Trump is reading an alternative plan to expand customs duties …

Officials in the administration of US President Donald Trump said they were studying a temporary practice to impose customs duty in major sectors of the world economy.
On Thursday, a US Federal Court’s appeal, a review of the comprehensive customs obligations approved by Trump, said that one day after the Commerce Court had ruled that it would immediately stop implementing it, and Trump had violated his power to release these fees.
He has directed the Federal Court’s decision to take action by June 5 and the US administration by the ninth.
Wall Street Journal quotes that the Trump team is reading its preferences and says that Trump will help the United States to re -balance if you want to find a new legal power to impose customs duty.
Sources pointed out that the Trump group relied on some emergency powers used to quickly impose the largest part of its vast customs fee during its second term.
As the strategy is threatened, sources suggest that the Trump team is considering the dual action of temporary measures to impose customs duty on major sectors of the global economy under an unused material in the 1974 trade law.
The law consists of a section that allows customs to impose customs duties up to 150 days to address trade reserves with other countries, providing a time to set up personal customs to each large business partner under a different section of the same law used to face unfair foreign trade practices.
This second step requires a long announcement and suspension, but administrative authorities are looking at more legal justification than this week’s legal illegal illegal policy.
It is noteworthy that this alternative verdict has been used many times in the past, when Trump’s first condition has imposed customs duty on China.
The newspaper quoted two sources that the Trump administration has not yet made a final decision. He may be waiting for the Federal Court to allow Trump to continue the emergency customs duties imposed by Trump during the appeal procedures.