Cowardice and Capitulation Stain the Legacy of Once-Esteemed Mega Law Firm
Cowardice and Capitulation Stain the Legacy of Once-Esteemed Mega Law FirmPaul, Weiss joins the list of institutions and individuals with ample resources to defend themselves, who nevertheless have refused to stand up for justice in the face of MAGA intimidation“[T]he most disgraceful action by a major law firm in my lifetime.” “[A] stain on the firm, every one of its partners, and the entire legal profession.” Those were just a few choice reactions to the decision from the Paul, Weiss law firm to capitulate to the Trump regime’s bullying. In exchange for revocation of an inappropriate, unconstitutional, shameful executive decree that sought to bar Paul Weiss lawyers from doing business with the federal government or even appearing inside federal buildings, Paul Weiss agreed to unprecedented infringement on its operations, choice of clients, and hiring practices. Faced with this assault on the 1st, 5th, and 6th Amendments, Paul Weiss chose not to litigate as another targeted law firm, Perkins & Coie had, but to submit itself to the micromanagement of the federal government, a move so craven and fraught with conflict that every client, associate, partner, and employee will need to reevaluate its relationship with the mega-firm. “[T]he firm agreed to represent clients no matter their political affiliation and do $40 million worth of pro bono work on causes that the Trump administration supports, such as fighting antisemitism,” the New York Times reported. How taking clients specifically agreeable to Trump complies with insistence on not taking cases based on their political affiliation is as inexplicable and nonsensical as agreeing to an “expert” monitor approved by the administration to review its hiring practices. The firm’s internal memo explaining the deal was silent on the specific topic of “DEI,” whereas the Trump version stated the firm agreed it “will not adopt, use, or pursue any DEI policies.” In a statement attempting to rationalize the firm’s decision, Chairman Brad Karp insisted that “the Administration is not dictating what matters we take on, approving our matters, or anything like that.” But the plain language of the “agreement” says otherwise. (His statement that other firms had not rallied to the firm’s defense is belied by Perkins’s decision to litigate and Paul Weiss’s unquestionable ability to obtain counsel from a respected firm…had it chosen to fight.) The firm’s version made no mention of former partner Mark Pomerantz, who had worked in Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office and publicly admonished Bragg for not filing charges against Trump. (Of course, Bragg later filed charges and obtained a 34-count conviction of the now-president.) The version of the agreement released by the White House states, “[Managing partner Brad] Karp acknowledged the wrongdoing of former Paul, Weiss partner, Mark Pomerantz.” Let us count the ways in which this violates professional ethics, common sense, and basic decency.
Its reputation as a progressive firm and support for the Democratic Party is permanently sullied. The right to determine its clientele and to advance causes of its own choosing are core 1st Amendment activities that virtually all firms guard fervently. In an effort to protect its multi-million-dollar practice, Paul Weiss may wind up accelerating its decline. Its lawyers, clients, prospective employees, and law school deans can exact a price by condemning this move, disassociating themselves from the firm and thereby sending a signal to other firms not to follow Paul Weiss’s example. Given a choice between joining a firm of quislings or a firm such as Perkins & Coie or Williams & Connelly, which exemplify the highest ideals of the profession, what top law recruit would join the former? The decision to cave is peculiar in the extreme. The Wall Street Journal reported:
So even after finding “a partner at litigation powerhouse Quinn Emanuel,” Paul Weiss decided to surrender, running to the White House to negotiate away its independence. Apparently, Robert Kraft (a Paul Weiss client) “helped set up the meeting, which included Trump, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, Trump adviser Steve Witkoff, and Boris Epshteyn, Trump’s outside legal counsel.” In other words, this was not the sole handiwork of a single partner. And that raises another troubling, surprisingly under-reported issue. Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer’s brother, Robert, who has sat on the senator’s advisory committee for judicial nominations, is a long-time Paul Weiss corporate law partner. I reached out to Senator Schumer’s office with several questions:
I received no response after repeated efforts to obtain comment. (Just a few days earlier, in an effort to defend his decision to support the MAGA continuing resolution, Senator Schumer trumpeted his condemnation of Trump on Meet the Press: “[D]emocracy is at risk. Look, Donald Trump is a lawless, angry man. He thinks he should be king. He thinks he should do whatever he wants, regardless of the law…. Now we have to fight that back in every single way.”) Senator Schumer is not responsible for his adult brother’s career decisions. But, as a U.S. senator, he has a duty to disclose whether he had any role whatsoever in this shameful surrender of the legal profession. At the very least, the Democrats’ Senate minority leader should explain his views on the matter, whether he thinks it is appropriate for the Trump regime to go about such shocking bullying, and if not, what he intends to do about it. Paul Weiss’s capitulation is one more example contributing to a deeply alarming pattern of cowardice from corporate media, universities, Republican toadies, and some misguided Democrats. Too many people and institutions with ample power and resources to defend themselves nevertheless have refused to stand up to MAGA intimidation. Instead, they have betrayed fundamental values that are the cornerstone of our democracy. The debate rages as to whether we are in a constitutional crisis. The more troubling question remains: Why are so many people afraid to defend the Constitution? |


Comments
Post a Comment