If economic obstacles weren’t enough, the legal challenges are equally serious. At the heart of the issue is whether Trump used presidential emergency powers appropriately to impose certain tariffs. Multiple lower courts have ruled the approach illegal, arguing that the administration exceeded its authority. The Supreme Court has heard arguments, and its decision carries enormous consequences:
✔ If the Court upholds the tariffs → Revenue continues
✘ If the Court strikes them down → Revenue disappears and the dividend becomes impossible
In other words: The $2,000 payments depend entirely on the survival of Trump’s tariff system.
Trump’s Timeline: Pushing the Promise to 2026
But Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent added a dose of realism: “We will see. We need legislation for that.” That statement is crucial. It means the following: Congress must approve the payouts. This is not something Trump can authorize on his own. A divided Congress could block the plan entirely.

Why This Promise Is Politically Risky — but Powerful
Politicians make promises constantly. Most are vague. Most are difficult to measure. Most can be interpreted a dozen different ways. But this promise is different. When Trump says:
➡️ “I will give you $2,000.”
There is no room for interpretation.
The outcome is binary:
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Either Americans receive the payment,
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Or they don’t.