Sometimes the loudest decisions in America are not heard in shouting — but in restraint.
This week the Supreme Court, by a 6–3 ruling, reminded the nation of an old boundary drawn not in ink alone, but in revolution: the power to tax belongs to the representatives of the people, not to the urgency of a single office. The Court did not debate whether tariffs are wise. It decided who may decide them.
And that difference matters all the way down to Jefferson Street, Nolensville Pike, Antioch, Bordeaux, Madison, and the storefronts of North Nashville.
Because tariffs are never abstract in a working city. They are lumber prices for a contractor trying to build a duplex. They are kitchen costs for a restaurant owner pricing catfish and cooking oil. They are car parts for mechanics on Gallatin Road. They are groceries for a grandmother counting dollars before the checkout scanner counts them for her.
When a tariff rises, Nashville does not read a legal opinion — it reads a receipt.
For months Americans have argued over trade like it is foreign policy alone. But trade is not foreign. Trade is rent. Trade is payroll. Trade is the difference between hiring two workers or one. And when tariffs can be imposed without Congress, economic gravity shifts away from neighborhoods toward executive urgency.
The Court’s ruling restores friction — and friction in democracy is not failure; it is protection.
Congress must now debate before imposing broad tariffs. Debate slows decisions. Slowness invites public pressure. Public pressure invites accountability. And accountability is the oxygen of local economies.
In a growing city like Nashville, where cranes outline the skyline but inequality still outlines the census map, stability matters. Our city lives on small businesses, hospitality, logistics, construction, music production, trucking corridors, and service labor. Sudden tariff swings ripple through all of them.
A hotel doesn’t just absorb higher supply costs — it cuts hours. A restaurant doesn’t just raise prices — it loses customers. A supplier doesn’t just wait — it lays off drivers.
So this ruling is not about trade wars in distant oceans. It is about predictability in neighborhood budgets.
The Founders feared concentrated taxation authority because they understood a simple truth: people can adapt to hardship, but they cannot plan around uncertainty. A worker can budget for high prices. A business cannot survive unpredictable ones.
By requiring Congress to act, the Court placed tariffs back into the arena where citizens can influence them — elections, hearings, pressure, and representation. In other words, Nashville now has a voice again before the cost arrives.
This does not mean tariffs disappear. It means they must be explained. It does not guarantee cheaper goods. It guarantees public responsibility. It does not choose policy. It chooses process.
And process is the quiet guardian of democracy.
The Court has reminded the nation that economic authority must travel the long road through the people before it reaches their pockets. That road passes through ballots, districts, and debate — the very places a city like Nashville knows how to speak loudly.
A 6–3 ruling may look like numbers in Washington. But here, it becomes something else: Time for workers to prepare. Time for businesses to adjust. Time for voters to be heard before they are billed.
The decision does not lower prices today. It lowers distance between decision and consequence. And in a democracy, that distance is everything.
Rev. Dr. Howard E. Jones, Jr. is the Senior Pastor of Fairfield Missionary Baptist Church in Nashville, TN, an educator for over 27 years, a community leader, and a passionate advocate for justice, equity, and democracy.


