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Host: Cindy Allen ( / cindy-allen-a3188210 ) Show: Simply Trade – Cindy’s Version Published: February 27, 2026 Length: ~15 minutes Presented by: Global Training Center All Too Well: One Week Post-IEEPA, Still Not Fine at All One week after the Supreme Court struck down IEEPA tariffs, Cindy Allen, CEO of TradeForce Multiplier, delivers the latest update through the lens of Taylor Swift’s “All Too Well.” She breaks down the lingering uncertainty—“I know it’s long gone and the magic’s not here no more… I might be okay, but I’m not fine at all”—and what importers, brokers, and service providers should do next amid shutdowns, pending bills, and shifting tariff authorities. What You’ll Learn in This Episode • Legislative landscape • Three new bills introduced on IEEPA refunds: two support refunds for importers; one opposes and ties refunds to consumers (challenging in practice). • Other pending bills (eliminating first sale, non‑resident importer status, new licensing program) are unlikely to move soon. • IEEPA refund bills could gain traction if courts rule against refunds—watch for Congress to act. • DHS shutdown impacts • Ongoing due to budget issues; most CBP personnel are working without pay (be kind!). • Trade interactions limited as “non‑essential”: canceled meetings, no new conference appearances. • TSA PreCheck spared (shutdown threat revoked); Global Entry inactive due to staffing. • CBP updates and waits • Still awaiting Section 232 valuation guidance for steel/aluminum/copper derivatives—current CBP direction conflicts with executive order language. • Trade associations have jointly requested clarity; no response yet. • Administration signals • New trade deals now using Section 122 authority instead of IEEPA. • Acceleration planned for remaining 232 investigations and new 301 actions—structured processes with timelines, public input, and notice (no more Friday night surprises). Why “All Too Well”? Cindy ties the week to Taylor Swift’s “All Too Well,” capturing trade’s emotional whiplash: • IEEPA is “long gone,” but the “magic” of predictability isn’t back. • Importers, attorneys, and consultants are swamped with “What now?” calls—Cindy’s attended 5+ webinars with no clear answers. • The trade isn’t “fine”—we’re in uncharted territory. The Big Questions: If, How, When on IEEPA Refunds • IF refunds happen: Supreme Court remanded to lower court, likely landing at Court of International Trade (CIT). Prevailing view: no legal basis to withhold refunds, but scope (“which refunds?”) is unclear. • HOW to get refunds: • Two paths debated: 1581(i) (equitable jurisdiction—broad refunds for all) vs. 1581(a)(denied protests only). • Post-summary corrections rejected by CBP—don’t try now. • FedEx filed CIT action to protect refund rights. • Recommendation: talk to an attorney for tailored advice. • WHEN to act: • Government has 25 days for rehearing request (unlikely); ~7 days admin time; then CIT jurisdiction (~32 days total from Supreme Court). • ...