Paul Weiss Law Firm “Deal With Trump” Controversary

The New York Times Header

Paul Weiss Chair Says Deal With Trump Adheres to Firm’s Principles

March 21, 2025

In an email message, the law firm’s chairman, Brad Karp, reassured employees that its deal with President Trump was in keeping with its principles.

The chairman of Paul Weiss sought to reassure employees at the giant law firm that the deal it reached with President Trump was consistent with principles that the 150-year-old firm has long stood by.

On Thursday evening, Brad Karp sent a firm-wide email, detailing the agreement he had reached with Mr. Trump, which allowed the firm to escape an executive order that could have cost it significant business.

The order, part of a broader retribution campaign against law firms, threatened to suspend the law firm’s security clearances, which would have made it virtually impossible for Paul Weiss to represent clients in cases involving the federal government.

In the email to the firm, which was viewed by The New York Times, Mr. Karp said that in reaching an agreement with Mr. Trump, he really just “reaffirmed” the firm’s statement of principles outlined in 1963 by one of Paul Weiss’s original named partners, Judge Simon H. Rifkind.

“The commitments reaffirmed today are consistent with Judge Simon H. Rifkind’s 1963 Statement of Firm Principles,” which states, among other things, that “we believe in maintaining, by affirmative efforts, a membership of partners and associates reflecting a wide variety of religious, political, ethnic and social backgrounds,” Mr. Karp wrote in the email.

Despite Mr. Karp’s assurances, the deal between Paul Weiss and the White House was causing concern among the broader legal community that large law firms were capitulating to Mr. Trump’s demands instead of fighting them in court.

At a meeting at the White House, Mr. Karp reached a deal with Mr. Trump in which the firm agreed to do $40 million worth of pro bono work on causes supported by the Trump administration, such as working with veterans and fighting antisemitism.

“Thank you all for your patience during this time,” Mr. Karp told the roughly 2,000 lawyers and support staff at the firm. “With this behind us, we can devote our complete focus — as we always do — to our clients, our work, our colleagues and our firm.”

By Matthew GoldsteinJessica Silver-Greenberg and Ben Protess

Read Full Article on NYTimes.com

Read Full Article

What to Know About Paul Weiss, the Law Firm Bowing to Trump’s Demands

March 21, 2025

The 150-year-old firm has employed many Democrats, including Manhattan’s former U.S. attorney. Its revenue was more than $2.6 billion last year.

Paul Weiss, the New York law firm that this week struck a deal to escape President Trump’s wrath, is one of the nation’s largest, with more than 1,000 lawyers representing some of the world’s wealthiest and most profitable companies.

The firm, formally called Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, has offices around the world. Its work involves mergers and acquisitions, private equity, white-collar and regulatory defense and litigation. Clients have included corporations like ExxonMobil, Citigroup, Imagine Entertainment and Lucasfilm.
Paul Weiss’s revenue was more than $2.6 billion last year, according to Law360. The firm also has a large pro bono practice of public service work, some of which will now be performed for causes championed by President Trump, according to the deal.

The president had issued an executive order, part of a broader campaign against law firms, which would have suspended Paul Weiss’s security clearances and barred its lawyers from federal buildings. To persuade the president to lift the order, the firm agreed to do $40 million worth of pro bono work on causes, such as working with veterans and fighting antisemitism, over the course of Mr. Trump’s term.
But the deal with Mr. Trump has led some critics to charge that Paul Weiss betrayed its principles by giving in to the president rather than fighting him in court.

The firm is known for giving a home to prominent Democrats, like Theodore C. Sorensen, who was an adviser to President John F. Kennedy.

Among its current partners are Loretta E. Lynch, who served as attorney general under President Barack Obama; Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York under President Joseph R. Biden Jr.; and Jeh C. Johnson, a former secretary of homeland security under Mr. Obama.

By Benjamin Weiser

Read Full Article on NYTimes.com

Read Full Article

Paul Weiss Deal With Trump Faces Backlash From Legal Profession

March 21, 2025

Paul Weiss, a law firm targeted by President Trump, reached a deal to settle a conflict. Many in the legal field are condemning the agreement.

Some lawyers said the deal was driven by profit. Others said it was enabling autocracy. One said the move had prompted her to quit her legal job in disgust.

All over the legal world, lawyers on Friday were talking about the deal that Paul Weiss, one of the nation’s most prominent law firms, had made with President Trump to escape an onerous executive order that would have prevented it from representing many clients before the federal government. To avoid the hit to its business, the firm agreed to do $40 million worth of pro bono work for causes favored by the White House.

It was a striking development in the White House’s broad retribution campaign against big law firms that represented lawyers or prosecutors in the criminal cases against Mr. Trump before the 2024 election.

Paul Weiss’s move was a particular point of contention because of the firm’s standing in the legal community. The firm has long been dominated by Democrats and prided itself on being at the forefront of fights against the government for civil rights.

“They have all the resources they need to fight an unlawful order,” said John Moscow, who was a top prosecutor at the Manhattan district attorney’s office under Robert Morgenthau. “The example they are setting is to surrender to unlawful orders rather than fight them in court.”

By Danielle KayeLauren Hirsch and Maureen Farrell

Read Full Article on NYTimes.com

Read Full Article

The New York Times
The New York Timeshttps://www.nytimes.com/
The New York Times brings you unparalleled access to the people and events shaping our world today. we tell stories In a range of formats to fit your lifestyle.

Columns

 Biden-Harris Allowed in 1,000+ Al-Qaeda Terrorists!

Former CIA targeting officer Sarah Adams warned of potentially devastating attack planned by Al-Qaeda terrorists on American soil as imminent.

Rate of French Women Assaulted on Public Transport Spikes By 86% For Some Weird Unknowable Reason

Sexual violence against women on French public transport has increased 86% since 2016, according to National Observatory on Violence against Women data.

The UK’s 100-Year Bet

How does one agree to a century-long pact with a country whose independence can be measured in decades?

USAID Scam Exposed Yet Protests Rage On?

Many fake news stories about USAID's accomplishments were all lies and possibly a cover for the criminal acts using American taxpayer dollars.

Social Security, Musk, Ponzi Scheme & Real Culprit Fed Gov

Social Security is as far from a Ponzi scheme. It made every payment for 90 years. It is the federal government that misappropriated $2.7 trillion.

News

A Look at Trump’s Tariff Plan to Revive the US Auto Industry

​​The U.S. trade deficit reached a record high of more than $1.2 trillion in 2024. Automobiles and parts accounted for nearly a quarter of that.

Senate Confirms Bhattacharya as NIH Chief

Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, Trumps nominee, gained Senate confirmation to head the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in a vote of 53–47 on March 25, 2025.

What to Know About the Trump Administration’s Signal Chat Leak Episode

National security officials are facing questions after journalist reported he was added to encrypted group chat appearing to discuss U.S. strikes in Yemen.

Ratcliffe, Gabbard Say No Classified Information Shared in Leaked Chat

Ratcliffe and Gabbard defended handling of sensitive info at hearing, facing questions about apparently accidental leak of details on U.S. strikes on Yemen.

Advocacy Groups Sue Trump Admin to Block Dismantling of Education Department

A coalition of advocacy organizations filed a lawsuit to block the Trump admin’s efforts to dismantle the Dept of Education, calling the move illegal.

Trump Media Teaming Up With Crypto.com to Launch ETFs

Trump’s media company Trump Media & Technology Group and Crypto.com announced plans to introduce a series of ETFs under the Truth.Fi brand on Mar. 24.

US Supreme Court Declines Appeal in Youth-Led Climate Change Case

SCOTUS declined to hear appeal in lawsuit by minors alleging U.S. govt unconstitutionally deprived children of life and liberty by causing climate change to worsen.

North Carolina Supreme Court Rules That Family Can Sue Over Vaccination Without Consent

A mother’s constitutional rights were violated when her son was given a COVID-19 vaccine without her consent, the North Carolina Supreme Court has ruled.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central