Executive Action Against Law Firm — Client Selection, Client Reactions, PR & Reputation, HR, and More
Posted on“Law Firm Bends in Face of Trump Demands” —
- “President Trump and the head of the law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP have reached a deal under which Mr. Trump will drop the executive order he leveled against the firm, Mr. Trump said on Thursday. [3/20]”
- “In the deal, Mr. Trump said, the firm agreed to a series of commitments, including to represent clients no matter their political affiliation and contribute $40 million in legal services to causes Mr. Trump has championed, including ‘the President’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, and other mutually agreed projects.'”
- “It’s unclear how the money will be used to help the task force. The firm, Mr. Trump said, also agreed to conduct an audit to ensure its hiring practices are merit based ‘and will not adopt, use, or pursue any DEI policies.'”
- “The deal materialized after the head of the firm, Brad Karp, went to the White House this week and had a face-to-face meeting with Mr. Trump to discuss a resolution. Members of the legal profession said in interviews that they were surprised by the deal, as it appears as if the firm — which is dominated by Democrats and has long prided itself in being at the forefront of the fight against the government for civil rights — was capitulating to Mr. Trump over an executive order that is likely illegal.”
- “The agreement is a significant development in the retribution campaign Mr. Trump has opened against several top law firms that he sees as having supported efforts to help his opponents or unfairly prosecute him. And it is the latest demonstration of how Mr. Trump has used his power to extract concessions or public signs of support for his agenda from corporate leaders, news organizations and others since his election victory in November.”
- “The White House said that Mr. Karp had acknowledged ‘wrongdoing’ by one of the firm’s former partners, Mark F. Pomerantz. Mr. Pomerantz had tried to build a criminal case against Mr. Trump several years ago while working at the Manhattan district attorney’s office. It was not clear what wrongdoing Mr. Trump was referring to.”
- “‘The president is agreeing to this action in light of a meeting with Paul, Weiss Chairman, Brad Karp, during which Mr. Karp acknowledged the wrongdoing of former Paul, Weiss partner, Mark Pomerantz, the grave dangers of Weaponization, and the vital need to restore our System of Justice.'”
- “Thursday’s deal applies only to the executive order against Paul, Weiss. It’s not clear what effect, if any, it will have on the orders targeting other firms or whether it will lead Mr. Trump to back off his stated intention to go after more of them.”
“‘Why Are You Remaining Silent?’ Some Clients Expect Big Law Public Response on Executive Actions” —
- “Most Big Law firms, in keeping silent about the Trump administration’s actions against law firms, are concerned they could harm their clients or business if they were to speak publicly against the government. But some general counsel lawyers say they want their outside counsel to speak up.”
- “Some Big Law clients are going so far as to indicate that they’re willing to vote with their dollars and shift business around to those who speak out against the Trump administration, according to interviews with corporate counsel and several LinkedIn posts by general counsel.”
- “‘I’m carefully watching the reactions of various firms, or the lack thereof, and I feel it’s my duty to vote with my pocketbook in terms of where I want to send my business in the future,’ a clothing company GC said in an interview.
- “A medical company chief legal officer said in an interview, ‘If there ends up being a split where some firms are vocal and others aren’t, I will absolutely use that in my purchasing or vendor decisions. I will want a firm that is aligned with my values.’ The CLO expressed disappointment that firms thus far have remained silent. ‘As soon as the executive order on Perkins Coie came out, within a half hour, I emailed every law firm that I pay currently and the law firm I used to work at and a couple others where I have close contacts just to say that I expect you to be fighting this swift and strong.'”
- “The medical CLO expressed frustration at what they felt was an attempt to use the amicus brief as a kind of smokescreen to disguise firms’ lack of response. ‘I’m talking to them, and they’re saying wishy-washy things like ‘we’re reviewing our options’ and ‘there are documents like an amicus brief being circulated’ but no one will make any public statement or make any kind of stand because they’re keeping their options open, which includes just rolling over,’ the CLO said. ‘Their cowering in the corner is working at a disservice to them. It’s showing how they’re willing to bend a knee as soon as their revenue is threatened.'”
- “‘We’re up to three, and the silence is deafening,’ wrote a general counsel from a food production company. ‘Where is the outrage from their peer firms? This isn’t a partisan issue – these firms take on clients from both sides of the aisle, as well as clients with no affiliation at all.'”
“Ex-Cognizant Executive Rethinking Paul Weiss After Trump Deal” —
- “Former Cognizant Technology Solutions executive Steven Schwartz appears to be rethinking his decision to fire Paul Weiss now that President Donald Trump has rescinded an executive order that took aim at the firm.”
- “Lawyers from Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP had been defending Schwartz on foreign bribery charges since 2018. But the lawyers filed a motion to withdraw March 19, saying Schwartz was terminating them in response to Trump’s March 14 executive order targeting the law firm.”
- “Schwartz ‘is considering and consulting with counsel regarding the announcement last night that the President has rescinded the March 14, 2025 Executive Order concerning Paul Weiss,’ his new lawyers with Sullivan & Cromwell LLP said in a Friday letter to Judge Michael E. Farbiarz of the US District Court for the District of New Jersey.”
- “They said they will be prepared to discuss is views ‘on the impact of that decision on Paul Weiss’s motion to withdraw and on the trial date for this matter’ at a conference March 24.”
“Lawyers Must Not Stay Quiet in Face of Trump Attack on Firms” —
- “As the dean of two major law schools, I always told first-year students about the legal profession’s essential role in our democracy—and reminded them at graduation three years later. During the intervening years, our faculty worked to give future lawyers the tools they needed to serve this role effectively and responsibly.”
- “I often wondered how the message came across, and whether the students viewed the legal profession’s claimed relationship to our democracy as pompous, self-serving hot air. The first two months of the Trump administration have quelled any doubts I may have had about the vital importance of that relationship.”
- “It’s no surprise the Trump administration has placed the ethos and values of the legal profession in its crosshairs. It started by eliminating many of the career lawyers at the Department of Justice, before moving on to axing the inspectors general at more than a dozen government agencies, overhauling the leadership of the Judge Advocate General’s Corps across the military, and removing the chief counsel for the IRS.”
- “Government lawyers are the first line of defense in preventing abusive, illegal actions by the government they serve. Former DOJ attorneys such as Danielle Sassoon, Kevin Driscoll, John Keller, Hagan Scotten, and Denise Cheung sounded the alarm by resigning rather than executing the actions Trump officials told them to carry out.”
- “The White House expanded its attack on the legal profession to the private bar, targeting Covington & Burling, Perkins Coie, and Paul Weiss because of representations they undertook that the Trump administration viewed as hostile to the president.”
- “It’s telling that the administration is broadcasting its retribution. The public fight with these three highly respected law firms is designed to intimidate the entire legal community through the implicit threat of future blackballing and by intimidating clients into pressuring law firms to cooperate with the administration. Corporate clients right now are likely grilling their counsel about whether they engage in pro bono or other litigation disfavored by Trump.”
- “Despite the likelihood Perkins Coie will prevail in court, the message has been sent.”
- “Even if courts declare it unlawful for the government to formally blackball law firms, lawyers and clients will fear that if they challenge this administration, they will be treated unfairly during interactions with federal agencies that are the bread and butter of their practice. One client recently dropped Paul Weiss as his defense counsel, saying Trump’s order ‘may negatively affect his ability to obtain a favorable review of his case.'”
- “The firms that have the greatest expertise and experience litigating against the government are most at risk. The administration’s public demonstration of vindictiveness will have ripple effects, regardless of the outcome of litigation challenging it. Given Paul Weiss’ prominence, the success of the administration’s bullying and shakedown is stunning and will reverberate through the legal profession.”
Skadden associate Rachel Cohen very publicly resigned last week, posting her firmwide email on LinkedIn (1000+ comments): “With gratitude and urgency” —
- “When I went to law school and to Skadden, I did so in pursuit of agency. I was driven by a desire to be in rooms where decision-makers were, to get to play a role in things that mattered, because things felt so needlessly terrible. It never occurred to me that the people in those rooms might feel that they were powerless. I am forced to hope that our lack of response to the Trump administration’s attacks on our peers, both those at other large firms and the many people in this country with far fewer resources, is rooted in feelings of fear and powerlessness, as opposed to tacit agreement or desire to maximize profit. I still hope that is true. But it has not yet been borne out.”
- “There is an open letter (now signed by over 600 other AmLaw 200 associates, many of them at this firm), mainstream media coverage and an oped explaining why I feel this way.”
- “Know that I attended internal meetings about this topic, sent emails to decision makers, avoided commenting on the EEOC investigation publicly or airing any internal firm discourse publicly. I did all of these things out of hope that we would do the right thing if given time and opportunity.”
- “The firm has been given time and opportunity to do the right thing. Thus far, we have not. This is a moment that demands urgency. Whether we are failing to meet it because we are unprepared or because we don’t wish to is irrelevant to me—and to the world—where the outcome is the same. If we were going to resist, we would have done so already. If we were not going to respond to the EEOC (a refusal that would be fully legal), the firm would have already told us.”
- “I recognize not everyone is positioned as I am, and cannot act the same way. But do not recruit for this firm if they cannot protect their employees. Do not pretend that what is happening is normal or excusable. It isn’t.”
- “To the many superiors, support staff and friends that I know I disappoint by making this announcement firmwide instead of talking to you first, I sincerely apologize. There are so many thank yous that I have for so many people at this firm. Please know that if you suspect that you have helped me or taught me or cared for me, that I agree and am eternally grateful. In the coming days, I will make every effort to reach out to you separately, but there is urgency here that makes it impossible to go to each of you first. I will do everything in my power to mitigate difficulties caused by my unexpected departure.”
- “Like any self-important adolescent, I spent most of my high school history classes wondering what I would do in the moments before true horror or chaos or where my values were tested and demanded great sacrifice. I do not wonder anymore. I know who I am. I thought I knew who we all were.”
Above the Law noted: “Will Clients Trust Paul Weiss Again?” —
- “‘Would you want to be represented by a law firm that can’t even stand up for itself? A law firm that might sell you out to the federal government to save its own skin?’ — Deepak Gupta, founder of Gupta Wessler LLP and lecturer at Harvard Law School, sounding off on Bluesky about Paul Weiss’s decision to acquiesce to the Trump administration.”
“Big Law Firms Scrub Mueller Ties as Trump Targets Enemies” —
- “Four law firms scrubbed references to their lawyers’ roles in former special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation as President Donald Trump attacks past legal foes.”
- “Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison, WilmerHale, Cooley, and Davis Polk & Wardwell removed the references from lawyer bios on their websites late last year and this year, a Bloomberg Law analysis of current and archived firm web pages shows.”
- “The four law firms didn’t respond to requests for comment. A review of internet archives shows they scrubbed Mueller references between October and March 20. In Paul Weiss’ case, the archives show the firm changed its lawyer’s webpage after March 1.”
- “Firms’ move to scrub websites of Mueller mentions is a form of ‘appeasement’ when they instead should be defending their lawyers’ ability to work on cases that are adverse to Trump, said Liz Oyer, a former pardons attorney at the Justice Department who was terminated earlier this month.”
- “WilmerHale, where Mueller practiced as a partner before retiring in 2021, removed Mueller’s biography page between November and March, a review of archived webpages shows. WilmerHale is one of 20 firms targeted in an EEOC investigation into diversity programs at law firms.”
- “This year, WilmerHale also removed the mention of Mueller’s investigation from the webpage of retired partner James Quarles III, who rejoined the firm with Mueller in 2019 after service in the special counsel’s office.”
- “This year, Davis Polk revised webpages of Greg Andres, co-head of the firm’s white collar defense and investigations practice, and white collar partner Uzo Asonye to omit references to the Mueller probe. The firm highlighted their role on Mueller’s investigative team and prosecution of Manafort in previous iterations. The pair left the special counsel’s office in 2019 to join Davis Polk, according to their LinkedIn profiles.”
- “Cooley removed a paragraph from the profile of white collar partner Andrew Goldstein, who was formerly referred to by Cooley’s website as one of Mueller’s ‘top deputies’ in the special counsel’s office. His page previously highlighted a front-page story by The New York Times that described his ‘day-to-day’ leadership role.”
- “The EEOC sent letters to 20 large firms, including Kirkland & Ellis, Latham & Watkins, Ropes & Gray, and Simpson Thacher, launching investigations for possible discrimination in their diversity programs. Trump three days earlier issued an executive order against Paul Weiss that stripped the Wall Street firm of security clearances and threatened to cancel government contracts held by its clients, while ordering agency heads to restrict its lawyers’ access to federal government buildings.”
“Cut a Deal or File a Suit? Every Big Law Response to Trump Scrutiny Is a Blueprint” —
- “The law firms that have been subject to the Trump administration’s executive actions have pursued a range of approaches over the last week, from directly confrontational to seeking common ground.”
- “And as speculation grows over which law firm or lawyer Trump may target next, the approaches by Covington & Burling; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; and Perkins Coie may also serve as a blueprint for others that are proactively planning their strategy.”
- “Although some in the industry have lamented the lack of a singular approach, or a more adversarial one, some communications experts and consultants say firms are handling it the way they might advise clients to handle their matters. In other words, carefully weighing the pros and cons and evaluating likely outcomes while acting under narrow time constraints.”
- “‘No two situations are alike. No two jurisdictions are alike. There are many decisions that go into handling these matters for law firms,’ said Gina Rubel, CEO and general counsel of Furia Rubel, a global crisis and consulting agency. She added that ‘not everyone is going to love’ their decisions, alluding to the range of voices from inside firms and their clients who are calling for different approaches.”
- “Law firms, she said, are ‘doing a legal and cost analysis, and saying, ‘What is in our clients’ best interest? What is in our best interest? Who do we want to be at the end of this? How much is too much?'”
- “Leslie Levin, an ethics law professor at the University of Connecticut Law School, said every firm has its own tolerance for risk, so the varying responses are not a surprise. She said, though, that litigation—as well as consensus-building within law firm management committees themselves—takes time, and the firms may not feel they have that luxury.”
- “‘It feels more like they’re trying to weigh the costs and benefits of acting, and they’ve got to look at their own clients. My guess is that Paul Weiss is listening to what clients say. I’m sure they’re hearing a lot from their clients,’ Levin said.”
- “On the other side of the spectrum, Covington and Perkins Coie—also facing administration actions—are pursuing litigation against the administration, whether on behalf of clients or the firm.”
- “Covington joins about a dozen Am Law 200 firms now involved in litigation against the Trump administration—some pro bono, others not—on behalf of clients. That includes Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr; Hogan Lovells; Jenner & Block; Ropes & Gray; Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher; Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer; Milbank; Saul Ewing; Munger, Tolles & Olson; and Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton.”
- “Whatever approach a law firm takes, Cari Brunelle, founding partner of legal advisory firm Baretz & Brunelle, listed out some of the factors—and consequences—as a result of the approach: the financial cost associated with a protracted court battle; or flight risk of talent, with partners choosing to go elsewhere because of so much uncertainty, or because they disagree with their leaders’ ultimate choices.”
- “There’s also the potential for client and reputational backlash. ‘As a leader, you’re never going to be able to make everyone happy, and so, when you’re dealing with a situation like this, you have to put the interest of the firm above all else,’ Brunelle said. ‘So, whatever that means for you, it may be different than what others would think.'”
Friday night update: “Trump hangs sword of Damocles over the American legal system” —
- “President Donald Trump is doubling down on his threats against the American legal system, directing Attorney General Pam Bondi to take action against lawyers and law firms that go against him.”
- “The memo circulated late Friday, entitled ‘Preventing Abuses of the Legal System and the Federal Court’, marks an escalation of Trump’s crackdown on law firms he believes have crossed him, now threatening the full power of the Department of Justice to punish them.”
“‘Lawyers and law firms that engage in actions that violate the laws of the United States or rules governing attorney conduct must be efficiently and effectively held accountable,’ the memo reads.” - “In it, Trump directs Bondi to seek sanctions against lawyers and law firms that ‘engage in frivolous, unreasonable, and vexatious litigation against the United States.’ He also pushes Bondi and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem to ‘prioritize enforcement’ of proper attorney conduct.”
- “Any unethical or unprofessional conduct will result in disciplinary action, the memo warns, which could include revoking security clearances and federal contracts — a lever he has already pulled repeatedly to target several firms with clients that have challenged Trump.”
- “This enforcement will also be retroactive, as the memo instructs Bondi to look back at the conduct of lawyers or law firms over the last eight years for misconduct.”
- “Friday’s memorandum comes as the nation’s law firms are already running scared over Trump’s promised retribution. Several lawyers that spoke to POLITICO shared their fear after the executive orders targeting specific law firms in a retaliatory spree connected to his political rivals.”
- “But Trump’s new memo signals this is only the beginning.”
- “He lists examples of ‘grossly unethical misconduct’ and references Marc Elias of the Elias Law Group, one of the most prominent Democratic attorneys in the nation. Elias was also a lawyer for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign while an attorney at Perkins Coie and was central to the commissioning of the now-infamous Steele dossier.”
- “Earlier this week, Elias penned an op-ed saying that while he was concerned about retribution from Trump, he wouldn’t cave to pressure from the president.”
- “‘Now that Trump has proven to be a ruthless autocrat, too many have grown timid and silent,’ Elias wrote on his website Democracy Docket.
- “‘Law firms and individual attorneys have a great power, and obligation, to serve the rule of law, justice, and order,’ the memo states. ‘The Attorney General, alongside the Counsel to the President, shall report to the President periodically on improvements by firms to capture this hopeful vision.'”