Trump, Supreme Court and refund payments
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The trade community can expect faster refunds, thanks to two recent upgrades to U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Automated Commercial Environment Secure Data Portal that will prepare users for the transition to an electronic refund process on Feb.
The moves comes as importers continue to wait for a Supreme Court ruling on executive tariff powers that could lead to a rush of refund requests.
The government is speeding up its tariff-refund process as importers await a landmark Supreme Court decision on the Trump administration’s levies.
Officials may be forced to refund $90 billion in already collected revenue. If the Supreme Court rules that President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs are illegal, customs officials may be forced to go through the unprecedented task of refunding more than $ ...
The country’s top trade court has clarified that it can order refunds on tariffs owed more than 314 days prior should the Supreme Court strike down President Donald Trump's emergency tariffs, easing importers' fears of a potential barrier to a refund ...
The window has opened for some U.S. Amazon Prime customers to seek refunds under a $2.5 billion settlement Amazon reached with the Federal Trade Commission.