New Photo - Double trouble: Barger gets caught off second base as Blue Jays' rally fizzles in Game 6 of Series

Double trouble: Barger gets caught off second base as Blue Jays' rally fizzles in Game 6 of Series ROB GILLIES November 1, 2025 at 1:43 AM 0 1 / 5World Series Dodgers Blue Jays BaseballLos Angeles Dodgers second baseman Miguel Rojas (72) shows the ball to the umpire after forcing out Toronto Blue Jays' Addison Barger (47) at second to turn a double play to end the game during ninth inning Game 6 World Series playoff MLB baseball action in Toronto on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025.

- - Double trouble: Barger gets caught off second base as Blue Jays' rally fizzles in Game 6 of Series

ROB GILLIES November 1, 2025 at 1:43 AM

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1 / 5World Series Dodgers Blue Jays BaseballLos Angeles Dodgers second baseman Miguel Rojas (72) shows the ball to the umpire after forcing out Toronto Blue Jays' Addison Barger (47) at second to turn a double play to end the game during ninth inning Game 6 World Series playoff MLB baseball action in Toronto on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP)

TORONTO (AP) — Addison Barger was thinking base hit off the bat — and he was going to score the tying run for Toronto in the ninth inning Friday night.

Then, in a flash, he got doubled off second and Game 6 was over. Just like that.

"I was being too aggressive," Barger said after the Blue Jays lost 3-1 to the Los Angeles Dodgers, sending the World Series to a deciding Game 7 on Saturday.

Trailing by two in the ninth, Toronto put runners at second and third with nobody out when Barger's ground-rule double off Roki Sasaki got lodged at the bottom of the fence in left-center.

Tyler Glasnow entered and quickly retired Ernie Clement on a popup. But the Blue Jays still had a good chance to rally — until Andrés Giménez hit a soft liner to left field that Kiké Hernández turned into a game-ending double play.

Hernández caught the ball on the run in shallow left-center and fired to second base, where Miguel Rojas made a tough pick of a one-hop throw to double off Barger and end the game.

Barger initially broke toward third. He was surprised Hernández got to the ball and was able to catch it on a fly.

"I didn't think it was going to travel that far, so it was kind of a bad read," Barger said.

Toronto slugger George Springer, a cluch hitter throughout his postseason career, was left in the on-deck circle.

It was the first 7-4 game-ending double play in postseason history, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

"Wild way to finish it," Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. "It's such a 'tweener. He made a good play."

Hernández decided to play even more shallow against Giménez than the scouting report suggested.

"Given the situation, really fast guy at second base, I was like, you know what? I'm going to play really, really shallow. If he hits it over my head, kudos to him. I feel like his pop is more to the pull side," Hernández said.

"Somehow I was able to hear that the bat broke even with that crowd. The crazy thing is I had no idea where the ball was because it was in the lights the whole time. But given the situation in the game, the World Series on the line and how good I was hitting tonight, I was like, it's going to hit me in the face — but I'm not stopping. I'm not pulling up. And at the very end, the ball came out of the lights and went into my glove."

Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts couldn't believe it.

"That was crazy. I thought it was a bloop hit," Betts said. "And then I saw Kiké running to catch it, and then I turned and looked at second and I saw he was halfway. I don't know if Kiké actually heard, but I was screaming 'Two! Two! Two!' But Kiké's instincts are so good, man. He probably saw the whole thing himself. He got it and threw it immediately. The best part of that play was Miggy. That was a sick catch."

Los Angeles catcher Will Smith said Barger "got a little giddy and wanted to score the tying run", but he also credited Rojas with "one heck of a pick."

"That was awesome," Smith said.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts praised Hernández for getting a great jump on the ball, saying he's one of the headiest players he's ever been around.

"Heck of a baseball player, heck of a play," Roberts said.

___

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Published: November 01, 2025 at 08:28AM on Source: ALPHA MAG

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Double trouble: Barger gets caught off second base as Blue Jays' rally fizzles in Game 6 of Series

Double trouble: Barger gets caught off second base as Blue Jays' rally fizzles in Game 6 of Series ROB GILLIES ...
New Photo - Get ready for mayhem in World Series Game 7: 'What the hell else do you want?'

Get ready for mayhem in World Series Game 7: 'What the hell else do you want?' Bob Nightengale, USA TODAY November 1, 2025 at 1:55 AM 0 TORONTO — Hall of Fame outfielder Vladimir Guerrero walked in the corridor Friday night of the Rogers Centre with a few friends, greeted a familiar face, and simply uttered: "Game 7." He spread his hands out, exhaled, and shook his head. Guerrero played in only one World Series in his 16 yearcareer and never won a title, and his son Vladimir Jr.

- - Get ready for mayhem in World Series Game 7: 'What the hell else do you want?'

Bob Nightengale, USA TODAY November 1, 2025 at 1:55 AM

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TORONTO — Hall of Fame outfielder Vladimir Guerrero walked in the corridor Friday night of the Rogers Centre with a few friends, greeted a familiar face, and simply uttered: "Game 7."

He spread his hands out, exhaled, and shook his head.

Guerrero played in only one World Series in his 16 year-career and never won a title, and his son Vladimir Jr. has a chance to go where he never went, playing in Game 7 of the World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday night after losing 3-1 in Game 6.

The Blue Jays are now going to have to do it the hard way, with Shohei Ohtani expected to start – or perhaps even pitch in late relief, meaning he could have to play in the the outfield to stay in the game after pitching.

"It's a possibility," Roberts said, when asked if Ohtani would start. "We are not certain, but it's a possibility."

The original plan was for Tyler Glasnow to start, but he came on in the ninth of Game 6 after rookie Rōki Sasaki tired, and closed out the game.

"That was pretty cool," Glasnow said, producing the first save of this World Series.

Shohei Ohtani is expected to pitch in Game 7 for the Dodgers.

It now sets the magical stage for Ohtani, who saved the World Series Baseball Classic for Team Japan, win he struck out Angels teammate Mike Trout to end win the gold medal.

Neither team has much Game 7 experience, with the Blue Jays never playing a Game 7 while the Dodgers lost their last seven-game World Series in 2017 against the Houston Astros.

"It's going to be electric here," Blue Jays manager John Schneider said.

"We had our chances with guys on base kind of as the game went on. But we're going to be ready to play [Saturday]. Everyone's going to be ready to play. I expect them to be playing cards around 1:00 p.m., kind of shooting the [stuff] with everyone. It's going to be fun here. But to the fans. See you [Saturday] night. Be loud, be rowdy. We're going to be ready to play."

If they had their druthers, of course, the series would already be over. But Yoshinobu Yamamoto never gave them a chance. He gave up just five hits and one run in six innings, with their bullpen hanging on for dear life, and even using Glasnow, who originally was expected to start Game 7.

That honor now likely goes to Ohtani.

"Just kind of figuring out what his temperature is on starting versus coming out of the pen," Roberts said, "and so we're close to a decision."

Ohtani has never pitched on three days' rest in his MLB career, but this is the World Series.

"This is Game 7, so there's a lot of things that people haven't done," Roberts said. "You've just got to trust your players and try to win a baseball game.

What's another Ohtani super-human feat to go down in the history books?

"We're going to leave it out there," Roberts said. "I don't think that the pressure, the moment's going to be too big for us. We got to go out there and win one baseball game. We've done that all year. Everyone's bought in. So I don't know how the game's going to play out, but as far as kind of the moment, winning a game, I couldn't be more excited to get to sleep and wake up to play a baseball game."

Game 7, there's nothing like it.

"It's going to be three or four or five hours of mayhem and great baseball," Schneider said. "These guys are going to be ready for it. Hopefully they get to slow some things down but enjoy it.

"It's Game 7 of the World Series at your home stadium. I mean, what the hell else do you want?"

1 / 42025 World Series: All the best moments from Dodgers vs. Blue Jays Game 6Former Toronto Blue Jays star Devon White throws out the ceremonial first pitch before Game 6.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: World Series Game 7 is going to be 'mayhem' for Dodgers, Blue Jays

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Published: November 01, 2025 at 08:27AM on Source: ALPHA MAG

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Get ready for mayhem in World Series Game 7: 'What the hell else do you want?'

Get ready for mayhem in World Series Game 7: 'What the hell else do you want?' Bob Nightengale, USA TODAY Novem...
New Photo - Bosco recalls 'scream-laughing' at her Drag Race golden chocolate bar: 'I think I blacked out'

&34;I remember screaming, 'This season is never going to fing end!'&34; Bosco tells EW about the surprise reveal that she held the season's elusive golden chocolate bar. Bosco recalls 'screamlaughing' at her Drag Race golden chocolate bar: 'I think I blacked out' &34;I remember screaming, 'This season is never going to fing end!'&34; Bosco tells EW about the surprise reveal that she held the season's elusive golden chocolate bar. :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/JoeyNolfiauthorphotoba4923fec03a4027868306485696ef41.jpg) Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at .

"I remember screaming, 'This season is never going to f---ing end!'" Bosco tells EW about the surprise reveal that she held the season's elusive golden chocolate bar.

Bosco recalls 'scream-laughing' at her Drag Race golden chocolate bar: 'I think I blacked out'

"I remember screaming, 'This season is never going to f---ing end!'" Bosco tells EW about the surprise reveal that she held the season's elusive golden chocolate bar.

Joey Nolfi, senior writer at

Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at *. *Since 2016, his work at EW includes *RuPaul's Drag Race* video interviews, Oscars predictions, and more.

EW's editorial guidelines

March 28, 2022 6:11 p.m. ET

Put those sad horns away and sound the harps of *angles* above, because the holy golden chocolate has gone to *the* demon queen of* RuPaul's Drag Race* season 14.

"I'm feeling good, I'm feeling very lucky and happy that I get to continue on doing my bulls--- and showing my ass," Bosco exclusively tells *EW's BINGE* podcast (below) of unwrapping the elusive, gilded piece of candy that allowed her a free pass to return to the *Drag Race* competition after her elimination at the end of Friday night's episode, promising that she'll continue to serve "new-and-improved versions of naked" now that she has a new lease on life in the Werk Room.

"After the lip-sync [against Jorgeous in the bottom-two], I was pretty defeated, like, well, this is where the journey ends. I was ready for them to play those sad trombone horns that we hear every single week," Bosco continues. "They do a really nice job of editing out how hard it is to open those chocolate bars. There's usually about a minute of us struggling with the wrapping, and that's always really funny to watch. I struggled with the wrapping a little bit and saw this piece of gold sticking out, and I was like, there's no way. It was the full gold bar. I started scream-laughing, I think I blacked out, full astral projection, scream-laughing. I remember screaming, 'This season is never going to f---ing end!'"

By making epic, explosive television elsewhere throughout the episode — which saw the queens performing in the *Moulin Ru!* stage production as part of the fan-favorite Rusical song-and-dance challenge — Bosco certainly earned her right to return so quickly after her elimination. At the top of the installment, she clashed with fellow contestant Lady Camden over their shared desire to play the lead role of Saltine, which ended in a group vote that deemed Bosco as the rightful recipient.

RuPaul's Drag Race

Bosco opens the golden chocolate bar on 'RuPaul's Drag Race' season 14. World of Wonder/VH1

Still, Bosco explains, the gals were "vibing within an hour or so" of the argument over the part.

"I was very aware that I was the one in the wrong and being the pettier person, I was like, I'll wait until she's good to talk. By the time we started rehearsals, we were Gucci, we were fine," she remembers. Later, on the runway, Bosco endured a few more verbal lashings from her season 14 sisters — particularly Jorgeous, who quipped about Bosco's tripple-bottom placement in the prior week's lip-sync knockout rounds after Mama Ru asked the remaining queens to tell her who they thought should be eliminated and why.

"That was so funny. It was such a good clap-back," Bosco admits. "Jorgeous was really heated with me in that moment, because I was mean to Lady Camden. Valid. She was mad at me because I [told RuPaul I'd pick] her. She was mad and had a really funny one-liner and comeback to it. Work. She won the one-liner-off there. I'm happy for her flowers there. She beat me in the lip-sync before it even started," Bosco says. "I am a strong believer that drag queens by nature are assholes. While I'm a kind person, I am absolutely an asshole. I don't feel any shame in being a little brat 12 weeks into this competition. I'm usually on my best behavior. I really wanted that thing, so I fought for it."

*RuPaul's Drag Race* season 14 continues Fridays at 8 p.m. ET/PT on VH1. Listen to Bosco's full interview above, and check out more of our *Quick Drag* post-show chats — adapted from our live Twitter Spaces discussions that air immediately after new episodes at 10:05 p.m. ET/7:05 p.m. PT on the @EW handle — below.

***Subscribe to*****EW's BINGE* podcast****** for full recaps of *RuPaul's Drag Race*, including weekly season 14 recaps with the cast, adapted from our new* Quick Drag* series airing Fridays at 10:05 p.m. ET/7:05 p.m. PT on the @EW Twitter account.***

**Related content: **

- DeJa Skye reveals more Lil Jon *Snatch Game* stunts she almost pulled on *Drag Race*

- *Drag Race *star Kerri Colby just wore Jennifer Lopez's dress to perform with Jennifer Lopez

- This is Jasmine Kennedie's moment, and she's riding it beyond *RuPaul's Drag Race*

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

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Published: November 01, 2025 at 08:20AM on Source: ALPHA MAG

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Bosco recalls 'scream-laughing' at her Drag Race golden chocolate bar: 'I think I blacked out'

&34;I remember screaming, 'This season is never going to fing end!'&34; Bosco tells EW about the surprise rev...
New Photo - Daya Betty reveals 'crazier, more inappropriate' jokes she cut from Drag Race roast of Ross Mathews

The RuPaul's Drag Race season 14 star tells EW that Michelle Visage also roasted Mathews after the girls, and tells a joke she cut from her own set. Daya Betty reveals 'crazier, more inappropriate' jokes she cut from Drag Race roast of Ross Mathews The RuPaul's Drag Race season 14 star tells EW that Michelle Visage also roasted Mathews after the girls, and tells a joke she cut from her own set. :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/JoeyNolfiauthorphotoba4923fec03a4027868306485696ef41.jpg) Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at .

The RuPaul's Drag Race season 14 star tells EW that Michelle Visage also roasted Mathews after the girls, and tells a joke she cut from her own set.

Daya Betty reveals 'crazier, more inappropriate' jokes she cut from Drag Race roast of Ross Mathews

The RuPaul's Drag Race season 14 star tells EW that Michelle Visage also roasted Mathews after the girls, and tells a joke she cut from her own set.

Joey Nolfi, senior writer at

Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at *. *Since 2016, his work at EW includes *RuPaul's Drag Race* video interviews, Oscars predictions, and more.

EW's editorial guidelines

April 5, 2022 1:51 p.m. ET

Daya Betty's roast of Ross Mathews might've landed with lukewarm reception from the *RuPaul's Drag Race* judges, but that doesn't mean she didn't at least *try* to turn up the heat with her originally planned set of jokes.

Appearing on the latest episode of EW's BINGE podcast, Daya reveals that she cut a few jokes from her routine during the comedy challenge, but promises that some of them remain too controversial to tell.

"I had a whole list of 'Ross Mathews is so gay' jokes. One I had that didn't make the cut was: Ross Mathews is so gay, his favorite moisturizer was Astroglide," Daya recalls, adding with a laugh that others didn't make it past the initial screening process for far more hilarious reasons. "The people in the room that were ok'ing [the jokes] were like, 'Nope, you can't stay that!' I'm not even going to say it here because it's probably way too inappropriate. There was plenty [of] crazier, more inappropriate jokes. I'll just say it was severely inappropriate and there was a reason it was not aired."

She says the challenge also wrapped with an impromptu set from Michelle Visage, which she says the queens thoroughly enjoyed. But, for most of them — including eliminated queen DeJa Skye, who left alongside Jorgeous after they lost a three-way lip-sync against Daya — the roast actually began in the Werk Room as the queens workshopped their material among the sisterhood.

"We kind of used each other as practice dummies. Especially DeJa. DeJa was the best at it. She'd sit down in her little corner and she'd yell out a joke randomly, and we'd all be like, thumbs up, thumbs down, and, let's be honest, they were pretty much all thumbs down," Daya remembers. "You saw the episode, I had some thumbs down myself. It turned into a collaborative effort. I personally was working on my jokes even after makeup. I was still finessing jokes."

RuPaul's Drag Race

Daya Betty reveals cut jokes from the 'Drag Race' roast of Ross Mathews. World of Wonder/VH1

Listen to Daya's full interview above, in which she also touches on discovering that nearly half of the cast brought similar wigs for various challenges, why she purposely walked super slow down the runway in her "giant 11-inch heels," and why she stands by the comments — *not* their delivery — that landed her in hot water throughout *Untucked*. Tune in to the next live episode of* Quick Drag *Friday at 10:05 p.m. ET on the @EW Twitter handle.

***Subscribe to*****EW's BINGE* podcast****** for full recaps of *RuPaul's Drag Race*, including weekly season 14 recaps with the cast, adapted from our new* Quick Drag* series airing Fridays at 10:05 p.m. ET/7:05 p.m. PT on the @EW Twitter account.***

**Related content: **

- Jorgeous deserves her damn blunt after slaying 6 *Drag Race* lip-syncs: 'Bitch, I was tired'

- DeJa Skye went out laughing for her sisters — and *Drag Race *was better for it

- Bosco recalls 'scream-laughing' at her *Drag Race *golden chocolate bar: 'I think I blacked out'

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

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Published: November 01, 2025 at 08:19AM on Source: ALPHA MAG

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Daya Betty reveals 'crazier, more inappropriate' jokes she cut from Drag Race roast of Ross Mathews

The RuPaul's Drag Race season 14 star tells EW that Michelle Visage also roasted Mathews after the girls, and tells a j...
New Photo - A Vermont cycling apparel company is trying to survive Trump's tariffs. Will the Supreme Court help?

A Vermont cycling apparel company is trying to survive Trump's tariffs. Will the Supreme Court help? LINDSAY WHITEHUSTOctober 31, 2025 at 11:07 PM 0 Hannah Bowerman, left, a technical designer for Terry Precision Cycling, measures a bike shirt worn by market designer Thea Sousa during a fit session at the company's headquarters in Burlington, Vt., Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Amanda Swinhart) BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — From the moment President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on nearly every country, Nik Holm feared the company he leads might not survive.

- - A Vermont cycling apparel company is trying to survive Trump's tariffs. Will the Supreme Court help?

LINDSAY WHITEHUSTOctober 31, 2025 at 11:07 PM

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Hannah Bowerman, left, a technical designer for Terry Precision Cycling, measures a bike shirt worn by market designer Thea Sousa during a fit session at the company's headquarters in Burlington, Vt., Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Amanda Swinhart)

BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — From the moment President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on nearly every country, Nik Holm feared the company he leads might not survive.

Terry Precision Cycling has made it 40 years with a product line specifically for women, navigating a tough early market, thin profit margins and a pandemic-era boom and bust. But Holm, the company president, wasn't sure how his operation could pay the tariffs first announced in April and stay in business.

"We felt like our backs were up against the wall," he said, explaining why he joined a lawsuit challenging the tariffs that the Supreme Court will hear next week.

Terry Precision Cycling's offices are tucked behind a Burlington, Vermont, coffee shop on a leafy street that bursts into color in the fall. Local accolades share wall space with bike saddles and a color wheel's worth of fabric samples. Orders are shipped out from a warehouse a few miles away.

It seems an unlikely epicenter for the furor over Trump's tariffs playing out on the trading floors of global market exchanges and in the boardrooms of international corporations.

But Terry Precision Cycling is one of a handful of small businesses that are challenging many of Trump's tariffs Wednesday before the Supreme Court in a case with extraordinary implications for the boundaries of presidential power and for the global economy.

Small businesses hit hard

The company is small, but it works with suppliers around the world. It sells cycling shorts manufactured in the U.S. using materials imported from France, Guatemala and Italy. Its distinctive, colorfully printed bike jerseys are made with high-tech material that can't be found outside of China.

Tariffs mean the company has to pay more for all those imports, and without the cash reserves of a big company, it has few choices to make up the shortfall besides raising prices for customers. The bewildering pace of changes in tariffs, especially on goods from China, has made setting prices more like rolling the dice. "If we don't know the rules of the game, how are we supposed to play?" Holm asked.

The company had to add $50 to one pair of shorts in the pipeline when China tariffs hit 145%, bringing the price to $199. "Name the cost and we can name the price, and then we can backtrack to see who can actually afford it," Holm said.

The other companies in the lawsuit he joined are also small businesses, including a plumbing supply company in Utah, a wine importer from New York and a fishing-tackle maker in Pennsylvania.

Holm started working for the company more than a decade ago, taking up cycling in earnest alongside the job. He often rides his bike to work and props it outside his office, alongside the company's designers and salespeople. A thin man with deep-set eyes and side-parted hair, Holm was named president about two years ago as the company started by women's cycling pioneer Georgena Terry was wrestling with a downturn in the outdoor market after the coronavirus pandemic. His normally level demeanor gets animated when he talks about the design of their padded shorts or the level of SPF protection in the jerseys.

"It's all about fit and function, and feeling safe and comfortable," he said. "That's our foundation, getting people, getting women, riding. More butts on bikes and getting out there."

The businesses challenging Trump's tariffs are represented by Liberty Justice Center, a libertarian-leaning legal group usually more aligned with conservative causes. But they say Trump is wrong on sweeping tariffs, which are projected to collect a total of some $3 trillion from businesses over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

They argue the president is using an emergency powers law that doesn't even mention tariffs to claim nearly unlimited powers to impose and change import duties at will, something no other president has done on such a scale.

"It is practically what the American Revolution was fought over, the principle that taxation is not legitimate unless it is adopted by the representatives of the people," said Jeffrey Schwab, an attorney with the Liberty Justice Center.

Trump calls the case one of the country's most important

The Trump administration said the law lets the president regulate importation, and that includes tariffs. The president has been vocal about the case, suggesting at one point he might go to the arguments himself — something no other sitting president is recorded to have done. "That's one of the most important cases in the history of our country because if we don't win that case, we will be a weakened, troubled financial mess for many, many years to come," he said.

The law Trump used for many of his tariffs, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, has been invoked dozens of times over the decades, often to impose sanctions on other countries.

But no president had used it for tariffs until February, when Trump placed duties on China, Mexico and Canada. He said the countries had not been doing enough to stop illegal immigration and drug trafficking.

In April, he unveiled "reciprocal" tariffs on nearly all U.S. trading partners with a baseline of 10% and higher increases for specific countries, though many of those have since been put on hold. Tariffs on China hit 145% at one point but have since come down and are headed to 20% overall under Trump's latest deal with China.

Multiple lawsuits have been filed over the emergency-powers tariffs. The Supreme Court also will hear two other cases on Wednesday, one from a group of Democratic-leaning states and another from an Illinois educational toy company.

The plaintiffs have won two rounds in lower courts, though the government did convince four appellate judges that the law does allow the president broad power over tariffs.

How the Supreme Court will rule is an open question

The high court will now be asked to rule on the scope of a president's authority. The justices, three of whom were appointed by Trump, have so far been reluctant to check his extraordinary flex of executive power.

But they have been skeptical of presidential claims of power before, as when Joe Biden tried to forgive $400 billion in student loans under a different law dealing with national emergencies. The court found that the law didn't clearly give Biden the power to enact such a costly program.

Trump's tariffs, by contrast, are expected to total in the trillions. They're also projected to increase people's bills by about $2,000 per household this year, an analysis from the Yale Budget Lab found.

Revenue from tariffs totaled $195 billion by September, more than double what it was the year before — though the government could have to pay back that money if the justices strike down the tariffs.

Trump has acknowledged that Americans could feel some short-term pain from tariffs but maintained that they'll bring about more favorable trade deals and help American manufacturing. His administration says the tariffs are different from the Biden student-loan case because they're about foreign affairs, an area where it says the courts should not be second-guessing the president.

For the people at Terry Precision Cycling, though, those big-picture political questions were far from their decision to join the lawsuit. Holm thought more about the company's 20 or so employees, its legacy and the women who buy its products out of a love for cycling.

"If it becomes so unaffordable for them to do it, less can enter into that joy, that freedom of being on a bike," he said. "It was about surviving this uncertainty."

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A Vermont cycling apparel company is trying to survive Trump's tariffs. Will the Supreme Court help?

A Vermont cycling apparel company is trying to survive Trump 's tariffs. Will the Supreme Court help? LINDSAY WH...

 

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