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Sunday, 22 February 2026

The Proprietary Deep State: Algorithmic Power, Private Sovereignty, and the Crisis of Democratic Governance

 

ABSTRACT.  This essay examines the emergence of what a growing body of political-economy scholarship designates the “Proprietary Deep State”—a hybrid governance apparatus in which critical operational capacities of sovereign governments have been substantially delegated to, or supplanted by, a small number of technology principals. Drawing on publicly verifiable data through February 21, 2026, the essay analyses three convergent cases: Palantir Technologies’ deepening integration into US intelligence and enforcement infrastructure, culminating in a five-year, $1 billion blanket purchase agreement with the Department of Homeland Security disclosed on February 20, 2026; the structural consequences of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)—which Elon Musk led from January to May 30, 2025 before departing, leaving behind an institutionalised successor apparatus under OMB Director Russell Vought, while Musk himself faces court-ordered deposition (February 5, 2026) over DOGE’s dismantling of USAID; and Meta Platforms’ acceleration toward ambient AI-embedded wearable computing, with smart-glasses sales having tripled in 2025 and a neural electromyography wristband already commercialised.
Bayesian game-theoretic modelling demonstrates that rational state actors will systematically subsidise private infrastructure monopolies, thereby entrenching rather than correcting the accountability deficit. Oxfam’s January 2026 report documents that global billionaire wealth surged 16 percent in 2025 to a record $18.3 trillion, and that billionaires are now 4,000 times more likely to hold or directly influence political office than ordinary citizens.

I. Introduction: From Shadow Bureaucracy to Proprietary Sovereignty

The concept of the “Deep State” has long denoted a permanent network of career officials, intelligence professionals, and military planners whose influence on policy outlasts any electoral cycle. In its classical formulation the Deep State operated through institutional continuity, classified information, and bureaucratic inertia—always accountable, at least in principle, to democratic processes even when insulated from them. What the 2025–2026 period reveals is a qualitative transformation: the functional capacities of the state—surveillance, infrastructure, fiscal administration, information management—have migrated to private corporate hands on a scale and at a velocity that existing regulatory frameworks were not designed to address.

This essa advances three related claims. First, that the principal locus of state power in the United States has undergone a partial but structurally significant privatisation, with Palantir Technologies, Elon Musk’s constellation of enterprises, and Meta Platforms as its primary loci. Second, that this privatisation has occurred under conditions of acute information asymmetry, producing the strategic dynamics modelled in Section IV. Third, that the legal framework governing relations between sovereign states and these private actors is constitutively inadequate to the present situation. Throughout this essy, the more analytically precise designation “Proprietary Deep State” is employed: a configuration in which the informational, communicative, and enforcement infrastructure of governance is privately owned, algorithmically mediated, and opaque to democratic oversight..

II. TheProprietary Deep State: Three Case Studies in Algorithmic Power


II.i. Palantir Technologies and the Proprietisation of Intelligence Infrastructure

No single development better illustrates the emergence of the Proprietary Deep State than the trajectory of Palantir Technologies. Co-founded in 2003 by Peter Thiel with early seed investment from the CIA’s venture arm, In-Q-Tel, the company has transformed from a niche data-analytics firm into what amounts to an operating system for the United States intelligence and enforcement community. Its expansion accelerated dramatically after January 2025.

Palantir’s Q4 2025 earnings, reported February 2, 2026, revealed that US government revenue grew 66 percent year-on-year to $570 million in a single quarter, with total quarterly revenues of $1.41 billion exceeding all analyst estimates. The company projects full-year 2026 revenues of $7.18–$7.20 billion, representing more than 60 percent annual growth. This expansion is anchored in a series of landmark contracts. In April 2025, ICE awarded Palantir a $30 million agreement to develop ImmigrationOS, a system designed to provide “near real-time visibility” on deportation targets. Palantir subsequently received DISA Impact Level 6 authorisation—the highest DoD certification covering Top Secret information—enabling deployment across military environments without case-by-case approval.

Two disclosures in the days immediately before this datet crystallise the governance stakes most acutely. On February 18–19, 2026, Tax Notes—drawing on USASpending.gov data and FOIA-obtained contracts—reported that the IRS has paid Palantir more than $180 million across 26 contracts since 2018, and that Palantir is now building an internal IRS tool to make highly sensitive taxpayer data more accessible across agency personnel. Former Treasury Associate Chief Information Officer Matthew Burton stated: “The greatest risk is capture: when the vendor knows it is indispensable, it exploits its position for gain at the expense of the public.” On February 20, 2026, Palantir secured a five-year, $1 billion blanket purchase agreement with the Department of Homeland Security, covering software licences, maintenance, and implementation services department-wide. Palantir’s remaining performance obligation soared from $2.6 billion in Q3 to $4.2 billion in Q4 2025, suggesting this DHS agreement may already be embedded in financial statements.

The accountability problem is structural, not incidental. When the algorithms used to classify threats, prioritise enforcement targets, manage battlefield AI, and aggregate taxpayer data are proprietary, the classical mechanisms of democratic oversight—legislative hearings, judicial review, inspector-general audits—encounter a constitutive epistemological limit. As Burton stated, government reliance on proprietary data-management systems creates “problems of financial dependency, technical lock-in, and real risks to democratic accountability.” The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Victoria Noble warned that Palantir’s IRS contract “would create serious privacy risks for taxpayers, who entrust some of their most sensitive personal data to the IRS.”.

II.ii. Elon Musk, DOGE, and the Weaponisation of Structural Dependency

The case of Elon Musk and DOGE requires careful periodisation, because the original version of this document contained factual inaccuracies that this revision corrects. Musk formally departed his DOGE role on May 30, 2025, after approximately 130 days as a Special Government Employee—the legal maximum for that classification. His departure followed legal setbacks in multiple federal courts, clashes with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and OMB Director Russell Vought over the scope and targeting of cuts, a 71 percent collapse in Tesla’s first-quarter profit (revenue down 9 percent), and a severe deterioration in his public approval rating. In a June 2025 interview, Musk characterised his DOGE tenure as “somewhat successful” but said he would not repeat the experience.

Musk’s formal departure did not, however, terminate the structural consequences of DOGE—and it is the post-Musk phase that is analytically most important. The Revolving Door Project’s comprehensive February 2026 report, “DOGE: From Meme to Government Erosion Machine,” documents that DOGE operatives—predominantly young personnel recruited from Musk’s and Peter Thiel’s networks without prior government experience—were converted from special government employees to permanent agency staff, burrowing into federal agencies well after the initiative’s headline phase. OMB Director Russell Vought—identified by the report as the de facto post-Musk DOGE leader—institutionalised the core agenda through the full formal authority of his office: 317,000 federal employees were separated by year-end 2025; USAID, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and much of the Education Department were effectively eliminated; and the fiscal year 2026 White House budget includes a $45 million request for a residual DOGE structure of 30 employees, with salaries for a further 120 embedded agency staffers reimbursable through ITOR appropriations. Congressional Republicans passed only a single bill enacting $9 billion in DOGE-related cuts—far below Musk’s original $2 trillion ambition—and Trump officials signalled in early 2026 that no further clawback legislation was likely given the narrow House majority.

As of this date, Musk faces a consequential accountability moment. On February 5, 2026, US District Judge Theodore Chuang ruled that “extraordinary circumstances justify” compelling Musk to be deposed in a lawsuit brought by former USAID employees accusing him of unlawfully directing that agency’s dissolution. The judge found that Musk “likely has personal, first-hand knowledge” of the relevant decisions—even as White House lawyers simultaneously argued Musk had no legal authority. This paradox—maximum operational influence combined with claimed non-accountability—is the defining legal signature of the Proprietary Deep State. Separately, at least 23 of more than 100 traceable DOGE operatives made cuts at agencies regulating sectors in which they had prior financial interests (ProPublica, July 2025), exemplifying the structural conflict-of-interest that characterises the whole enterprise.

Musk’s strategic leverage over national security infrastructure operates along a parallel and currently unconstrained axis. As the owner of Starlink (dominant satellite internet in active conflict zones), X (the primary global real-time public communications platform), and SpaceX (critical launch vehicle for US military and intelligence satellites), he controls communication and logistics nodes that no state can readily replace. The Bayesian model in Section IV operationalises the structural dependency this creates..

II.iii. Meta Platforms and the Frontier of Neurocognitive Governance

The governance challenge posed by Meta Platforms operates at a longer temporal horizon but carries the most consequential long-run implications for democratic autonomy. Its mechanism is the progressive enclosure of the information environment within which political deliberation occurs and, increasingly, the hardware layer that mediates perception itself.

The current state of play is established with precision by Meta’s January 28, 2026 investor call and CES 2026 disclosures (January 7, 2026). Meta’s apps reached 3.58 billion daily active users in December 2025, including more than 2 billion daily actives each on Facebook and WhatsApp. Full-year 2025 revenue was $201 billion. Zuckerberg described 2026 as “a year where this wave accelerates even further,” naming “personal superintelligence” as Meta’s central product objective and specifying that the company’s competitive advantage resides in “unique context”: access to users’ “history, interests, content and relationships”—the most comprehensive personal data ecosystem in history. Reality Labs, which oversees hardware, posted a $19.2 billion loss in 2025, which Zuckerberg characterised as likely the “peak” before gradual improvement. Meta has invested more than $50 billion in Reality Labs since 2020 and plans $100 billion in capital expenditure in 2026.

The hardware layer is where governance concerns become most acute. At Meta Connect 2025 (September 2025), Meta unveiled the Ray-Ban Meta Display Glasses ($799, shipping September 30), the Oakley Meta Vanguard sport glasses ($499), and—most consequentially—the Neural Band, an electromyography wristband that reads peripheral nervous system signals to interpret finger and hand gestures as device inputs, enabling navigation and text input without touching any screen. Smart-glasses sales tripled in 2025. At CES 2026, Neural Band technology was demonstrated in a Garmin partnership for automotive integration. A next-generation smartwatch codenamed “Malibu 2,” scheduled for 2026, is expected to absorb the neural wristband’s function. Future versions of the glasses are described by Zuckerberg as devices that will “see what you see, hear what you hear, talk to you and help you as you go about your day.”

The privacy and governance implications of ambient neural-interface consumer devices are not hypothetical. Researcher Nita Farahany has documented that existing electromyography devices have been used in laboratory conditions to extract financially sensitive information—including PIN codes—without users’ conscious awareness. Stanford Law School’s Law and Biosciences Blog characterised neural data as raising “particularly pressing privacy concerns given their ability to monitor, decode, and manipulate brain activity” (2024). Colorado and California have enacted neural-data protection statutes; no federal framework exists and none is before Congress. A January 2026 court filing in federal proceedings against Meta revealed that internal AI chatbot safety deliberations involved direct executive-level input from Zuckerberg, with child safety advocates citing the case as evidence that safeguards must be “proactive and embedded into system design.” Oxfam’s January 2026 report notes that billionaires now own more than half of the world’s largest media companies and all major social media platforms—a concentration whose implications for political deliberation are compounded, not ameliorated, by the move into wearable computing.

III. Socioeconomic Divergence and the Rent-Extraction Model of Power

The economic data for 2025–2026 provide empirical grounding for the structural claims in Section II. Oxfam’s January 2026 report documents that global billionaire wealth surged by more than 16 percent in 2025—three times the annual average of the preceding five years—to a record $18.3 trillion, an 81 percent increase since 2020. The number of billionaires exceeded 3,000 for the first time. In October 2025, Musk became the first person in recorded history to accumulate personal wealth exceeding half a trillion dollars; by year-end his fortune stood at approximately $700 billion. The fifteen wealthiest Americans collectively gained $747 billion (31 percent) in 2025—in the same calendar year that the administration in which Musk held executive authority dismantled the regulatory frameworks nominally responsible for constraining such concentration.

The inverse correlation between elite wealth accumulation and human welfare outcomes is stark. One in four people globally faced food insecurity as of early 2026, a severe deterioration from the one-in-nine ratio documented in the preceding period. The $2.5 trillion in billionaire wealth gains recorded in 2025 would, by Oxfam’s calculations, have been sufficient to eradicate extreme global poverty 26 times over. Boston University Professor Brooke Nichols estimated that DOGE-driven USAID cuts had resulted in approximately 793,900 deaths by February 5, 2026—predominantly children—with projections of 14 million additional deaths by 2030 absent a reversal. Tesla shareholders approved a $1 trillion pay package for Musk the same day this mortality figure was publicly reported.

The translation of economic concentration into political power is quantified with unusual precision by Oxfam’s 2026 methodology. Billionaires are now 4,000 times more likely to hold or directly influence political office than ordinary citizens—a quadrupling of the 1,000:1 ratio documented in 2024. In the 2024 US electoral cycle, one in every six dollars contributed came from just 100 billionaire families, with Musk alone spending more than $290 million in campaign contributions. The structural dynamic at work is rent-extraction: control over digital infrastructure, data platforms, and government contract monopolies enables the continuous appropriation of value from public commons without commensurate productive contribution. The “Deep State” has not been dismantled; it has been privatised and made overt.

IV. Bayesian Game Theory: Strategic Behaviour under Information Asymmetry

The Bayesian game-theoretic framework is particularly apt for analysing the Proprietary Deep State because its defining characteristic is information asymmetry: the state does not know the true motivations and capabilities of its private partners, and private actors exploit this uncertainty strategically. Two scenarios merit formal treatment.

IV.i. The Blackout Gambit: Infrastructure Dependency and Systematic Over-Subsidy

Consider a two-player game between a Sovereign State (Player 1) and a Technology Principal (Player 2). The State’s uncertainty concerns the Principal’s type: with probability P = 0.6, the Principal is a State-Aligned Actor who will maintain infrastructure access in exchange for adequate compensation; with probability 1−P = 0.4, the Principal is an Independent Sovereign who will selectively restrict access to maximise private geopolitical or commercial gain.

In any active conflict zone where Starlink provides primary communications—as in Ukraine and several other active theatres as of February 2026—the Principal decides whether to maintain or restrict satellite access. The Independent Sovereign type can restrict access to extract a bilateral deal with a third party, additional public subsidy, or ideological compliance. The State cannot observe the Principal’s type and must act under uncertainty with existentially high stakes.

The Bayesian Nash Equilibrium is systematic over-subsidy. Because the expected cost of a communications blackout in a conflict zone is existentially high, the State’s dominant strategy is to offer compensation sufficient to retain alignment even from an Independent Sovereign type. Since this exceeds what a State-Aligned Actor requires, the equilibrium involves persistent transfer of public resources to private hands irrespective of actual intentions. The DOGE episode represents an acute variant: Musk moved inside the State’s payoff function entirely, exercising administrative authority over agencies responsible for his companies’ contracts while those contracts were awarded or renewed, converting dependency into direct governance leverage.

IV.ii. The Algorithmic Coup: Platform Bias and the Fragmentation of Democratic Epistemology

A second game involves the Electorate (Player 1) and a Platform Owner (Player 2) during an election cycle. The Electorate’s uncertainty concerns the algorithmic information environment: with probability P = 0.3, the platform is informationally neutral; with probability 1−P = 0.7, it systematically advantages certain electoral outcomes. The high prior for bias reflects documented political interventions by X under Musk’s ownership in the 2024 cycle and the broader pattern of algorithmic opacity.

Because the prior probability of bias is 0.7, the rational Bayesian voter observing any anomalous information distribution updates toward the bias hypothesis. The equilibrium result is generalised epistemic distrust: voters systematically discount platform-mediated information but, lacking a credible alternative at comparable scale, cannot replace it. This produces social fragmentation favourable to the Platform Owner, because a fragmented electorate is less capable of generating the collective mandate for regulatory action that would constrain platform power. The Platform Owner benefits from distrust of the platform so long as it remains the primary information intermediary—a condition that Meta’s 3.58 billion daily active users ensures will persist. The structural analogy to Palantir’s position in intelligence is exact: in both cases the private actor controls indispensable infrastructure, its proprietary nature prevents verification of behaviour, and equilibrium involves systematic subsidy or tolerance in exchange for access.

V. The Crisis of Legal Extraterritoriality and the Limits of the Westphalian Framework

The emergence of Sovereign Billionaires—private actors exercising foreign-policy-equivalent power across state boundaries—creates a systemic crisis for the Westphalian framework. The 1648 Peace of Westphalia established that states, as the primary legal persons of international relations, are exclusively entitled to exercise coercive and regulatory power within their territorial jurisdiction. This framework has never fully accommodated powerful private actors, but the scale of the current phenomenon is historically unprecedented.

When Musk restricted Starlink access to Ukrainian forces during active combat operations in the Crimea corridor in 2023—acknowledged in Walter Isaacson’s biography—he exercised a power that international law reserves exclusively to state agents. When Palantir’s proprietary algorithms govern US border enforcement with classified outputs no external auditor can review, sovereign authority is not violated but circumvented. When DOGE operatives seized access to Treasury payment systems managing trillions of dollars without congressional authorisation, constitutional norms were dissolved from within rather than overridden from without.

The court-ordered deposition of Musk over DOGE’s USAID actions (February 5, 2026) illustrates both that private actors exercising state functions can in principle be held accountable through domestic law, and that the mechanism is slow, contested, and deeply uncertain in outcome. The G7 must confront the possibility that existing international law’s exclusive focus on state actors renders it constitutively inadequate to the present situation. Priority doctrinal developments include: extending international human rights obligations to private actors exercising state-equivalent functions (building on the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights); establishing mandatory interoperability and algorithmic auditability standards as preconditions for market access in democratic jurisdictions; and elaborating an “infrastructure sovereignty” doctrine—the principle that critical communications, data, AI, and enforcement infrastructure must be democratically accountable regardless of nominal ownership.

VI. Structural Governance Recommendations for G7 Members

Conventional regulatory approaches—sector-specific oversight, antitrust enforcement, or voluntary codes of conduct—are structurally insufficient to the present challenge. The Bayesian Nash Equilibria in Section IV generate systematic incentives for states to subsidise rather than constrain private infrastructure monopolies. Correcting these equilibria requires structural interventions that alter underlying payoff functions.

Four priority areas warrant immediate collective action. First, mandatory algorithmic auditability: as a condition of government contracting and domestic platform operation, AI systems deployed in enforcement, electoral, or critical infrastructure contexts should be auditable by independent technical bodies with appropriate security clearance. The current situation—in which the classification of threats and prioritisation of enforcement are determined by Palantir’s proprietary algorithms while its co-founder maintains close executive branch relationships—is incompatible with the rule of law.

Second, infrastructure sovereignty legislation: a common G7 framework should establish that critical communications infrastructure—including satellite internet systems, AI backbone platforms, and social media platforms above defined reach thresholds—cannot be controlled by a single private actor without robust public accountability mechanisms. The framework should include mandatory redundancy requirements, interoperability obligations, and emergency access provisions exercisable by democratic governments. Starlink’s operational role in active conflict zones makes this a collective security matter.

Third, neural and cognitive data governance: the commercialisation of electromyography wristbands, AI-embedded smart glasses, and next-generation neural interfaces in the absence of any federal framework represents an acute governance failure. G7 members should classify neural and cognitive biometric data alongside the most sensitive health data, prohibit commercial monetisation without affirmative ongoing consent, require pre-market regulatory clearance for consumer neurotechnology products, and implement the UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of Neurotechnology through binding domestic legislation.

Fourth, structural conflict-of-interest prohibitions: the DOGE episode demonstrates that existing ethics rules for special government employees are constitutively inadequate when private actors hold tens of billions in government contracts and simultaneously administer the agencies managing those contracts. G7 members should consider mandatory divestiture or blind trust requirements for any private actor exercising de facto governmental authority, analogous to requirements applied to elected officials, with enforcement mechanisms independent of executive branch cooperation.

VII. Conclusion

The Proprietary Deep State is not a conspiracy theory but an institutional description of a structural condition. The convergence of verifiable empirical developments as of February 22, 2026—Palantir’s $1 billion DHS agreement that was disclosed, its IRS and ICE enforcement contracts, its Top Secret DISA authorisation; the DOGE apparatus institutionalised under Russell Vought long after Musk’s May 2025 departure, with Musk now facing court-ordered deposition; Meta’s $201 billion revenue base, tripling smart-glasses sales, and commercialised neural wristband; and Oxfam’s documentation of a 4,000:1 political influence asymmetry—reveals a structural transformation in the locus of state power. The Deep State has not been dismantled. It has been privatised, substantially enlarged, and made overt.

The Bayesian analysis demonstrates that this transformation is not merely a political choice reversible by electoral means. Structural dependency on private infrastructure monopolies generates equilibria that systematically favour continued privatisation, and the actors who would be most constrained by corrective regulation are best positioned to prevent it. What democratic states cannot afford is the assumption that the problem is self-correcting or that the existing framework is adequate to a situation it was not designed to govern.



References

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Immigration Policy Tracking Project. (2025). ImmigrationOS: Palantir ICE surveillance platform. https://immpolicytracking.org/policies/reported-palantir-awarded-30-million-to-build-immigrationos-surveillance-platform-for-ice/

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Oxfam International. (2026, January). Resisting the rule of the rich: Protecting freedom from billionaire power. Oxfam International. https://www.oxfam.org/en/press-releases/billionaire-wealth-jumps-three-times-faster-2025-highest-peak-ever-sparking

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Friday, 20 February 2026

THE CONSTITUTIONAL CEILING AND THE GEOSTRATEGY OF COERCION:

     A Bayesian Game Theory Analysis of the 2026 Supreme Court IEEPA Tariff Ruling


Abstract

On February 20, 2026, the Supreme Court of the United States issued a landmark 6-3 ruling in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump and V.O.S. Selections v. United States, holding that IEEPA does not authorize the President to impose tariffs. The ruling strikes down all "Liberation Day" reciprocal tariffs and related IEEPA-based duties — a revenue stream worth over $160 billion already collected and $1.4 trillion projected over the next decade. This paper extends the original case study with real-time data, applies a Bayesian game theory framework to model the strategic interactions now reshaping the global trade order, and assesses the administration's pivot to alternative statutory authorities. The ruling, arriving as G7 foreign ministers convene for their first session under France's 2026 presidency, marks not only a constitutional inflection point but a fundamental restructuring of U.S. coercive economic diplomacy.


 I. Historical Context: The Rise and Architecture of Emergency Tari

 The genesis of this constitutional crisis traces to April 2, 2025 — a date the Trump administration branded 'Liberation Day.' Invoking IEEPA of 1977, President Trump declared chronic trade deficits and fentanyl flows a national emergency, a legal theory with no historical precedent. IEEPA was designed for targeted, surgical interventions: asset freezes, sanctions on rogue actors, and blocking transactions with hostile parties. Never before had any president attempted to use its ambiguous authorization to 'regulate importation' as a basis for a global, open-ended tariff regime.

The legal architecture was built on two words in IEEPA — 'regulate' and 'importation' — separated, as Chief Justice Roberts observed with some dryness in his majority opinion, by sixteen other words. Upon this slender textual foundation, the administration erected the most sweeping unilateral tariff system since the Smoot-Hawley Act of 1930: a 10% baseline on virtually all U.S. imports, escalating 'reciprocal' rates reaching 145% on Chinese goods, 50% on Brazilian imports, and threatened 25% duties on Danish goods tied to Greenland ambitions. By February 20, 2026, the Penn-Wharton Budget Model estimated IEEPA tariffs had collected $164.7 billion in cumulative revenue, representing just over half of all U.S. customs duties collected since January 2025.

 The legal challenge was swift and successful below the Supreme Court. In May 2025, the U.S. Court of International Trade unanimously ruled IEEPA did not authorize the tariffs. The Federal Circuit, sitting en banc, affirmed that ruling in August 2025. The Supreme Court granted expedited review and heard oral arguments November 5, 2025. The six justices in the majority — Roberts, Gorsuch, Barrett, Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson — coalesced around complementary rationales, while Alito, Thomas, and Kavanaugh dissented. The fractured majority opinion, combining the 'major questions doctrine' with a textual analysis of IEEPA, is itself a landmark in administrative and constitutional law.


II. The Ruling Deconstructed: A Splintered but Decisive Majority

 The majority opinion is architecturally sophisticated, with different coalitions joining different sections. Roberts' core holding — that IEEPA's text does not authorize tariffs — commanded all six majority justices. The 'major questions doctrine,' holding that Congress must speak clearly before delegating power over decisions of vast economic significance, commanded only Roberts, Gorsuch, and Barrett; the liberal justices reached the same outcome through a purer textualist analysis.

 Roberts anchored his textual argument on history: the very first act of the First Congress in 1789 was a tariff law, exercising what the Framers understood as an exclusively legislative power. 'When Congress has delegated its tariff powers,' Roberts wrote, 'it has done so in explicit terms, and subject to strict limits.' He pointedly noted that the U.S. Code contains dozens of statutes granting executive authority to 'regulate' various activities — yet none of those statutes has ever been interpreted to convey taxation authority.

Justice Gorsuch, adhering consistently to his non-delegation jurisprudence, wrote separately to emphasize that an executive power without defined limits — the ability to impose 'any tariff, on any country, at any rate, for any duration' — amounts to a delegation of legislative power. Gorsuch's contribution has particular doctrinal significance: he signals that any replacement statute enabling comparably unconstrained executive tariff authority may face the same constitutional fate.

 Justice Kavanaugh's dissent, though unsuccessful, was strategically crafted. He acknowledged the constitutional concerns but argued that the practical disruption — $160+ billion in potential refunds, bilateral trade deals premised on IEEPA rates now void ab initio — militated for deference. Crucially, Kavanaugh signaled a possible off-ramp, noting that 'with respect to tariffs in particular, the Court's decision might not prevent Presidents from imposing most if not all of these same sorts of tariffs under other statutory authorities.' This observation effectively previewed the administration's 'Plan B' strategy within hours of the ruling.


 III. Bayesian Game Theory: Modeling the Post-Ruling Strategic Environment


 III.i. The Framework: Incomplete Information and Updating 

Beliefs Bayesian game theory is particularly apt for analyzing the post-ruling environment because all major actors — the administration, trading partners, Congress, and markets — operate with incomplete information about each other's true preferences, constraints, and fallback strategies. Each actor must form prior beliefs about others' types (cooperative, adversarial, opportunistic) and update them as new signals arrive. The Supreme Court ruling itself is a major signal that reshapes prior beliefs across the system simultaneously.

Before the ruling, the dominant equilibrium was one of coerced compliance: trading partners, uncertain about whether IEEPA tariffs would survive judicial review, faced a credible threat and many adjusted behavior accordingly. Several nations accelerated bilateral negotiations, purchasing U.S. exports of LNG, soybeans, and aircraft to reduce their bilateral deficits. The Court's ruling shatters that equilibrium, triggering a Bayesian update across all players: the administration's coercive capacity is lower than believed, the probability of sustained tariff threats is revised downward, and the credibility of 'Plan B' alternatives is uncertain.

 Bayesrading Partners' Revised Beliefs After the Rulingian Update:  

 Prior (pre-ruling): P(IEEPA tariffs survive) ≈ 0.35  |  P(court strikes down) ≈ 0.65 Posterior signal received: Court rules 6-3 against IEEPA tariffs (strong signal) Revised belief: P(Section 122 tariffs survive legal challenge) ≈ 0.70 (strong statutory basis, 150-day limit self-contained)

Revised belief: P(Section 338 survives challenge if invoked broadly) ≈ 0.45 (untested, possibly Gorsuch non-delegation risk)

Revised belief: P(Section 232/301 replicate IEEPA scope within 6 months) ≈ 0.55 (long review process; partial replication more likely) 

 Key implication: Trading partners' dominant strategy shifts from 'comply to avoid IEEPA tariffs' toward selective resistance, knowing replacement tools are slower and more constrained. 


III.ii. The Administration's Strategic Response: An Immediate Pivot  

  Within hours of the ruling, President Trump held a press conference, calling the decision 'deeply disappointing' and describing certain justices as 'a disgrace to our nation.' Yet the administration's operational response was remarkably swift and strategically pre-planned: Trump announced he would immediately sign an executive order imposing a 10% global tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, while simultaneously initiating 'several Section 301 investigations' into unfair trade practices. 

This bifurcated response reveals a Bayesian prior that was already prepared for a loss: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had publicly stated as early as December 2025 that the administration could 're-create the exact tariff structure' using other statutory authorities. The rapid pivot is consistent with a player who had a contingency strategy with high prior probability of deployment (P ≈ 0.70), suggesting the IEEPA tariffs were always partly a tool for forcing faster bilateral negotiation, with the expectation that they would eventually be constrained by courts.


Administration's Sequential Strategy Tree (Bayesian Decision Model)

Node 1 — IEEPA tariffs in place: High leverage, bilateral deal-making possible → Branch A (Court upholds): P ≈ 0.35 pre-ruling → dominant equilibrium maintained → Branch B (Court strikes down): P ≈ 0.65 pre-ruling → triggers Node 2 Node 2 — Post-ruling fallback: → 

Section 122 (immediate, 150-day, capped at 15%): Expected utility MODERATE (fast deployment, limited scope) → 

Section 301 investigations (9-month process): Expected utility HIGH (targeted, legally robust) but delayed → 

Section 232 (national security, 270-day process): Expected utility HIGH for specific sectors (steel, pharma, semi) → 

Section 338 (untested, Smoot-Hawley vestige): Expected utility UNCERTAIN (P of legal challenge = 0.55) 

→ Legislative path (Congress): Expected utility LOW given Senate dynamics; P(passage within 90 days) ≈ 0.20 

Dominant immediate strategy: Section 122 as bridge + Section 301 investigations as long-term scaffold


III.iii. Trading Partners: Cooperative vs. Opportunistic Types

From the perspective of major U.S. trading partners, the ruling creates a classic Bayesian signaling game. Partners must now decide whether to: (a) exploit the window of reduced U.S. coercive capacity to harden negotiating positions; (b) lock in favorable bilateral agreements before replacement tariffs are fully operational; or (c) pursue multilateral coordination through the WTO or G7 to establish new norms constraining unilateral tariff use. 

The observed behavior immediately after the ruling provides signals about partners' underlying types. Canada's Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc stated the ruling 'reinforces Canada's position that the IEEPA tariffs imposed by the United States are unjustified' — a signal of a 'resistance' type player preparing to leverage the ruling in the July 2026 USMCA review. The European Union signaled it was 'carefully analyzing' the ruling, consistent with a cautious 'conditional cooperator' type — willing to reduce friction if U.S. replacement tariffs are more predictable, but prepared to counter-escalate if Section 338 is deployed broadly.

G7 Partner Strategy Matrix: Dominant Responses by Player Type

CANADA (USMCA review July 2026): Prior: High exposure to IEEPA → Strong compliance pressure Post-ruling: P(Canada toughens USMCA demands) ≈ 0.75; P(seeks reciprocal concessions) ≈ 0.80 Expected Canadian strategy: Use ruling as leverage on dairy, digital taxes, auto rules 

EU (Section 232 / potential Section 338 exposure): Prior: Moderate IEEPA exposure, high Section 232 (steel/aluminum) exposure Post-ruling: P(EU retaliatory tariffs if Section 338 invoked broadly) ≈ 0.70 Expected EU strategy: Conditional cooperation; accelerate Mercosur ratification as credible outside option 

CHINA (ongoing Section 301 tariffs unaffected): Note: IEEPA China tariffs struck down; Section 301 tariffs remain in place Post-ruling: Minimal immediate strategic shift; Section 301 tariffs (list 3/4A) upheld by Federal Circuit P(China accelerates trade partnerships with ASEAN/Global South) ≈ 0.85 

BRAZIL (IEEPA 50% tariff struck down): Post-ruling: Immediate economic relief; P(Brazil returns to constructive U.S. dialogue) ≈ 0.40 P(Brazil deepens EU-Mercosur alignment) ≈ 0.80; leverage of Bolsonaro prosecution issue diminished


IV. Fiscal Architecture: The Revenue Black Hole and Refund Crisis

The fiscal dimensions of the ruling are immediate and severe. The Tax Foundation estimates that more than $160 billion in IEEPA tariffs have been collected through February 20, 2026, and that the 10-year prospective loss — tariff revenue that would have been collected from 2026 through 2035 — is approximately $1.4 trillion. This erasure amounts to approximately three-quarters of the new tariff revenue the administration had projected to finance the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' tax cuts of 2025. 

The Penn-Wharton Budget Model's granular monthly data confirms the trajectory: IEEPA collections began in February 2025 and accelerated sharply, reaching approximately $20.8 billion per month by January 2026, representing 51.9% of all U.S. customs duties that month. The share of total tariff revenue attributable to IEEPA had risen monotonically throughout 2025, meaning the fiscal dependence on these illegally collected funds was deepening at the very moment the Court struck them down. 

The refund question is constitutionally charged and practically treacherous. The Court's ruling held IEEPA tariffs void ab initio — unlawful from inception — but deliberately said nothing about refund mechanisms. Justice Kavanaugh's dissent warned explicitly: 'The United States may be required to refund billions of dollars to importers who paid the IEEPA tariffs, even though some importers may have already passed on costs to consumers or others.' The Court of International Trade, to which the case was remanded, is expected to begin lifting stays and setting a reliquidation roadmap, but trade lawyers caution that the process will be protracted, contentious, and may overwhelm CBP's administrative capacity. The Congressional Research Service notes that as of December 10, 2025, approximately $129 billion in estimated deposits had been paid, with roughly 19.2 million of 34 million IEEPA-covered entries remaining unliquidated — meaning the precise refund liability is still being determined. Importers who filed timely protests at the CIT are better positioned; those who did not may face statutory time bars under Section 1581. The refund process itself represents a second fiscal shock arriving in slow motion, spread across months or years of litigation. 

Fiscal Impact Summary (as of February 20, 2026)

IEEPA tariffs collected (cumulative through Feb 20, 2026): ~$160–165 billion Projected 10-year revenue loss (2026–2035) from IEEPA removal: ~$1.4 trillion (Tax Foundation) Section 232 tariffs (unaffected by ruling): Projected to raise ~$635 billion over next decade Effective tariff rate: Drops from ~17% to ~9% effective rate (still ~4.5× pre-2025 baseline) Potential refund liability: $129–175 billion (depending on unliquidated entries) Consumer savings (if no replacement tariffs): ~$1,200–$1,400 per household over 10 years (Tax Policy Center)
GDP growth drag removed: +0.3% long-run GDP recovery (Tax Foundation estimate)


V. Geostrategic Theater: Greenland, Brazil, Iran, and the USMCA


V.i. Greenland and the North Atlantic

The Greenland gambit was among the most dramatic applications of IEEPA as geopolitical leverage. In January 2026, the administration threatened 25% tariffs on Denmark — a NATO ally — to extract Danish acquiescence in U.S. ambitions to 'acquire' Greenland, a move framed as strategically necessary for Arctic security. The Munich Security Report 2026 documents how the U.S. administration 'in early 2026 announced tariffs on eight European countries opposed to its ambition of purchasing Greenland.'

With IEEPA authority now void, that threat collapses entirely. The 62nd Munich Security Conference, which ran February 13-15, 2026 — just five days before the ruling — had already witnessed Secretary of State Rubio attempting a more emollient tone toward European allies, having assessed that the aggressive Vance approach of 2025 was counterproductive. The Supreme Court ruling, arriving as the first G7 foreign ministers' meeting under France's presidency had just concluded, hardened European resolve. P(European unified resistance to Greenland pressure) rises from approximately 0.55 to 0.85 in the post-ruling environment.

V.ii. Brazil and the Bolsonaro Dimension

The 50% IEEPA tariff on Brazilian imports — extraordinary given that the U.S. actually runs a trade surplus with Brazil — was widely interpreted as naked political retaliation for Brazilian authorities' prosecution of former President Jair Bolsonaro. This represented tariffs being deployed as an instrument of domestic political interference rather than economic rebalancing, a usage far removed from any plausible statutory purpose. The ruling provides Brazil immediate relief from this legally baseless impost. 
The strategic implications extend beyond bilateral trade. As the Munich Security Report notes, 'US trade pressure has hardened their stance vis-à-vis Washington and could push them closer to Beijing.' China has responded to U.S. economic coercion by proactively expanding trade relationships, offering zero tariffs to 53 African countries and upgrading agreements with ASEAN, Brazil, and Kenya. The erasure of IEEPA leverage over Brazil comes too late to reverse the geopolitical drift; P(Brazil meaningfully re-engages constructive trade dialogue with U.S. in 2026) is assessed at approximately 0.35.

V.iii. Iran and Secondary Sanctions Architecture

The administration had deployed IEEPA tariffs as a de facto secondary sanctions tool, threatening countries that purchased Iranian oil with trade penalties. This was an innovative but legally questionable expansion of IEEPA's emergency authority into the domain of energy geopolitics. With that tool invalidated, the administration must rely on conventional secondary sanctions under existing Iran-specific statutes — a less flexible but better-established legal architecture.

The Munich Security Conference context is relevant: CNN reported that the next round of Iran nuclear talks was expected in Geneva around the time of the ruling, involving both Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. The simultaneous loss of IEEPA leverage and ongoing nuclear negotiations creates a complex signaling environment where the administration must project credibility on Iran without its most flexible coercive tool.

V.iv. USMCA and the North American Recalibration

The mandatory USMCA review scheduled for July 2026 now occurs in a fundamentally different legal landscape. Canadian exports, while nominally exempt from many IEEPA tariffs under rules-of-origin provisions, had faced significant uncertainty and 'border thickening.' Canadian Trade Minister LeBlanc's post-ruling statement signals Ottawa's intent to use the judicial outcome as leverage. The administration, stripped of IEEPA's speed and flexibility, will enter July negotiations knowing that its replacement tools — Section 122 tariffs expiring after 150 days, Section 301 proceedings taking nine months, Section 232 requiring national security findings — are slower, more legally constrained, and more politically exposed.

P(U.S. achieves substantive new concessions in July USMCA review) drops from approximately 0.60 under IEEPA leverage to approximately 0.35 under Section 122/232/301 toolbox, given Canadian negotiators' revised beliefs about U.S. coercive capacity.

VI. The 'Plan B' Arsenal: A Bayesian Assessment of Replacement Authorities


VI.i. Section 122 — The Immediate Bridge

Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 was the administration's first move after the ruling, with Trump announcing the same day he would sign an executive order imposing a 10% global tariff under its authority. Section 122 allows a president to address 'large and serious' balance-of-payments deficits through a temporary import surcharge of up to 15%, but with critical constraints: the tariff is limited to 150 days absent congressional extension, must be non-discriminatory (the same rate for all partners), and cannot be used to pursue differentiated country-by-country 'reciprocal' rates. It has never previously been invoked.

The 150-day ceiling is strategically critical: it provides approximately five months of bridging pressure — enough to span the July USMCA review — but insufficient for the long-term structural leverage IEEPA provided. Section 122's non-discrimination requirement also eviscerates the core 'Liberation Day' strategy of differentiated country rates used as bilateral negotiating chips. As Fortune's analysis observed, 'Trump will no longer be able to honor many of the deals he has negotiated' with individual nations, since those deals were premised on differentiated IEEPA rates that Section 122 cannot replicate.

VI.ii. Sections 301 and 232 — The Long-Game Scaffold

For more durable tariff authority, the administration is simultaneously initiating Section 301 investigations (targeting unfair trade practices) and Section 232 proceedings (national security findings). Both require extended administrative processes — up to nine months for Section 301 and 270 days for Commerce to report under Section 232 — but both carry firmer legal ground and survived Trump's first term largely intact.

The Federal Circuit's September 2025 ruling in HMTX Industries v. United States affirmed Section 301 List 3 and List 4A tariffs on China, though that decision awaits potential Supreme Court review. Section 232 tariffs on steel, aluminum, automobiles, semiconductors, copper, lumber, and pharmaceuticals remain in place and are projected to generate approximately $635 billion over the next decade. ING's analysis notes that 'Section 301 and 232 investigations can target specific sectors more precisely than IEEPA's broad-brush approach,' meaning the replacement regime may actually prove more surgically effective in targeted sectors even if less useful for broad-based leverage.

VI.iii. Section 338 — The Nuclear Option

The administration has also signaled interest in Section 338 of the Tariff Act of 1930, a Great Depression-era provision permitting up to 50% tariffs on countries that 'discriminate against' U.S. commerce. Section 338 has never been fully tested in modern courts and would face immediate legal challenge under the major questions doctrine given the Gorsuch-Barrett portion of the Roberts opinion. Given that Gorsuch and Barrett joined the majority specifically to constrain unbounded executive tariff authority, any broadly deployed Section 338 regime — asserting discrimination by essentially all trading partners, as IEEPA did — would likely face a similar constitutional fate.

      

Legal Survival Probabilities: Alternative Tariff Authorities (Bayesian Assessment)

Section 122 (10% global, 150 days): P(survives legal challenge) ≈ 0.80 — Explicit statutory text; balance-of-payments trigger plausible; 150-day self-limiting reduces major-questions risk Section 301 (targeted, after investigation): P(survives challenge) ≈ 0.85 — 

Strong precedent from Trump 1.0; Federal Circuit affirmed in September 2025 Section 232 (national security, specific sectors): P(survives challenge) ≈ 0.80 — Established jurisprudence; steel/aluminum already upheld; new pharma/semi investigations on firmer ground 

Section 338 (discrimination basis, broadly applied): P(survives challenge) ≈ 0.40 — Untested; broad application likely triggers Gorsuch non-delegation concern; Roberts major-questions doctrine applicable 

Congressional legislation (reimposing IEEPA-equivalent): P(passage within 6 months) ≈ 0.20 — Senate voted to rebuke Canada tariffs; Republican fractures visible (Rand Paul, Don Bacon); Democratic opposition certain


VII. Bond Markets, Credit, and the Dollar: Macro Financial Fallout

The financial market reaction to the ruling reflects a complex superposition of two opposing forces: relief at the removal of a major tax on household consumption and business inputs, offset by alarm at the fiscal hole created and the policy uncertainty generated by the administration's immediate replacement tariff announcements. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield moved to approximately 4.10% in the immediate aftermath, reflecting elevated borrowing costs as bond markets processed the 'revenue black hole.' 

The U.S. dollar softened against the euro, yen, and British pound as the 'tariff premium' built into dollar valuation over the past year unwound. The Canadian dollar experienced a relief rally given Canada's direct IEEPA exposure. Credit rating agencies are re-evaluating the U.S. fiscal outlook, with the removal of $1.4 trillion in projected tariff revenue complicating the deficit trajectory already pressured by the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' tax cuts. The simultaneous replacement announcement of Section 122 tariffs partially arrested the dollar decline, as markets assessed that some tariff-driven revenue would persist — though at lower levels and for only 150 days without congressional extension. 

The manufacturing sector presents a more nuanced picture. NPR reported that U.S. factories shed 108,000 jobs in 2025 despite tariff protection — a paradox explained by the fact that the majority of manufacturers rely on imported components and inputs, making tariffs a net drag on most of the sector even while providing protection for finished goods producers. CNBC's analysis estimated the consumer tariff burden would drop from approximately $1,300 per household in 2026 to approximately $400 under the Section 232 tariffs that remain in place, a significant if incomplete relief.

VIII. The G7 Context and the Emerging Post-Tariff Order

The 62nd Munich Security Conference, held February 13-15, 2026 under the theme 'Under Destruction,' provided the immediate geopolitical backdrop against which the Supreme Court ruling must be read. The MSC Report 2026 analyzed how 'Washington has openly dispensed with the rules of global trade it once helped create,' deploying tariffs as coercive instruments in ways that have accelerated China's self-positioning as a champion of open trade — a remarkable geopolitical inversion. The conference saw the first G7 foreign ministers' meeting under France's 2026 presidency, with French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot setting 'addressing major global macroeconomic imbalances' as a key priority. 

The ruling's arrival five days after the Munich conference adds strategic texture to the G7 diplomatic landscape. European leaders who had been strategizing about how to respond to continued U.S. tariff pressure now face a recalibrated environment in which U.S. coercive capacity is reduced but not eliminated, and in which the administration's demonstrated readiness to deploy Section 122 tariffs within hours of the ruling signals continued aggressive intent. The G7 summit itself, scheduled under France's presidency for mid-2026, will provide the next major diplomatic arena for working through the post-IEEPA order. 

The Munich Security Report's framing of 'destruction over reform' resonates in the trade context: the ruling is a restoration of constitutional order, but it does not resolve the underlying tensions that drove the administration's tariff strategy. U.S. trade deficits remain historically large — the 2025 U.S. trade deficit reached $901 billion, barely reduced despite the tariffs — validating the administration's diagnosis even as the Court rejected its chosen remedy.


IX. Structural Implications for Presidential Power and the Non-Delegation Doctrine

The ruling's long-term constitutional significance extends well beyond tariff policy. By applying the major questions doctrine to restrain a unilateral executive claim over a domain of vast economic significance, the Roberts Court continues a trajectory that began with NFIB v. OSHA in 2022 (blocking COVID vaccine mandates) and West Virginia v. EPA (restricting EPA climate regulation). The Roberts-Gorsuch-Barrett coalition within the majority represents a jurisprudential school committed to policing the boundaries of executive delegation — a project that will constrain future presidents of either party. 

The liberal justices' decision to join the majority through a purely textual rather than structural rationale preserves their ability to resist future applications of the major questions doctrine in other regulatory domains (environmental regulation, student loans, health policy) while agreeing with its application to tariffs. This careful calibration signals that the ruling's precedential reach is deliberately bounded by the unusual circumstance of a president claiming unlimited, indefinite, unconstrained tax authority under an ambiguous statute. 

Justice Gorsuch's concurrence, which operationalizes the non-delegation doctrine in ways the full Court has not endorsed since the 1930s, is the most theoretically ambitious part of the ruling. If Gorsuch eventually commands a majority for a robust non-delegation revival — which would require at least one more vote — the implications for the administrative state would be transformative, reaching far beyond trade policy into environmental, financial, and healthcare regulation.


X. Conclusions: The Constitutional Ceiling and the New Equilibrium

The February 20, 2026 ruling in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump establishes what this paper terms the 'constitutional ceiling' of executive trade power: the point at which the legislature's exclusive Article I authority over taxation and tariffs reasserts itself against executive expansion, regardless of foreign affairs or emergency justifications. The ruling does not restore the pre-2025 trade order — Section 232 tariffs alone will raise approximately $635 billion over the next decade, maintaining the effective tariff rate at roughly 9%, more than four times the pre-Trump baseline — but it fundamentally restructures the character of U.S. trade coercion. 

The Bayesian game theory analysis suggests the post-ruling equilibrium will be characterized by four features. First, greater legal predictability: replacement tariff tools are more constrained but also more jurisprudentially stable, reducing the variance in trading partners' beliefs about U.S. coercive capacity. Second, bilateral deal erosion: the non-discrimination requirement of Section 122 and the investigation prerequisites of Sections 301 and 232 make it structurally impossible to maintain the web of differentiated bilateral 'deals' premised on IEEPA's unconstrained flexibility. Third, increased multilateral leverage for partners: the WTO, which has been marginalized by unilateral IEEPA action, may partially recover relevance as U.S. options narrow. Fourth, a congressional battle: the administration's acknowledgment that it would seek legislative authorization ('I would ask Congress, and probably get it,' Trump said) sets up a major tariff legislation fight that will test Republican unity in both chambers.

 The 2026 G7 summit under France's presidency, the July USMCA review, and the 150-day expiration of Section 122 tariffs will together constitute the next three critical decision nodes in this evolving strategic game. At each node, the prior beliefs, updated by today's ruling, will shape the dominant strategies of all players. What is certain is that the United States has hit its constitutional ceiling — and that ceiling, in reshaping the architecture of coercive economic statecraft, is itself a form of structural power in the global game.