The United States is preparing new tariffs on dozens of countries, including the United Kingdom, citing forced labour concerns as the legal foundation for the duties, the Wail confirmed Wednesday.

The move marks a fresh push by the Trump administration to reimpose sweeping trade penalties after the Supreme Court struck down many of the president's earlier duties in February, removing the primary legal mechanism Washington had used to levy them.

Forced labour provisions give the administration a separate statutory route to impose trade restrictions without relying on the emergency powers the court curtailed.

The UK's inclusion is likely to complicate ongoing trade talks between London and Washington. British officials have been seeking a bilateral deal that would reduce exposure to American duties on goods including steel and cars.

The scope of the proposed tariff list — covering dozens of countries — signals the administration is pursuing broad coverage rather than targeting individual trading partners.

Dollar figures for the proposed duty rates and a confirmed rollout timeline have not been released. A formal announcement is expected in the coming weeks.