(The Center Square) – Saying costs to North Carolina households is an estimated $800 to $1,300 this year because of government tariffs, Attorney General Jeff Jackson on Thursday enjoined the state in litigation led by Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield.
State of Oregon, et al., v. Trump, et al. is filed in the U.S. Court of International Trade. The 24 plaintiffs seek a three-judge panel to give relief in staying, holding unlawful, vacating and setting aside the Border Patrol’s CSMS #67844987 – the 10% ad valorem surcharge on imports from every country that went into effect Feb. 24.
“North Carolinians have already paid billions in unlawful tariffs – our farmers, our manufacturers, and our communities can’t bear more,” Jackson said. “I’m taking the federal government to court because they broke the law again, they harmed North Carolinians, and I can prove it.”
Jackson says “nearly $3.5 billion in tariffs” were paid by North Carolina last year through pricing on vehicles, heavy machinery, furniture, pharmaceuticals and other goods. The U.S. Supreme Court two weeks ago in a 6-3 decision struck down those tariffs imposed through the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
Jackson said the new tariffs instituted since could cost $1.2 trillion nationwide. The John Locke Foundation estimates the farm industry in the state to lose 8,000 jobs and $1.9 billion from them.
The nonprofit John Locke Foundation bills its vision as “a North Carolina in which liberty and limited, constitutional government are the cornerstones of society so that individuals, families, and institutions can freely shape their own destinies.”
Jackson and other attorneys general say the latest tariffs violate the Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act. Congress, they say, rather than the president has power to set and collect taxes.
Defendants include second-term Republican President Donald Trump; the Department of Homeland Security and Secretary Kristi Noem; and U.S. Customs and Border Patrol and Commissioner Rodney Scott.




