
WASHINGTON — Days after he publicly rebuked Supreme Court justices who ruled most of his tariffs were unlawful, President Donald Trump steered clear of direct confrontation when he came face-to-face with three of them at his State of the Union address Tuesday. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content.
Main Idea: President Donald Trump kept his criticism of the Supreme Court brief during the State of the Union, even as three justices who backed a ruling against his tariffs sat in the chamber.
Key Points:
The tariffs ruling could raise uncertainty for consumers and small businesses if trade costs change, and the public clash may weaken trust in the Supreme Court.
A clear court check on tariffs may help keep trade rules more lawful and predictable for households and market participants.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central actor in the confrontation over the tariffs ruling and the State of the Union appearance.
Major Supreme Court figure tied to the tariffs ruling and present at the address.
Named justice in the tariffs case and one of the justices Trump faced at the speech.
Named justice in the case and highlighted in the article for dissenting and receiving praise from Trump.
Named justice in the tariffs case and present during Trump’s remarks.
The court’s ruling on Trump’s tariffs is the core legal event driving the story.
Mentioned as a justice who usually does not attend, providing background context.
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Sign in to commentMentioned as one of Trump’s appointees in the majority, but not central to the scene.
Mentioned as a justice who usually does not attend, providing background context.
Referenced in a historical comparison to a prior State of the Union controversy.