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Trump again promises $2,000 tariff dividend as SCOTUS decision looms

President Trump on Sunday once again floated the idea of paying a $2,000 dividend to most Americans out of the billions raised in tariffs this year, an idea he's repeatedly touted but never executed.Why it matters: Trump is doubling down on his tariff pitch even as those duties face their biggest legal test yet before the Supreme Court — and as Republicans reel from an election in which voters punished them for high prices those same tariffs helped fuel.What they're saying: "We are taking in Trillions of Dollars and will soon begin paying down our ENORMOUS DEBT, $37 Trillion. Record Investment in the USA, plants and factories going up all over the place," Trump posted on Truth Social, in one of a series of posts defending his tariffs. "A dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high income people!) will be paid to everyone."The intrigue: Earlier this week the Supreme Court heard arguments on whether most of Trump's tariffs were legally imposed, with justices sounding skeptical of his authority.They appeared concerned that tariffs effectively acted as a revenue-raising tax, as opposed to a mechanism to solve any emergency caused by a trade imbalance. There are questions about whether the government could end up having to refund more than $100 billion to importers if the high court rules the tariffs weren't legal.Between the lines: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, in an interview with ABC's "This Week" on Sunday, insisted the tariffs were not about "taking in the revenue," but rather were intended to re-balance trade. Flashback: Trump has hinted at a tariff dividend many times this year.He's more recently settled on the $2,000 figure, though.What to watch: It's not clear when the Supreme Court will rule on the tariff case.If they do preserve the tariffs, the question will become whether the dividend is authorized, who'd receive it, and how much of a dent that would put in the tariffs' ability to reduce the debt.

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