28/02/2026 09:16 am MYT
On Friday, 20 Feb 2026, the US Supreme Court clobbered a huge chunk of Trump 2.0 tariff imperialism, delivering a major blow to the president's key economic weapon. The US Supreme Court decided in a 6-3 tariff ruling that the US president wrongfully invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to implement his tariffs. The law that undergirds those import duties "does not authorize the President to impose tariffs," the majority ruled 6-3 in the long-awaited decision. Trump's legal stance "would represent a transformative expansion of the President's authority over tariff policy," the majority of Supreme Court judges concluded. The judges highlighted that Trump imposed the tariffs without Congress, which has the power to tax under the US Constitution.
Now, barely a few days into the Chinese New Year of the Fire Horse, president Donald Trump has once again increased the already elevated level of uncertainty - on Saturday 21 Feb 2026, Trump said he would increase US global tariffs to 15%, one day after the US Supreme Court struck down a broad swath of the president's tariff policy. In a Truth Social post, Trump said the new tariffs will be "effective immediately."
Desperately trying to save huge embarrassment, Trump posted the following on his social media site:
Note from Publisher
This week, the National Unity Department released the 2025 National Unity Index (IPNas). The Index is a composite social cohesion measure that produces a score between 0 and 1 to reflect the overall level of national unity in Malaysia, with higher values indicating stronger unity. It is an empirically based index developed under the Twelfth Malaysia Plan (12P) that integrates multiple constructs of social cohesion, including ethnicity, cross-ethnic social relations, national ethos, as well as governance and development dimensions.
The IPNas 2025 climbed to 0.701, surpassing the target set under the 12P. However, the survey also underscores persistent structural sensitivities: ethnicity, media narratives, politics and religion remain key perceived fault lines, while notable disparities between states indicate that unity is uneven rather than uniformly consolidated. The findings imply that national cohesion in Malaysia is improving but remains conditional—dependent on inclusive development, credible governance and responsible public discourse. In short, unity appears to be strengthening institutionally, yet socially fragile in perception, requiring sustained and regionally nuanced policy attention. News reporting, digital contents, and viral messages that manipulate racial sentiments need to be curtailed to prevent negative perceptions between communities.
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