The Court of International Trade (CIT), which last week declared the Trump administration’s 10 percent global duties unlawful , has granted the federal government a stay of the enforcement of that judgement. In other words, the administration, which filed for the stay on Monday, will be allowed to continue to collect Section 122 tariffs and will not be required to pay back the duties owed to the plaintiffs in the case until “the entry of a final and conclusive judgment after all appeals,” the CIT wrote in a decision later the same day. In its filing, the Department of Justice alleged that it would be harmed without a stay in that the injunction would “severely undermine the President’s trade agenda and will destabilize efforts to remedy our longstanding trade deficit.” It also argued that Customs and Border Protection (CBP) would not be able to enact the court’s injunction without diverting its already-limited resources from the effort to refund International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs ,…