
Nevada Treasurer Zach Conine sent a
Conine urged congressional leaders in the letter sent Thursday to pass legislation requiring the Trump administration to refund $2.1 billion he said was unconstitutionally taken from Nevadans. His letter backs a plea from Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford and 18 other state AGs seeking to hold the Trump administration accountable and recover funds for small businesses and families.
"In the 28 days since Donald Trump's tariffs were ruled unconstitutional, the administration has earned millions of dollars in interest on money that belongs to Nevadans," Conine said.
The Trump administration had pledged to refund claims with interest if the tariffs were found unlawful.
Congress, the AGs argue in their own
Conine is asking for timely and automatic refunds for the tariffs, which the U.S. Supreme Court
Small businesses and low-income households, burdened by tariff-driven price increases on necessities, deserve full refunds "without jumping through endless hoops," California Attorney General Rob Bonta said during a Thursday press conference.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled the tariffs exceeded the president's IEEPA powers, noting that the constitution vests the power to levy taxes and duties with Congress. The ruling was a response to multiple state
Following the ruling, Trump threatened more tariffs, prompting Nevada to join 24 states in a lawsuit challenging his attempt to impose tariffs using Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974.
"These reckless tariffs are not abstract policy debates; they are price increases felt at kitchen tables and small businesses across Nevada," Ford said. "After the Supreme Court rejected his earlier justification, the president is trying a new legal theory to reach the same unlawful result."
"We are going back to court to defend Nevada consumers, protect our economy, and uphold the separation of powers," Ford said.










