
Deborah Perlstein (N.Y. Times), They Are America’s Most Powerful Law Firms. Their Silence Is Deafening.
Professor Perlstein is a distinguished constitutional scholar and a professor at Princeton. Her analysis parallels mine in important respects.
I commend her full article to your attention; I won’t attempt to quote or paraphrase all of it. I also strongly commend to your attention Paul Weiss’s side of the story.
The Need for Collective Action
Prof. Perlstein writes,
[W]here many ordinary judges, law school deans and public interest attorneys of both political parties have found the courage to push back against Mr. Trump’s anti-constitutional histrionics, Big Law has largely stayed silent or worse.
These firms face a classic problem of collective action: Every individual firm has an incentive to keep quiet, but if everyone stays silent, all will lose. The problem is understandable. It is also solvable. It requires firms to find the courage to act together.
A Joint Amicus Brief Supporting Perkins Coie as a Means of Collective Action?
The idea has been much mooted, and a draft joint amicus brief has reportedly been prepared. But, on reflection, I’m strongly inclined to think that
- Perkins Coie’s legal case is rock solid, and the other big law firms could tell the courts nothing—nothing—that the courts don’t already know, and that
- a joint amicus brief would do nothing to change the odds of Perkins Coie wins or loses in the courts.
The latter question will come down to whether a majority of the Supreme Court choose to follow the law, or whether they choose to join the Trump ass kissers.
Professor Perlstein evidently agrees that the reasons for collective action are largely symbolic. She says,
[An] excuse circulating among Big Law lawyers is that speaking out won’t make a difference either way. Perkins Coie, after all, won its case without the broad support of its peer institutions.
That argument misses the point. Coming to Perkins Coie’s defense isn’t a decision about litigation strategy. It is about standing up to the administration’s intimidation. Signing on to joint briefs is not the only way to do that. Fellow firms and their clients could contribute to a joint defense fund, to help defray the costs of litigation and lost business for those on the receiving end of Mr. Trump’s score-settling wrath.
The point is for Big Law to do something — anything — as a group to demonstrate that they will continue to place their obligations to their clients and to the law above their fear of the bully. Solidarity can prove that point. And it can shore up the hope we all retain that the world’s strongest economy and oldest democracy will not both, simultaneously, fall.
The excuses made for Big Law’s silence are of course not limited to Big Law. The same collective action problem no doubt informs the discussions taking place inside the corner offices of the firms’ corporate clients, in the boardrooms of major media enterprises, at the gatherings of university trustees. The solutions to such problems are limited. But one tried and true approach remains clear: joining forces to fight back.
A Side Note on Law Firm Collective Action: The Bar Associations’ Statement
A joint statement by the New York City Bar Association and many other bar associations calls for rejecting “any efforts to use the tremendous power of the government against members of the legal profession for performing their duties.”
Note that the leadership of the New York City Bar Association includes many lawyers with leading law firms.
Collective Action? Yes, But Bring in the Business Roundtable and the United States Chamber of Commerce Along with the Top 200 Law Firms
Like many ideas, collective action is a wonderful idea, provided it works. I don’t think it will work unless and until the American business elite comes to its senses and realizes that Trump is, in truth, a tyrannical madman. You are not going to jollify him. You are not going to mollify him with minor bribes, like paying a few million dollars in bogus “settlements” of bogus lawsuits he has brought. He is, instead, a mortal danger to your businesses. And he is a mortal danger to you. Yes, you can bribe him on Monday. But he won’t stay bought. On Wednesday, you’ll have to do it all over again.
You have got to reach the point where you wake up and smell the coffee. Let the DOGE cuts wreak havoc on Trump voters. Let the tariffs wreak havoc on the economy. And then take collective action.
