Despite a partial U-turn, Senate Democrats are vowing to move forward and put their GOP colleagues on the record on President Donald Trump's latest tariffs.
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), a lead author of a resolution that would overturn the basis for Trump's global levies announced last week, said in an interview Thursday that Democrats still plan on forcing a vote on the measure. Trump on Wednesday put a 90-day pause on most of the tariffs on Wednesday, though he left in place a lower, 10 percent levy and announced severe retaliatory tariffs on China.
"My colleagues are telling me they want to move ahead," Wyden said Thursday. "It's the same trade chaos — I don't know if you've seen the [financial market] numbers, but the only thing going up on the index today is volatility."
Multiple Senate Democrats and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) formally introduced the resolution Thursday, and they are expected to force the vote once the Senate returns from a two-week break.
Four Republicans previously joined Democrats in a successful Senate vote to nix Trump's earlier Canada tariffs. Speaker Mike Johnson moved to block a House vote on that measure and has undertaken a similar move to block a future House vote on the global levies.