Trump Attacks Could Have Killed Law Firms, Yale Prof Says

Oct. 7, 2025, 5:44 PM UTC

President Donald Trump’s attacks on law firms have hand their intended impact, even as courts shoot down executive orders against some as unconstitutional and the details of White House deals with others remain unclear, according to Yale Law School professor John Morley.

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“The point here is to extract a demonstrative form of obedience,” Morely said. He said he’s already seen a “chilling effect” with firms less willing to take on matters pushing back against the administration than in Trump’s first term.

Morley, who has studied law firm collapses, does not blame the leaders of firms that struck deals with the White House to avoid punitive executive orders. Court wins for the four firms who have challenged orders targeting them so far show that those firms made the right, albeit risky, choice to fight.

“I am absolutely certain that, if one of these executive orders survived a temporary injunction proceeding, that would be the death of the firm,” Morley said. “Or at least I think the probability is very high.”

Morley spoke to Bloomberg Law reporter Roy Strom on this episode of our podcast, On The Merits, about what has become of Trump’s attacks on Big Law and what would happen if the President resumed them. He also discussed how they’ve changed the attitudes of his students at Yale about which firms they may want to work at in the future.

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To contact the reporter on this story: David Schultz in Washington at dschultz@bloomberglaw.com

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