Trump, in Abrupt Reversal, Will Continue War on Law Firms
Source: Bloomberg Law
The Trump administration has changed its mind on its decision to walk away from appealing its loss in lawsuits over executive orders targeted at four Big Law firms.
The Justice Department on Tuesday afternoon moved to withdraw its motion to voluntarily dismiss the appeals of its cases against Perkins Coie, WilmerHale, Susman Godfrey and Jenner & Block.
The motion comes after the Justice Department on Tuesday sent an email to the four law firms signaling it would file the motion to withdraw its voluntary dismissal of its appeal less than 24 hours after saying it would drop the fight, confirmed a person familiar with the emails. News of the reversal was first reported by the New York Times.
The law firms opposed the governments filing, the DOJ said in its motion: Plaintiffs-Appellees oppose the governments unexplained request to withdraw yesterdays voluntary dismissal, to which all parties had agreed. Under no circumstances should the governments unexplained about-face provide a basis for an extension of its brief.
However, the DOJ said that regardless of this position, the court had not yet granted the motion to dimiss and it is the perogative of the Defendent-Appellants to purse this appeal.
Read more: https://news.bloomberglaw.com/business-and-practice/trump-signals-he-will-continue-court-war-on-targeted-law-firms
Link to tweet
BumRushDaShow
(168,372 posts)More taxpayer money used to carry out Waste. Fraud. Abuse.
Ray Bruns
(6,197 posts)
LetMyPeopleVote
(178,273 posts)This motion made me smile

erronis
(23,465 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(178,273 posts)It is very uncommon to do this major of a reversal just before briefs were due. The DOJ's brief is due Friday.
Link to tweet
https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/trump-doj-moves-to-revive-retaliation-cases-against-law-firms/
Just one day earlier, the Trump administration had moved to voluntarily dismiss its appeals in four cases challenging Trumps orders sanctioning Jenner & Block, WilmerHale, Perkins Coie and Susman Godfrey. Lower court rulings found the orders unlawful and unconstitutional, concluding they were designed to punish the firms for representing clients and causes Trump opposed.....
The dismissal would have left intact blistering district court decisions warning that Trumps actions threatened the countrys adversarial legal system the foundational principle that everyone is entitled to representation, even against a sitting president.
But Tuesday, in a stunning reversal and without explanation, the DOJ filed a motion to withdraw its own dismissal and press forward with the appeals.
In plain terms, the administration is now trying to undo its decision to walk away and instead keep fighting to reinstate the executive orders judges found unlawful.
All four firms swiftly opposed the Trump admins sudden reversal, urging the appeals court to reject the governments attempt to withdraw its voluntary dismissal.
This will be fun to watch
Martin68
(27,487 posts)pat_k
(13,031 posts)... when briefing is complete, issues an even more blistering condemnation of the government's arguments than the repudiations by the lower courts.
Mr. Sparkle
(3,696 posts)Wonder Why
(6,786 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(178,273 posts)One day after the DOJ agreed to throw in the towel, it changed its mind and demanded the towel back.
In a stunning reversal, Trumpâs Justice Department revives campaign against law firms
— Audrey (@parickards.bsky.social) 2026-03-03T22:31:15.573Z
One day after the DOJ agreed to throw in the towel, it changed its mind and demanded the towel back.
www.ms.now/rachel-maddo...
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/in-a-stunning-reversal-trumps-justice-department-revives-campaign-against-law-firms
At least, that was the plan on Monday. On Tuesday morning, MS NOW, citing two sources familiar with the case, reported that the Justice Department had notified the four firms that its changed course and will proceed with the appeal after all. The New York Times had a related report:
The Trump administration indicated on Tuesday that it planned to renew its defense of executive orders that it had leveled against law firms, a sharp reversal a day after asking a court whether it could abandon the fight.
In a motion filed with the appeals court in the District of Columbia, where the cases are playing out, the Justice Department formally asked to withdraw its request on Monday to abandon the cases against four law firms.
So, to recap: First, the president tried to exercise greater control over the legal industry in a ridiculous power-grab, telling many of the nations largest firms that they would lose government contracts and security clearances unless they agreed to meet the White Houses demands. Four leading firms refused and filed suit.
A variety of judges from across the ideological spectrum ruled against Trump, concluding that the move was obviously illegal. Trumps Justice Department decided there was no point in racking up another round of defeats, only to take the opposite position a day later without explanation.
This withdrawal of the administrations withdrawal is amateurish, and it does not change the likely outcome of the fight, the Times editorial board explained. Judges appointed by presidents of both parties have repeatedly ruled that the executive orders were illegal, and there is every reason to expect that to continue. The Trump administrations initial withdrawal of its appeals is an indication that at least some officials understand this reality.
As for the firms involved in the case, I spoke to a spokesperson at WilmerHale, who said the firms oppose the governments unexplained request to withdraw yesterdays voluntary dismissal, to which all parties had agreed. Watch this space.