| Senate votes to block tariffs on Brazil. It shows some pushback to Trump trade policy 
 Oct. 28, 2025 at 2:50 pm
 
 
  Sen.  Tim Kaine, D-Va., meets with reporters to discuss President Donald  Trump’s strategy on tariffs, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Oct.  28, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
 
 By
 STEPHEN GROVES
 The Associated Press
 
 
 WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate approved a resolution Tuesday  evening that would nullify President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Brazil,  including oil, coffee and orange juice, as Democrats tested GOP  senators’ support for Trump’s trade policy.
 
 The legislation from Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, a Democrat, passed on a 52-48 tally.
 
 It  would terminate the national emergencies that Trump has declared to  justify 50% tariffs on Brazil, but the legislation is likely doomed  because the Republican-controlled House has passed new rules that allow  leadership to prevent it from ever coming up for a vote. Trump would  almost certainly veto the legislation even if it were to pass Congress.
 
 Still,  the vote demonstrated some pushback in GOP ranks against Trump’s  tariffs. Five Republicans — Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Mitch  McConnell of Kentucky, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Rand Paul of Kentucky  and Thom Tillis of North Carolina — all voted in favor of the resolution  along with every Democrat.
 
 Kaine said the votes are a way force a  conversation in the Senate about “the economic destruction of tariffs.”  He’s planning to call up similar resolutions applying to Trump’s  tariffs on Canada and other nations later this week.
 
 Related “But they are also really about how much will we let a  president get away with? Do my colleagues have a gag reflex or not?”  Kaine told reporters.
 
 Trump has linked the tariffs on Brazil to the country’s policies and  criminal prosecution of former President Jair Bolsonaro. The U.S. ran a  $6.8 billion trade surplus with Brazil last year, according to the  Census Bureau.
 
 “Every American who wakes up in the morning to get a  cup of java is paying a price for Donald Trump’s reckless, ridiculous,  and almost childish tariffs,” said Senate Democratic leader Chuck  Schumer of New York.
 
 Republicans have also been increasingly  uneasy with Trump’s aggressive trade policy, especially at a time of  turmoil for the economy. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office  said last month that Trump’s tariff policy is one of several factors  that are expected to increase jobless rates and inflation and lower  overall growth this year.
 
 In April, four Republicans voted with  Democrats to block tariffs on Canada, but the bill was never taken up in  the House. Kaine said he hoped the votes this week showed how  Republican opposition to Trump’s trade policy is growing.
 
 To bring  up the votes, Kaine has invoked a decades-old law that allows Congress  to block a president’s emergency powers and members of the minority  party to force votes on the resolutions.
 
 However, Vice President  JD Vance visited a Republican luncheon on Tuesday in part to emphasize  to Republicans that they should allow the president to negotiate trade  deals. Vance told reporters afterwards that Trump is using tariffs “to  give American workers and American farmers a better deal.”
 
 “To vote against that is to strip that incredible leverage from the  president of the United States. I think it’s a huge mistake,” he added.
 
 The  Supreme Court will also soon consider a case challenging Trump’s  authority to implement sweeping tariffs. Lower courts have found most of  his tariffs illegal.
 
 But some Republicans said they would wait until the outcome of that case before voting to cross the president.
 
 “I don’t see a need to do that right now,” said Sen.  Kevin Cramer, a North Dakota Republican, adding that it was “bad timing”  to call up the resolutions before the Supreme Court case.
 
 Others  said they are ready to show opposition to the president’s tariffs and  the emergency declarations he has used to justify them.
 
 More on the Trump administration
 “Tariffs make both building and buying in America more expensive, “  said Sen. Mitch McConnell, the former longtime Republican leader, in a  statement. ”The economic harms of trade wars are not the exception to  history, but the rule.”
 
 His fellow Kentuckian, Republican Sen.  Rand Paul, told reporters, “Emergencies are like war, famine, tornado.  Not liking someone’s tariffs is not an emergency. It’s an abuse of the  emergency power. And it’s Congress abdicating their traditional role in  taxes.”
 
 In a floor speech, he added, “No taxation without representation is embedded in our Constitution.”
 
 Meanwhile,  Kaine is also planning to call up a resolution that would put a check  on Trump’s ability to carry out military strikes against Venezuela as  the U.S. military steps up its presence and action in the region.
 
 He  said that it allows Democrats to get off the defensive while they are  in the minority and instead force votes on “points of discomfort” for  Republicans.
 
 STEPHEN GROVES.
 
 seattletimes.com
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