha 4 hours ago

      It's clear that there was no reasoned thought behind the tariff push. Tariffs can work if implemented in a principled way and coupled with a complementary industrial policy to develop critical sectors of the economy.

      Instead, we had a completely chaotic implementation of tariffs which seemed to be completely at the whim of Trump with zero supportive industrial policy. So much so that the term 'Taco' https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trump_Always_Chickens_Out was coined to describe Trump's approach.

      The charitable explanation is that Trump had no plan and was making it up as he went along. The less charitable explanation is that the chaos was an intentional feature to enable a quid pro quo of favourable policy in exchange for under the table payments via crypto or 'investments' in his family's various businesses.

      When you couple completely illegal application of a supposed 'emergency' to invoke tariffs with a chaotic, whim based implementation, is there any wonder that they failed?

      • everforward 3 hours ago

        The studies I’ve seen seem to indicate that tariffs can work but are like running with scissors.

        The artificially reduced competition will spur buying domestic products, but can also make domestic producers complacent. They don’t develop new features because they have an almost captive audience, until foreign producers advance enough that people will pay the tariff premium for better foreign products.

        Then it’s a catch-22. Domestic producers are behind on technology so killing the tariffs will bankrupt them, but raising the tariffs only leans into their complacency.

    • tootie 4 hours ago

      It's unbelievable he's still given any semblance of credence for anything he does. Trump is just palpably stupid. He is bad at absorbing information, he is bad at analytical thinking, he is impatient, vain and rash. Aside from his tenuous legal justification, he never once publicly expressed even a fundamental understanding of the basic mechanics of tariff collection nor what balance of trade actually means. You'd constantly see his proxies on TV just put words in his mouth to bend his foolish policy into some coherent. And we're seeing it again with the attack on Iran. No strategy, no achievable objectives, no comprehension of basic facts on the ground. He's really really really just stupid.

  • duxup 6 hours ago

    Absolutely absurd that we’re at this point. The courts / SCOTUS let the government roll out a massive and obviously illegal tax on citizens for a long time. They should have stepped in earlier.

    Now we the people probably don’t get our money back….

    • suzdude 4 hours ago

      courts / SCOTUS let the government roll out a massive and obviously illegal tax on citizens for a long time.

      The don't forget about congress. 216 GOP congressional reps voted to handicap congress's ability to halt tariffs. For much of the current session of congress, their calendar wasn't counting days.

      https://www.reuters.com/world/us/house-republicans-block-con...

    • epolanski 3 hours ago

      > Absolutely absurd that we’re at this point.

      It's not really, this is the result of having a flawed democratic system.

      What do Turkey, Philippines, Russia, Belarus, Hungary, Nicaragua, etc and now US have all in common?

      They are ALL presidential or semi-presidential republics where a single person "rules" without needing to face opposition in a parliament nor even requiring support from its own party.

      Winner-takes-all democracies, aren't democracies if only part of the electors is represented in the executive.

      Presidential republics are super dangerous, they combine the perils of dictatorships with a cherry on the cake of being able to claim popular mandate.

      Seriously, it's not a coincidence that the last parliamentary republic to turn into an authocracy has been Sri Lanka 50+ years ago.

    • Jeremy1026 6 hours ago

      > probably

      Hah, we are 100% not getting our money back. And the higher, tariff level, prices aren't going to go back down either.

      • intrasight 5 hours ago

        The "Importer of Record" gets the refund. I read that a large fraction of those importer of record are Chinese companies.

        • superxpro12 5 hours ago

          read from where? Because over 92% of tariff costs were born by domestic importers. Thats american companies who then offload that tax through higher purchasing costs.

          https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2026/02/who-is...

          • intrasight 5 hours ago

            That article doesn't even mention nonresident importers (NRIs). The percentage that are NRIs is not public information but it is believed to have grown during this trade conflict.

            What got my attention on this was this HN comment by rstuart4133:

            "There are Non-Resident Importers, which are foreign companies that import goods into the USA, but do not have a presence in the United States. About 15% of USA imports come through NRIs. For them this reversal sets up a true irony. Trump effectively forced US citizens to pay more the imported goods. He thought that money would go to the USA treasury. Now the US treasury has to pay it back, so it is a free gift to the exporting countries. Like China. Truly delicious."

        • Jeremy1026 5 hours ago

          Yes, but when the product costs went up to cover their fees who paid that? We did. So the "Importer of Record" will (maybe) get a refund from the government, while also getting the higher prices paid to them from the distributors/consumers.

          • vuln 2 hours ago

            yes scotus hates poors and is complete bought out by the rich

      • snarf21 5 hours ago

        It is almost as if this was a planned wealth transfer that was immensely succesful.

      • jlarocco 5 hours ago

        Yeah, most of us absolutely are not getting our money back.

        The importers pay the tariffs, and they might get a refund, but it's unlikely they can distribute the money back to the people who they passed the price increase onto.

        Imagine I imported 1 ton of rice and paid the tariff. Then I split that ton of rice into 2000 one pound bags and sold them to two super markets, with a higher price accounting for the tariff. Then one super market decided to absorb the price from their margins and sell it at the same price as before to avoid price shocks. Can I track down the other 1000 purchasers who paid a higher price? Is it even worth it?

        • xp84 4 hours ago

          Not only can’t you track down the 1,000 rice buyers, you don’t have any legal obligation to, so you 100% wouldn’t. (Not speaking of “you” just the general case of all importers who get refunds).

        • warkdarrior 4 hours ago

          The other important point is that those 2000 one-pound bags sold, so the market accepted the new higher price. Even after the tariffs are removed, the higher prices are here to stay.

      • commandlinefan 6 hours ago

        Did they actually raise prices, though? I haven't noticed any significant jumps; my understanding was that they were absorbing (for the most part) the tariffs for the time being, but planned to raise prices in the near future.

        • SunshineTheCat 5 hours ago

          Tariffs don't work like that.

          These are taxes that businesses have to pay and as a result, they pass on to the consumer.

          Larger companies have some room (in some cases) to absorb some of these costs. While smaller companies do not. These can literally put people out of business overnight.

          Here is a specific example: https://nypost.com/2025/04/08/us-news/idaho-business-owner-c...

        • throwaway667555 5 hours ago

          Look at the CPI chart and draw a trend line ignoring recent years. You'll see we're living under 2034 price levels currently.

        • rootusrootus 6 hours ago

          Average family paid 1000 more last year due to tariffs. I definitely noticed things that jumped in price.

        • stevenwoo 5 hours ago

          It depends on if one thinks 10-20 percent is significant. Do you cook your own food - some food items are imported during USA winter months and those items went up noticeably, also items that are not grown/harvested in significant quantities in USA went up. The only things I did not see a price increase were US sourced oatmeal, rice and flour, stuff where they are selling stuff that could be from before tariff times. Coffee went up due to bad harvests but the tariffs added to that, and now that harvests are back to normal, prices haven't gone back down commensurately.

        • Jeremy1026 5 hours ago

          I get more or less the same items from the grocery store every week. My grocery store shows me purchases going back a year.

          3/9/25 - 45 items - $178.98

          3/15/25 - 40 items - $187.13

          3/22/25 - 59 items - $315.29

          3/29/25 - 45 items - $131.36

          ...

          2/14/25 - 48 items - $238.15

          2/21/25 - 17 items - $117.49 (used $45 in coupons from store loyalty points, actual cost $162.49)

          2/28/25 - 27 items - $165.27

          My grocery bill definitely is feeling it, now is it 100% tariffs, probably not. But research points to it being some what related to tariffs [1,2,3] You'll notice in the most recent shops, I have been trying to skip the non-essentials when possible to keep my bill lower.

          I don't have any other regular purchases with history to look back on. It's not like I replace all my consumer electronics every 6 months-1 year. Closest thing that I have to consistent historical data is 3D printer filament, which has gone from $15.99 to $16.99 on Amazon for my brand of choice from April 2025 to my most recent order last week.

          [1] https://taxfoundation.org/blog/trump-tariffs-food-prices/

          [2] https://budgetlab.yale.edu/research/state-us-tariffs-june-17...

          [3] https://www.edelmanfinancialengines.com/education/life-event...

    • dweinus 5 hours ago

      There is no probably; we not getting our money back. In fact, any of the money that has been spent in the meantime (say to make up for wealthy tax cuts or to expand military or border funding) we get to pay again!

    • wutwutwat 6 hours ago

      Still waiting on getting those freedoms back that we temporarily gave up after 9/11 via the patriot act so we could get the baddies.

      Don't hold your breath for either to be given back.

    • hypercube33 5 hours ago

      Two things is that we won't get money back and price of stuff is still going up. add on to that the companies getting refunds are pocketing the money.

    • wat10000 5 hours ago

      Congress needs to step up and take its power back from the executive. There was no good reason for the President to have this power in the first place. Why the hell do we have emergency powers to impose tariffs? Is there going to be a fleet of nuclear-armed bombers headed for the USA and the only way to stop them is to impose tariffs? It's ridiculous.

      Congress has been gradually handing their power over to the executive for decades. For decades, people have been warning that this was setting up for major abuse if you got a particularly bad president. Well, guess what....

      • endemic 4 hours ago

        > Congress needs to step up and take its power back from the executive.

        Won't happen with this administration at least; the expectation being that unless you are a yes-man, you'll be denounced as "not loyal" and voted out.

      • doom2 3 hours ago

        Just wait until the next Democratic president is elected. The current crop of Republicans will suddenly remember that Congress can exercise this power.

    • rootusrootus 6 hours ago

      I suspect that money is involved. We’re becoming numb to it.

    • UltraSane 5 hours ago

      There is no excuse for how long it took the Supreme court to decide this very obvious case.

      • vuln an hour ago

        they waited until the robes slowed down.

    • bickfordb 6 hours ago

      The latest temporary tariffs are also likely illegal.

      • teeray 5 hours ago

        Justice delayed is justice denied. There should be an express lane for litigation similar actions like this.

        • vuln an hour ago

          we can’t even do that with violent criminal let alone white color criminals. lol

      • NetMageSCW 4 hours ago

        I thought those were on very solid ground commonly used by past administrations?

      • badgersnake 5 hours ago

        Well if it works, they’re gonna keep doing it.

    • jasondigitized 5 hours ago

      I like Class Action lawsuits for $100 please

    • oofbey 5 hours ago

      In terms of policy this is a truly massive gift to importing companies. They had to pay massive amounts of tax to import goods. Analysis shows most (but not all) of the tariffs were passed on down the line to consumers of the imported goods or their derivatives.

      And now they get it all back! If they can figure out the paperwork. Which I expect most will, because if you import things and pay tariffs, you have to be good at govt paperwork.

      Wow. I don’t know what this means. But it’s a huge windfall to a very specific horizontal slice of the economy - cutting across industries and supply chains. Just whoever happened to be doing the importing gets a giant present. So bizarre. Economists will write about this case study for decades.

    • empath75 5 hours ago

      I hate the tariffs, but giving the money back to the corporations would be absolutely _grotesque_.

      Every company that collected a tariff fee needs to refund it as they collect their own refunds.

      • vuln an hour ago

        scouts got paid off by big corps

  • throwaway667555 6 hours ago

    I'm gonna have a stroke. The Congressional Budget Office found that consumers paid 70-80% of the tariffs, totaling more than $1000 per household. Where is my refund?

    • solid_fuel 4 minutes ago

      Unfortunately, this is what republicans voted for, as approved by their congressional representatives who declined to assert congressional power over taxation. Sadly, we all have to live with it until they wise up or quit voting.

    • kowalej 6 hours ago

      Not only that, the companies used the tariff excuse to raise prices which will not come back down even if tariffs are fully off the table. Just like the price inflation during COVID.

      • ericmcer an hour ago

        This is what the government should really look into. Are prices being held at inflated levels to sustain profits? And if so why is capitalism not working? Why are competing companies not undercutting each other to bring them back down?

        Can we have small watchdog programs that deeply study market conditions for critical resources (like peanut butter/eggs/milk/bread/etc.) and produce detailed data on why prices are what they are and what they estimate prices should be? It would be fascinating to see like detailed breakdowns and raw profit margins on different goods instantly.

      • joshlemer 5 hours ago

        Prices don’t monotonically go up forever, prices come down all the time

        Edit: Sorry autocorrect thought I said moronically,

        • CuriouslyC 4 hours ago

          The word you wanted there was probably monotonically

        • baby_souffle 5 hours ago

          Depends on how sticky the prices are. Some things are volatile as hell and swing wildly from week to week, some things are stable until adjusted and then they stay that price for another decade.

          Most things are never going to be cheaper than they are today. Some things may be cheaper this time next year but not by more than a few percent at the most.

        • DangitBobby 3 hours ago

          Did you mean "moronically" or "monotonically"? I'd accept either, just wondering which one you meant.

          • joshlemer 3 hours ago

            Hah, apologies, yes autocorrect got me.

        • empath75 5 hours ago

          I just love this idea that corporations just discovered greed during the pandemic and before that had been selflessly dedicated to selling goods for the benefit of mankind at the lowest price they possibly could. Companies always try to maximize prices, and they do that by trying to optimize the price they sell things at to sell as much as they possibly can at the highest price they can get away with. Sometimes you can get more profits by lowering prices and selling more stuff, sometimes by raising prices and selling less stuff. It's a trade off. Prices went up because of a series of demand and supply shocks enabled companies to raise prices. If they had not raised prices, there would have been shortages everywhere.

          • phil21 an hour ago

            I think there actually was a lot of surprise from executives coming out of COVID that they could raise prices so high without it impacting consumer demand in the ways they had previously predicted.

            The Chipotle earnings calls were pretty much the prime example of this. CEO more or less expressing amazement at how elastic consumers were on pricing, and that due to the increases not impacting sales volume they planned to continue ramping until it did.

            I think plenty of companies were operating off the idea that price competition was far more important than it turned out to be. I note the baskets of those shopping next to me in the grocery store and this rings true. Due to a myriad of reasons - consumer behavior being a large one of those - buying behavior based on price just isn’t as much of a thing as it was 30 years ago. Almost no one is shopping multiple supermarkets, buying cheaper alternatives, buying in-season veggies and fruit when it’s cheap, waiting for sales to stock up, buying in bulk and freezing, using coupons, meal planning based on the latest supermarket Sunday circular, etc. only a tiny minority of people have been doing so.

            Couple that learned helplessness with the monopoly situation for many (most?) markets in the US and it’s no surprise to me that once the dam broke there is no going back. The price discovery moving forward is going to be much more aggressive. It will take a generation or three to get back to thrifty consumer behavior unless we see something actually painful to the average person on a scale of the Great Depression.

            • empath75 19 minutes ago

              > CEO more or less expressing amazement at how elastic consumers were on pricing

              That is because the extra money in the economy also inflated salaries. Inflation is annoying but it basically has no impact on affordability over the long run. Everyone just assumed that their increases in salary were a well earned recognition of their contributions, but the increases in prices was pure corporate greed and corruption. They were both the same thing. People got more money and prices went up.

          • Refreeze5224 3 hours ago

            I think you're mistaking what's happening here. Companies are not discovering greed. People are finally recognizing that greed, and the greed inherent in the system, and recognizing that just because it's "part of the system", it's not OK.

        • redeeman 5 hours ago

          it does if you continue to pay

          • ambicapter 4 hours ago

            stupid humans needing to eat

    • cvoss 5 hours ago

      You did not pay the tariffs. You bore the cost of the tariffs. Those are not the same thing. The refund is due to the party that got the bill for the tariff and paid it-- the importer. What you paid for was for the business not to go bankrupt while this was occurring. If the business wants to refund you for that, they can choose to do so. But you are not owed a refund.

      • evan_ 4 hours ago

        So on Earth 2 in which everything is the same except these tariffs hadn't been enacted, would today's consumer prices be the same or lower?

      • wpm 5 hours ago

        Look you can write the funny numbers in whatever accounting mumbo jumbo you want, but I paid more to cover the cost to the supplier == I paid the tariffs.

        • avs733 4 hours ago

          I don't think the commenter you are responding too thinks this is a good thing - they are just describing that it is. I read it as just a blunt summary of how absurd this situation is.

      • x3ro 3 hours ago

        Let's call it what it is, a massive wealth transfer from the general public to companies, and transitively (primarily) to the super-rich. Just because it's legal that they are robbing us blind does not make it right.

      • WesleyJohnson 3 hours ago

        What businesses were legitimately going to go bankrupt by the increased tariffs? I'm not defending the tariffs, mind you, but I don't buy that every company had to increase prices to offset the additional taxes. Many could've taken the hit and been fine, except profits would be down and shareholders would be angry.

        • crazygringo an hour ago

          Lots of them. Profit margins in many sectors are low, lower than the cost of the tariffs.

          > except profits would be down and shareholders would be angry.

          Right. So when profits turn into losses, you expect shareholders to be OK with the stock price falling to zero and they lose their entire investment? You think this is "fine"?

      • flawn 5 hours ago

        This answer is the incarnation of capitalismmaxxing. Economically speaking you're correct - but morally definitely not, companies are for the bigger part not the harmed party here.

      • laweijfmvo 3 hours ago

        i personally paid, to UPS and DHL iirc, tariffs. so maybe i wasn’t actually directly billed the tariff as the importer, but i 100% paid it.

      • greybeard69 5 hours ago

        No one cares.

      • ajam1507 5 hours ago

        "I didn't kill him, officer. It was the bullet."

      • throwaway667555 5 hours ago

        Congress can act to pay back the economically harmed party, the consumer. They won't because we live in an oligarchy.

      • wat10000 4 hours ago

        In other words: the president can break the law and fuck you over by transferring a nice chunk of your money to big companies, and none of the lawbreakers will be held accountable in any way, and you're not owed a dime in restitution.

    • dawnerd 5 hours ago

      There's going to have to be class actions filed against the retailers if consumers want anything.

      • crazygringo an hour ago

        There would be zero legal basis for that. It wouldn't win.

        I'm not defending that. Just explaining.

    • jonlucc 6 hours ago

      In practice, the entities who gave money directly to the US government are the ones who paid the tariff. Those entities should be pressured to refund the consumers, but in practice, that's unlikely.

      I (unknowingly) ordered something on Etsy from another country. UPS delivered the items, then sent me a letter requiring I pay the tariff and an extra tariff handling fee. UPS paid the government, so UPS should get their money back from the government, then refund me. I'm not holding my breath.

      • throwaway667555 6 hours ago

        Economically it is a direct redistribution of wealth. In crisis times, Congress acts swiftly to cure wrongs against corporations. What about this wrong against every single household?

        • I-M-S 3 hours ago

          "The West, so afraid of strong government, now has no government, only financial power."

      • coldpie 5 hours ago

        UPS is definitely pocketing most of whatever refund they get. And golly gee gosh what a shocker, the company supports Republicans. I'm afraid you've been robbed.

        > ‘Corporate and industry group political action committees have donated more than $44 million directly to the campaigns and leadership PACs of the 147 members of the Sedition Caucus. Companies and trade associations that pledged to suspend donations have given more than $12 million to the campaign and leadership PACs of the Sedition Caucus.

        > Koch Industries ($626,500), American Crystal Sugar ($530,000), Home Depot ($525,000), Boeing ($488,000), and UPS ($479,500) have contributed the most money to members of the Sedition Caucus through their corporate PACs.’

        > Tomé’s reconciliation with representatives who legitimized Trump’s attempted presidential coup — and who may control Congress after the November midterm elections — shouldn’t surprise us. Trump lavished huge gifts on UPS and Corporate America that have made them richer.”

        > The second Trump presidency has the potential to be even more lucrative for UPS, given that the bulk of UPS’s unionized workers are Teamsters and led by prominent Trump ally Sean O’Brien

        https://joeallen-60224.medium.com/big-brown-and-the-fascists...

        • parineum 5 hours ago

          > UPS is definitely pocketing most of whatever refund they get. And golly gee gosh what a shocker, the company supports Republicans. I'm afraid you've been robbed.

          Looks like they've given a pretty similar amount to both parties[1]. UPS charging a specific "Tariff Fee" is bound to have angered Trump.

          [1]https://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/united-parcel-service/summa...

    • stackedinserter 5 hours ago

      You'll need to ask companies that are going to get that government refund.

    • dionian 6 hours ago

      same place where your refund is for congress rolling out 10%+ inflation for years and now your dollar is worth less. its theft actually

    • danans 5 hours ago

      Clearly, since calculating the individual refunds are impossible, the companies will be broadly discounting products going forward by their effective tariff rate for roughly the time the tariffs were in effect. /s

  • siliconc0w 5 hours ago

    SCOTUS is entirely to blame for the chaos here, the courts quickly found the tariffs illegal but they used the shadow docket to stay the ruling causing the illegal behavior to continue for a year.

    • scoofy 3 hours ago

      Any sensible administration implementing such an obviously suspect tariff regime could have easily put the tariffs in a kind of escrow instead of just pretending it's novel policy was trivially constitutional.

      Blaming SCOTUS here is not out of the question, but they should not be "entirely" to blame, unless you think it's totally fine to run the Executive branch like you're trying to get away with something. It's not.

      • platevoltage 13 minutes ago

        Right. I’m okay with blaming both.

    • eitau_1 4 hours ago

      It's even more to blame given that it stripped the NEA and IEEPA acts of legislative guardrails in 1987.

      [0] https://fivepoints.mattglassman.net/p/the-court-ieepa-and-th...

    • flawn 4 hours ago

      To blame in a second order but this is the admin's work overall, they shouldn't have tried to fund their PACs and pocket this money into their family & friends' bank accounts. Just shows how broken the system is.

  • freetonik 6 hours ago

    There was an interesting case in Finland. Finnish customs used to apply a 22% tax (ELV) on top of the car tax for imported used cars from other EU countries. On top of that, Finnish law required VAT to be charged on the car tax itself.

    There were multiple court cases and this practice was found unlawful (and actually against EU law). But the government did not issue automatic refunds, and instead requested that people "actively appeal" with some time limits. They also refused to pay interest on the money withheld.

    AFAIK, only about 50M Euro was paid back. A lot of funds gathered between 2002–2005 was never returned.

    I've been living in Finland for 10+ years, and this whole story was super surprising for me to learn because the prevailing notion among people here is that Finland is the land of law, and everything is done correctly and legally, always, and we can and should trust the authorities.

    • AnssiH an hour ago

      > There was an interesting case in Finland. Finnish customs used to apply a 22% tax (ELV) on top of the car tax for imported used cars from other EU countries. On top of that, Finnish law required VAT to be charged on the car tax itself.

      There was no VAT payable on the car tax of imported cars, only the ELV (ei-arvonlisävero, literally "not value added tax").

      The ELV idea was that for locally bought new cars you did have to pay VAT on car tax, but for used EU imports that was not legally possible (cannot charge VAT again when importing used item from another EU country), so an equivalent non-VAT tax was invented so the full tax (inc. VAT/ELV) stays the same.

      But this was unfair for e.g. the reason that Finnish companies buying cars could deduct Finnish car tax VAT on local new cars on their VAT return but not the car tax ELV on imported used cars (since it was not VAT).

    • shevy-java 3 hours ago

      Hmm. The "active request" is quite common though. I agree that this is unfair, since it is theft, IMO, but Finland is not the only one forcing active engagement to get your money back. Even when the government stole that money from the people.

      > we can and should trust the authorities.

      Well, Finland has a fairly competent government usually for the most part. That mantra will not work in many other countries though - such as Germany. Just look at what Merz is doing; his left hand does not know what the right hand should do ...

    • redeeman 5 hours ago

      every single so called "nation state" is in reality just a regime, they ALL do this. They are no different than the mafia. You can choose between so called "don socialist" and "don fiscally-resonsible", yet they are identical twins with a different haircut.

      No organisations or regime has ever considered itself illegitimate. The big guys consider smaller guys legitimate or illegitimate, but its just ink on a page.

      Finland (and _ALL_ other countries) is an illegitimate regime, collecting its protection money, telling you to pray it does not alter the deal any further

      • warkdarrior 4 hours ago

        Ah, yes, the whole world is against me. Do you have anything meaningful to say?

  • jmward01 5 hours ago

    The people harmed here were the US public and they are just going to continue to be harmed. The right answer is people go to jail. Until people start going to jail, being disbarred, etc, this will keep happening. This isn't a remedy. This is continuing the cycle.

    • ekjhgkejhgk 2 hours ago

      By "people go to jail" you mean Trump, right? Right?

  • jerf 6 hours ago

    None of this matters; this is guaranteed to go to the Supreme Court. Too much money, too much precedent. The only thing being established now is the battleground as the procedure of getting up to the Supreme Court. The actual rulings on the way up to the Supreme Court are of minimal consequence.

    • jtbayly 6 hours ago

      The Supreme Court already invalidated the tariffs. That’s the context of this order (and the subtitle of the article).

      • jerf 6 hours ago

        As sibling says, the Court very definitely did not order them to refund anything. They could have, and they didn't. The Court knew from the beginning that this was coming back to them.

        You may see other judges rule that the refunds don't have to be paid, for any of several reasons. Whatever your desired outcome is, none of it matters until this gets to the Supreme Court. Given the nature of money, it doesn't even matter if some higher court refuses to give an injunction against the refunds being issued until after the appeal is considered and some set of refunds goes all the way through... no company that gets any money from a pre-SC refund can really use it until the entire matter is resolved at the SC level.

        • aw1621107 5 hours ago

          > As sibling says, the Court very definitely did not order them to refund anything.

          > You may see other judges rule that the refunds don't have to be paid, for any of several reasons.

          I think the government might have a bit of an uphill battle given arguments they have previously made to courts. For example, consider this decision from the US Court of International Trade from 2025-12 [0]:

          > However, as the Government notes in its response to Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction here, it “[has] made very clear—both in this case and in related cases—that [it] will not object to the [c]ourt ordering reliquidation of plaintiffs’ entries subject to the challenged IEEPA duties if such duties are found to be unlawful.”

          > <snip>

          > Judicial estoppel would prevent the Government from taking an inconsistent approach after a final result in V.O.S. [] The Government has emphasized this point itself, citing to Sumecht NA, Inc. v. United States, which holds that “the Government would be judicially estopped from taking a contrary position” regarding a prior representation involving the availability of relief in the form of reliquidation. [] Having convinced this court to accept that importers who paid IEEPA tariffs will be able to receive refunds after reliquidation, and having benefited from the court’s subsequent conclusion that importers will not experience irreparable harm as a consequence of liquidation, the Government cannot later “assume a contrary position” to argue that refunds are not available after liquidation.

          > <snip>

          > Additionally, the panel in In re Section 301 Cases unanimously agreed—as we do now—that the USCIT has “the explicit power to order reliquidation and refunds where the government has unlawfully exacted duties.” [] The Government acknowledges that “a decision [to the contrary] would be inconsistent with years of [the court’s] precedent.”

          Obviously all this doesn't prevent the government from appealing anyways, but they'll need to get creative to get around their previous representations.

          [0]: https://www.cit.uscourts.gov/sites/cit/files/25-154.pdf

        • jlarocco 5 hours ago

          They didn't have to rule on it because there's already precedent that tariffs that shouldn't have been collected have to be repaid.

      • abcd_f 6 hours ago

        But they didn't say anything about refunding them and you can bet Trump will oppose that and ask the SCOTUS to decide on it. They of course have an option to take their time to render the decision and then just dismiss the case without a comment.

        That's what the GP likely meant.

        The circus must go on.

        • jtbayly 34 minutes ago

          Thanks! I guess I wasn't understanding what jerf meant, and I hadn't read enough to be correcting people.

      • AnimalMuppet 6 hours ago

        But (IIRC) the Supreme Court did not order that the tariffs be refunded. They left that issue open in their decision. So jerf may well be right.

    • HardCodedBias 5 hours ago

      The actual question is if Eaton overstepped his authority in this ruling.

      Instead of ruling narrowly that named plaintiffs would get a refund

      Eaton expressly said:

      "all importers of record" which is all who were subject to the IEEPA duties.

      It is unclear if this is lawful.

      He didn't have to do this at all. He could stuck with tradition here. He specifies why he did it in this case, but this opens the door.

      Also note that he did not open the door to "final liquidations" getting refunds (it is unclear how many tariffs more than 180 days ago were not officially protested).

  • mattas 6 hours ago

    I wonder if brands will have a "tariff refund" sale. Make everything 20% off until all of the brand's tariff refund is passed on to customers. Of course, this wouldn't help the customers that already paid the tariff but it could be a good marketing ploy.

    • yndoendo 30 minutes ago

      They will do this right before raising the prices on all goods to 30% before the sale deal.

    • bryant 6 hours ago

      Much more interesting would be if the tariffs were refunded equally to each person nationwide (interesting in that it very clearly then becomes an income redistribution scheme, even if on a limited basis).

      Possibly a refund of about $500 per social security number. Doesn't even have to be in cash, could just directly go towards the social security fund if legislated that way.

      Tons of ways to fix this quagmire in a way that's beneficial to people. But it won't happen.

      • WesleyJohnson 3 hours ago

        And then Trump can sign the checks again....

        Sarcasm aside, I agree the refunds should go back to consumers, not the importers. I don't have a source, but I have to imagine the lion's share of companies that were hit with tariffs increased their prices, and the consumer paid the bill.

    • nubinetwork 5 hours ago
    • johanyc 3 hours ago

      I like this idea. It's a good pr move for the business too

  • WarmWash 6 hours ago

    I have a few thousand dollars that I paid to a Chinese manufacturer who then used that money to pay an importer so that I could get my materials hassle free.

    Looks like the hassle will now be on the backend...

    • dtech 6 hours ago

      I work in the customs industry. What you are describing was a common scheme (DDP Incoterms) to evade the tariffs (partially), and there is a carve out of the refunds that explicitly says DDP will not be refunded. So there's s chance you get nothing back.

      Also contractually you didn't pay the duties so you wouldn't get refunds.

    • JKCalhoun 6 hours ago

      Yeah, I got the receipts even—with tariffs itemized.

      I'll never see that money.

      • JoblessWonder 2 hours ago

        One of our vendors started charging a 10% tariff fee for parts ordered from Switzerland... we passed that fee directly on to our customers as a line item. I can't imagine the headache when (not if) they come to us expecting a refund for that.

  • mgkimsal 5 hours ago

    One thing I don't see mentioned enough with the whole "the consumers paid these tariffs! we should get refunds!"... We "paid" not just in higher prices, but in many layoffs, reduction in working hours, skipped bonuses and raises. Companies that get 'refunds' will have an opportunity to use that money to rehire and repay workers. I'm cynical enough to think that will happen in large measures across the whole country, but I'm hopeful enough to want to see it happen nonetheless.

    Delayed refunds won't even start to repair the damage done by bankruptcies triggered by high tariffs, the snowballed cost of tariffs impacting multiple steps in the supply chain, the emotional toll on families and communities having to deal with less money and rising prices. But rehiring and getting some regions and communities back to work might be a step in the right direction.

    EXCEPT WE NOW HAVE A 15% GLOBAL TARIFF ONGOING. And a lunatic administration that will fight tooth and nail for years to keep this going as long as possible.

    Trump "loves" this country so much it hurts me.

    • zoobab 5 hours ago

      "use that money to rehire and repay workers"

      or give it to shareholders.

      • crazygringo an hour ago

        Shareholders only want money when a company can't reinvest it effectively.

        Reinvesting it to generate more revenue now that prices are lower again is the obvious capitalist thing to do.

        The companies aren't going to rehire workers out of charity. They do it because it makes them more money.

      • philipallstar 5 hours ago

        They only do that after tax, so there'll be more tax paid if they do that.

      • xp84 4 hours ago

        Everything is taxed including payroll.

    • marcosdumay 5 hours ago

      > Companies that get 'refunds' will have an opportunity to use that money to rehire and repay workers.

      Why on Earth do you expect a single-time payment with no strings attached to make companies think some market is profitable so they should invest in it?

      • mgkimsal 4 hours ago

        Unsure where you got that from? If a company that has had to lay off staff and reduce hours because of increase in expenses because of tariffs, then they get a chunk of money back, trying to 'get back' to where you were before - headcount, wages, etc - might be on your mind, and might be possible with a one-time refund of ideally a sizeable portion of your tax. However... we still have extremely high tariffs in place so the effects of higher input prices are still ongoing (and ramped up in some cases).

        If our tariff structure went back to, say, October 2024, and companies who'd paid some inordinate tax - forcing layoffs and reductions - got a chunk of that back - and the taxes went back to what they were - there'd likely be some return to hiring and raises as before. But we can't get back to that any time soon with an administration hellbent on extracting as much from us via tariffs as possible.

        • marcosdumay 3 hours ago

          The reason companies invest is not because they have money.

          And edit because I explained it badly:

          That means that yes, getting the tariffs back can make them hire, because there may be more people wanting to buy things. Sending them the tariffs money will do absolutely nothing.

          But even the first part isn't guaranteed, because you can't rollback the economy, things don't return to where they were, they go into some other place.

  • SunshineTheCat 5 hours ago

    I do find it kinda crazy that we had a specific policy surrounding tariffs (Smoot-Hawley) that was in the center of the worst economic collapse in US history.

    And now, less than 100 years later we're like "hey let's try that again!"

    https://www.visualcapitalist.com/the-average-u-s-tariff-rate...

    • Spivak 5 hours ago

      I mean honestly that's about right. As soon as it falls out of living memory people forget why the fence was there and tear it down.

      Expect rhymes from the 1930's—an economic depression, tension leading to another world war. Fun stuff ahead.

  • sporkland 3 hours ago

    So the consumer ate the tariff (I saw somewhere that they just got passed on for the most part). Now the companies are just gonna get the money back and either enrich their exec staff or shareholders?

    It feels like a company should have to prove they didn't pass the tariff on to consumers in order to collect this.

  • benrutter 6 hours ago

    Lots of comments along the lines that tarrifs were mostly passed down indirectly to consumers, who aren't entitled to refunds.

    I definitely agree on principle, it sounds pretty tricky to see how proving "I paid $x more for groceries because of tarrifs" would work in practice.

    Does anyone know of policy suggestions for how that could work?

    • ranyume 6 hours ago

      You put the money on an investment pool and pay the citizens back in:

      * Direct Cash (using some equation for impoverished households)

      * Infrastructure

      * Better life conditions

      No other uses for this money. The returns and the uses of this money must be public.

      • testing22321 5 hours ago

        Excuse me, this is the Inited States we’re talking about.

        You’re getting mighty close to socialism there citizen.

        • ranyume 5 hours ago

          I'm more of an anarchist myself, so I think it's a fair situational compromise!

    • downrightmike 6 hours ago

      Most everything was probably bought with credit/debit cards. The individual records exist. Just using your Amazon etc order history should be dead simple

      • benrutter an hour ago

        I think the tricky bit is less proving you bought something, and more proving that the thing you bought cost more than it otherwise would.

        As I understand it (which isn't a lot), if you paid a tariff on an overseas order you're theoretically due it back, although that might require taking the government to court, which is gonna cost more than the settlement for most people.

      • 9dev 6 hours ago

        you would need to prove what part of the amounts you paid were due to tariffs, and which were ordinary price changes. All vendors would need to publish that information, and be honest about it. Don't see it coming.

        • crazygringo an hour ago

          The real thing is, price changes tend to be proportional to tariffs. If the tariff was $20, the consumer got charged $40 more. But not uniformly -- every price is different, there are other non-tariff price changes too, prices can increase before or after tariffs not exactly at the same time, etc.

          If companies want to try to refund customers and come up with their own formulas for that, that's great. But usually there isn't some objective right answer that can be imposed externally.

  • sriram_malhar 5 hours ago

    Wouldn't it be simpler to implement a 'spend-forward scheme' rather than returning? For example, spend that money on research grants and health care. It is returning the money to the people. A man can dream, no?

  • ElijahLynn 2 hours ago

    Love this:

    The judge said the repayment process should be straightforward and grew impatient when a Justice Department lawyer said the government hadn’t yet formalized its position on refunding the tariffs, which President Trump imposed by citing a decades-old law. “Your position is clear,” the judge said. “The Supreme Court told you what your position is.”

  • ChoGGi 5 hours ago

    So corporations get refunds, I'm sure they'll issue refunds to consumers any day now.

  • whh 5 hours ago

    I don't usually like to get involved in US politics as I'm not American, nor do I live in the US. But I will say this: the dildo of consequences rarely arrives lubed.

    Read from that what you will... as a voter, or the POTUS.

    • cheema33 3 hours ago

      Some of us knew about the un-lubed dildo of consequences. And warned our fellow countrymen. But they appear to have joined a cult and were immune to reason. Now we are all riding the said dildo, whether we asked for it or not.

  • TechSquidTV 5 hours ago

    The American people will be robbed blind and beaten into submission until there is a reason not to. It's that simple. They have NEVER been punished, why would they stop?

  • mempko an hour ago

    Did the people pay for the majority of the tariffs, like 80% percent? But the companies are getting this money? How is this now just a transfer of what I paid to these companies? They just get free money at my expense?

  • bwb 5 hours ago

    I ache for the day we were governed by people who were competent and wanted to govern.

  • gorbachev 3 hours ago

    They will never pay this without a fight.

    Good time to specialize in "tariff litigation", if you're a law firm.

  • ex-aws-dude 3 hours ago

    If you're an American consumer who had the tarrifs passed on in higher prices wouldn't you feel totally robbed by this whole ordeal?

  • wiseowise 2 hours ago

    But hey, we’ve got to own the libs!

    I swear to God, the generation that voted the most for this stupid SoB will go down in history as the most stupid so far, like straight out of the Idiocracy.

    Trillions of world wide economic damage, irreparable damage to transatlantic cooperation, death of post ww2 order. All because McFuckity Fuck saw online that brown man bad and there’s inexplicable feminist agenda, also somehow America needs to become great again because being top world economy is not good enough. Also soyjack memes.

  • devin 4 hours ago

    Justice delayed is justice denied.

  • softwaredoug 5 hours ago

    Has anyone else noticed this? In our area, it seems in 2025 a lot of local businesses (ie local toy stores, etc) have closed. Presumably tariff pressures hurt (among other affordability issues).

    The big players can restructure supply chains. Small businesses can't. The mom and pops seem to suffer.

    I'm hoping there can be an infusion of $ into those companies and maybe stimulate a little growth, or at least survival through the Trump years.

    • baggachipz 4 hours ago

      > The big players can restructure supply chains. Small businesses can't. The mom and pops seem to suffer.

      This is by design. No doubt the large corporations who kissed the ring and gave gold statues will be the first to receive this money.

  • shin_lao 6 hours ago

    Unclear if the SC ruling is retro active. But of course, lawyers will try to make money out of this...

    • bonsai_spool 6 hours ago

      > Unclear if the SC ruling is retro active. But of course, lawyers will try to make money out of this...

      What do you mean unclear? The ruling says that certain of the tariffs were always illegal.

    • SpicyLemonZest 6 hours ago

      It's 100% clear, and even if it weren't the government already conceded that the tariffs are refundable to get this far. If the tariffs were not refundable, that would mean that the injury from them is irreparable, and they would have had to be enjoined pending the decision.

  • amelius 4 hours ago

    At least our president made a lot of lawyers happier.

  • netfortius 2 hours ago

    Ha, ha, ha. Someone, somewhere, ordering government to do something. Thank you for the best laugh today.

  • titzer 5 hours ago

    The past 20 years have been an endless series of wealth transfers from commoners to the wealthy. This is Oligarchy.

  • smm11 5 hours ago

    So we don't have to pay taxes this year, right?

  • shevy-java 3 hours ago

    Trump is not a competent person. How did he ever get rich?

    • platevoltage 10 minutes ago

      He won the sperm lottery. That’s how he got rich.

    • ekjhgkejhgk 2 hours ago

      Sounds impossible. As everybody knows, you need to be competent to get rich.

  • squeegmeister 3 hours ago

    “We live in the age of computers,” Eaton said. “It must be possible for Customs Service to program its computers so it doesn’t need a manual review.”

    lol

  • Bloating 3 hours ago

    If consumers indirectly pay the cost of tariffs, who pays for the dead-weight loss of taxes on domestic employers?

  • thayne 3 hours ago

    Trump should be personally liable for this. He knew it was illegal but he still did it, to the harm of US citizens.

  • wat10000 2 hours ago

    If I illegally forced a bunch of people to give me $130 billion, the courts would not stop at making me pay them back. I and all my co-conspirators would go to prison forever. We should accept nothing less here.

  • book_mike 5 hours ago

    Good. Perhaps the administration should follow the law.

  • yapyap 5 hours ago

    Wonder if the companies (who have been mostly passing on the tariffs to the end user) will just add the refunds to their profits or give back in some way

  • buellerbueller 6 hours ago

    Worst president ever.

  • mothballed 6 hours ago

    ... refunded to the importer of record. Not the people the costs were passed to. Essentially turning it retroactively into a tax to private businesses. This is the worst case of all scenarios for the consumer.

    • andyfilms1 6 hours ago

      I understand the frustration but I don't understand the logic. The businesses who paid the tariffs (who were literally sent an invoice that they paid) should be the ones refunded.

      How would the government even be able to determine if a business increased product prices due to tariffs vs other factors, or even if the business increased prices at all? What if the product is a loss leader and the company was fine just eating the expense? Or what about a nefarious company who manufacturers their stuff in Canada but used "tariffs" as an excuse to increase prices? What would they be refunded from?

      • coldpie 6 hours ago

        Yes, you're almost there, just go one step further. Now you've got a big pile of money and no clear rules on where it should go. Who gets to decide where it will go? Given how this administration operates, where do you think it will go?

      • giancarlostoro 5 hours ago

        > I understand the frustration but I don't understand the logic. The businesses who paid the tariffs (who were literally sent an invoice that they paid) should be the ones refunded.

        So if I'm the owner of Uncle Billy Bobs Autoparts and I ship from Madeupcountry. I billed you $500 extra for some new car part. The US government refunds me on the tariffs they charged me to import my product to you, and now your taxes is going into my refund. Who wins in this scenario? They're effectively giving every country a free bonus. I wouldn't be surprised if some people got scammed by the tariffs by being overcharged.

        There's no serious paper trail to any of this to meaningfully return lost revenue to the American consumer, I would rather not waste tax dollars on refunds.

        I guess the only "winners" are maybe businesses that didn't pass on the revenue loss on to the consumer? But how do you even correctly refund those businesses?

        • philipallstar 5 hours ago

          You just refund the people who pay the tariffs. You can't do any more than that.

          • giancarlostoro 5 hours ago

            I'm okay with that, though I don't think most of my receipts highlight how much went into a tariff. Maybe for very specific purchases it did, but for most things I've bought over the past year there's no real way to gauge this.

            • philipallstar 3 hours ago

              Agreed; only the edge importer can be refunded by the government. Hopefully those businesses pass on the refund, but that's up to them.

      • SJC_Hacker 3 hours ago

        > How would the government even be able to determine if a business increased product prices due to tariffs vs other factors, or even if the business increased prices at all? What if the product is a loss leader and the company was fine just eating the expense? Or what about a nefarious company who manufacturers their stuff in Canada but used "tariffs" as an excuse to increase prices? What would they be refunded from?

        Gee, I don't know, receipts ?

        Also simply revenue on the business end

    • mhb 6 hours ago

      Since the cost was probably split between reduced profit and additional customer cost, it seems pretty impractical to determine who is due a refund - end users or businesses. Or the logistics of refunds to customers.

      One possibility would be for businesses to return the fraction of the tariff paid by customers to future customers by offering the items affected with a negative tax until the refund is used up.

      • JKCalhoun 6 hours ago

        "Since the cost was probably split between reduced profit and additional customer cost…"

        Ha ha, that's a good one. I have yet to hear about reduced profits anywhere. Instead, as I said in another comment, I have actual physical receipts with the additional tariff cost (itemized!) in a pile on my workshop (which I'll never see refunded).

        • pwg 6 hours ago

          If the amounts are under the limit you might sue the company who cut those invoices in small claims court for the amounts of the tariff line items on the invoices.

          The invoices give you slam dunk evidence that you paid that amount in tariffs, and the supreme court decision says the payment was illegally collected, so seems like an easy win for you.

        • philipallstar 5 hours ago

          > Instead, as I said in another comment, I have actual physical receipts with the additional tariff cost (itemized!) in a pile on my workshop (which I'll never see refunded).

          You could ask for a tariff refund from those suppliers.

      • ex-aws-dude 3 hours ago

        You're thinking way too much like a programmer

        It doesn't need to be a perfect solution, you could just give everyone a flat refund similar to class action payouts.

        • mhb an hour ago

          Well that would seem like a potentially huge mess depending on the size of the purchases. Not to mention that the purchasers are not all easily tracked down. I wasn't suggesting it because it was perfect; I was suggesting it because it might be viable.

      • quickthrowman 6 hours ago

        > Since the cost was probably split between reduced profit and additional customer

        As someone who prices and sells labor and material for a living, nobody ate increased tariffs. They were passed along to the ultimate consumer of the tariffed product. Everyone was facing the same tariffs so they’re all incentivized to pass the cost along, line iteming the tariffs on the invoice would make it abundantly clear. I passed along all increased costs with a note on my proposal that said “Any and all additional tariffs will be paid for by the customer.”

      • Larrikin 6 hours ago

        Making people spend more money to "save" money is just a sale to increase profits even more.

      • wutwutwat 6 hours ago

        That's not how capitalism works. Consumers ate the cost. Have you not bought anything in the last year?

        • mhb an hour ago

          Yeah. You're confusing capitalism and how businesses generally work with this particular tariff. Which, based on these comments, was often/always just passed through to customers.

      • selimthegrim 6 hours ago

        Maybe this will finally be the impetus for the US to go for a VAT? Hell if we get a carbon based border adjustment tax out of this like people were talking about in Trump’s first term this might be a case of broken clocks.

    • candiddevmike 6 hours ago

      It's COVID PPP all over again... Expect more asset inflation.

    • giancarlostoro 5 hours ago

      One thing that should happen moving forward, whether we keep tariffs in one way or the other, we need consumer protection laws. I assume companies abused the "oh yeah you owe us for the tariffs" as a way to overcharge consumers. I think additional costs driven by tariffs should be 100% spelled out to the consumer next to where you're shown the tax amount. This should allow for auditing later if companies overcharge. It also would make "refunding" more reasonable, since you could show a receipt if technically you paid for a tariff, otherwise, if the company swallows it, they would show the amount but 'discount' or 'omit' it as something they are choosing to pay for. Without a paper trail I don't see how refunding any of this is feasible.

    • magicalhippo 6 hours ago

      > refunded to the importer of record. Not the people the costs were passed to

      I mean the importers were the ones who paid the duties. It's not a given they passed it on, and if it was then in many cases it was spread out. That is importer paid for one container of items, which in turn got sold to individuals which the government has no record of.

      If you ordered delivery by say FedEx and they paid the duty and passed it on to you, you should have a reasonable case to get it refunded from FedEx when they get the money back. Ideally they handle it automatically since they have all the necessary details.

      For manufacturing companies it's less clear, as some might have swallowed all or some of the duties, and multiple components might have been affected by different rates etc.

      Will be interesting to see how companies who passed it on will handle this, given it's a massive PITA to do anything but screw over their customers.

    • coldpie 6 hours ago

      Yet another successful Republican transfer of wealth from the people who do the work (employees) to the people who don't (owners).

    • bdangubic 6 hours ago

      that was the plan all along

      • davidw 6 hours ago

        These people are evil, but also bumbling idiots, so sometimes there is no evil plan, just incompetence.

        • candiddevmike 6 hours ago

          There are direct ties from the administration to companies offering hedges against tariffs. There was absolutely an evil plan, IMO.

        • JKCalhoun 6 hours ago

          Agree. But a few sure scrambled when they read the tea leaves and saw a chance to profit by it.

        • bdangubic 5 hours ago

          they are everything except incompetent when it comes to massively looting us and profiting.

    • NuclearPM 6 hours ago

      Tax to businesses? You think the costs were only passed down once? Really?

  • Dwedit 4 hours ago

    Good luck with that.

  • nekusar 5 hours ago

    And notice that the refunds are TO THE COMPANIES.

    This was the plan from the get-go:

        1. Illegal tariffs made
        2. Companies pay tariffs
        3. Companies sell goods with tariff passed on
        4. tariffs deemed illegal
        5. companies get refunds on tariffs
        6. COMPANIES KEEP TARIFFS
        7. The customers get fucked.
  • pwg 7 hours ago

    Paywalled.

    • cinntaile 6 hours ago

      Probably unintended but this is a great pun.

    • joe_mamba 6 hours ago

      Humorously, this fits the topic quite well

  • recursivedoubts 6 hours ago
    • happyopossum 5 hours ago

      Also in other news:

      "Amid online claims Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick’s sons, Brandon and Kyle Lutnick, senior executives at Cantor Fitzgerald, could benefit from the Supreme Court’s tariff ruling, a firm spokesperson told Newsweek it has “never executed any transactions or taken risk on the legality of tariffs.""

      [0] https://www.newsweek.com/howard-lutnick-sons-may-make-money-...

  • cmrdporcupine 5 hours ago

    Chaos is a ladder.

    Trump doesn't care who went bankrupt or lost money, he was able to create a whole pile of red number buying opportunities for his friends in the know. And for himself.

    It's now an age of oligarchy, stable corporate capitalism and gentlemanly bourgeois behaviour and the appearance of "rules based order" and equally brokered commerce is out, schoolyard bully attitude and "give me your lunch money" is in.

    If you still want to profit, you make friends with the right people, kiss the ring, and get permission to become a highwayman or parasite like the rest of them.

    At the bottom, is us. I don't think any election can put the cork back in this bottle. The only thing that will end this decline is an angry non-compliant populace that is sick of getting a very bad deal.

  • NickC25 6 hours ago

    Private businesses get refunded and a payday, prices for the consumer stay high (because consumers have proven that they can bear them), and inflation goes up.

    Clearly, this makes America great again. /s

    • ranger_danger 6 hours ago

      What if lowering prices actually resulted in enough extra sales that it provided more profit?

      • yndoendo 33 minutes ago

        I recommend _Alchemy: The Surprising Power of Ideas That Don't Make Sense_ by Rory Sutherland [0]. It will help improve the understanding of marketing and hows business operate. This is an over simplified summary.

        There are mainly two reasons people buy something.

        1) It is seen as good deal.

        2) It is seen as luxury.

        Your premise hinges on only #1 and ignores #2. #1 is also limited to select products. How many bed sheets or cars do you need?

        It also rejects the Friedman doctrine [1]. The continual following of this doctrine is what has lead to the enshitification of many products and services. Non-living wages also came out of following it. Living wages harms profits.

        [0] https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26210508-alchemy

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedman_doctrine

  • WalterBright 4 hours ago

    When Biden's student loan forgiveness program was determined to be illegal (twice) by the Supreme Court, nobody ordered that the recipients give it back.

    • platevoltage 8 minutes ago

      This one needs a bit more time in the oven.

  • jokoon 6 hours ago

    What if this was the plan, so those importers can make money?