KEY POINTS
  • President Biden has yet to make a decision on the options his advisors have presented on the tariffs, according to senior administration officials.
  • The National Security Council's spokesman recently called the tariffs "poorly designed," "a shoddy deal" that "increased costs for American families."   
  • Ambassador Katherine Tai, who as U.S. Trade Representative holds the leading role on the tariffs, has suggested they have strategic value in maintaining leverage in negotiations with China.
Xi Jinping, vice president of China, left, meets with U.S. Vice President Joe Biden in the Roosevelt Room at the White House in Washington, D.C., Feb. 14, 2012.

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration faces a legal deadline at midnight to defend former President Donald Trump's China tariffs, even as the White House considers scaling them back to lower consumer prices and ease inflation. 

Scores of companies sued the Trump administration in September 2020, arguing the process of implementing a third and fourth tranche of tariffs on roughly $350 billion in goods was overly broad and hastily implemented. If the Biden administration, having inherited the suit, cannot prove the legitimacy of the tariffs or the process, it may be forced to reevaluate tens of thousands of public comments on the tax penalties, or reimburse the parties for what they've paid.