Trump likely wouldn’t need Congress to approve his most controversial trade policy

It’s easy to dismiss many presidential candidates’ campaign promises as empty, because Congress would need to approve them. Tariffs are different.

Presidents have vast powers to lob tariffs on friends and foes, as former President Donald Trump demonstrated when he waged a trade war starting in 2018. That’s why some experts are alarmed and baffled by Trump’s latest threat to use his favorite economic weapon.

During a rally in battleground Wisconsin last weekend, Trump vowed to impose staggering tariffs on countries that snub the US dollar.

“Many countries are leaving the dollar. They are not going to leave the dollar with me,” Trump said. “I’ll say, ‘You leave the dollar, you’re not doing business with the United States because we’re going to put a 100% tariff on your goods.”

The US dollar remains the world’s reserve currency – essentially a super currency that helps international trade flow and the global economy to function. But Trump’s threat appears to be in response to China, Russia and other countries that have made noise about finding an alternative to the greenback.

Taking a hardline on protecting the almighty dollar might sound good on the campaign trail, but experts warn that such a massive tariff would likely backfire on the American people.

“I would characterize this as incoherent, tough-guy posturing,” Maury Obstfeld, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told CNN in a phone interview.

Obstfeld, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), noted that while some countries have diversified away from the US dollar, the greenback remains the world’s preeminent currency.

‘Crazy’ proposal on tariffs

Although he cautioned that it’s unclear under what conditions Trump would impose 100% tariffs, Obstfeld said such high levies would raise prices on consumers – especially if they were applied widely.

“100% tariffs would have a pretty severe effect on the price of goods we import from those countries and therefore inflation,” Obstfeld said.

Christine McDaniel, a former senior trade official in the George W. Bush administration, called Trump’s 100% tariff idea “crazy” and “silly season campaign rhetoric.”

“Trump’s answer to just about anything is tariffs,” said McDaniel, now a senior research fellow at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center.

McDaniel told CNN that Trump can likely apply tariffs he’s proposing unilaterally without approval from Congress following a report from the United States Trade Representative (USTR) under Section 301 or a report from the Commerce Department under Section 232. She cautioned that it is possible Congress could amend current law to claw back that trade authority.