Scott Bessent, US treasury secretary, throughout an Financial Membership of Minnesota occasion in Golden Valley, Minnesota, US, on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026.
Ben Brewer | Bloomberg | Getty Pictures
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday stated it is “not possible” that the Supreme Court docket will overturn President Donald Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose tariffs, with a possible choice from the court docket looming as early as this week.
“I imagine that it is extremely unlikely that the Supreme Court docket will overrule a president’s signature financial coverage,” Bessent stated on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “They didn’t overrule Obamacare, I imagine that the Supreme Court docket doesn’t need to create chaos.”
In June, the Supreme Court docket upheld a key Inexpensive Care Act provision that arrange a panel to advocate preventive care companies that insurers should present for free of charge to sufferers.
Bessent’s feedback come sooner or later after Trump stated he would impose a brand new slate of tariffs on items coming from Europe till “a Deal is reached for the Full and Whole buy of Greenland.”
Trump didn’t specify in his Fact Social publish which statute he was invoking to impose the tariffs, although the transfer seems to reflect the “liberation day” duties he has imposed on dozens of countries underneath the Worldwide Emergency Financial Powers Act.
The tariffs on items from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Finland will start at 10% on Feb. 1, Trump stated. They may then escalate to 25% on June 1, Trump stated.
The Supreme Court docket is about to rule on Trump’s use of the IEEPA to impose tariffs earlier than the tip of its time period, however a call may come as quickly as this week. IEEPA provides the president broad latitude to make use of financial instruments in response to an “uncommon and extraordinary risk.”
Bessent stated Trump’s new tariffs on Europe relating to Greenland are a response to an emergency.
“The nationwide emergency is avoiding a nationwide emergency,” Bessent stated. “It’s a strategic choice by the president … he is ready to use the financial may of the U.S. to keep away from a scorching conflict.”
Trump has lengthy sought to accumulate Greenland, the Arctic territory of Denmark, and has ratcheted up his strain marketing campaign for a U.S. takeover of the island in latest weeks. Leaders in Greenland, Denmark and throughout Europe have extensively rejected Trump’s calls for to take over the island.
European leaders of nations focused by the brand new tariffs responded on Sunday.
“Tariff threats undermine transatlantic relations and threat a harmful downward spiral. We are going to proceed to face united and coordinated in our response,” the leaders of Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the UK stated in a joint assertion.
“We stand in full solidarity with the Kingdom of Denmark and the folks of Greenland. Constructing on the method begun final week, we stand prepared to interact in a dialogue primarily based on the ideas of sovereignty and territorial integrity that we stand firmly behind,” the assertion learn.
Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Danish International Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen and Greenland’s Minister of International Affairs Vivian Motzfeldt on the White Home final week in a gathering that Rasmussen described as “frank however constructive.”
After the assembly, the group stated the U.S. and Denmark would set up a high-level working group to chart Greenland’s future.
The Trump administration claims {that a} U.S. acquisition of Greenland is crucial to nationwide safety to counter the growth of Russia and China within the area.
CNBC has reached out to the White Home and the Treasury Division to make clear what statute Trump is utilizing to impose the brand new European tariffs.
CORRECTION: Vivian Motzfeldt is Greenland’s Minister of International Affairs. A earlier model of this text misstated her title.
This story is creating. Please verify again for updates.
