Trump-Targeted Law Firms Fight DOJ Bid to Revive Orders (1)

March 27, 2026, 6:04 PM UTC

President Donald Trump’s attacks on major law firms “pose a severe threat to the legal profession and the rule of law,” attorneys for WilmerHale told a federal appeals court Friday.

Trump hit the firm with a “draconian” executive order in retaliation “for representing clients and causes he dislikes and expressing viewpoints with which he disagrees,” Paul Clement, the prominent litigator representing WilmerHale, wrote. The firm urged the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit to uphold rulings striking down Trump’s orders against WilmerHale and three other firms.

WilmerHale and Jenner & Block were the first of the four firms to file briefs in the appeal, which consolidates the lower court cases. Susman Godfrey and Perkins Coie are expected to also file briefs on Friday.

The firms said Paul Weiss’ decision to strike a deal with the White House to resolve a similar order against it underscores the threat posed by Trump’s attacks. Paul Weiss and eight other firms that later followed suit pledged a total of $940 million in free legal services on shared causes with the White House.

“WilmerHale and its co-appellees separately challenged the executive orders leveled against them,” Wilmer said. “Paul Weiss chose a different path. In exchange for formal rescission of an order purporting to identify it as a national security risk, Paul Weiss promised ‘a remarkable change of course.’”

Trump issued the orders shortly after returning to the White House last year, largely targeting the firms over their ties to lawyers involved in investigations and cases against the president. He called out WilmerHale for its connections to Robert Mueller, the former special counsel who led an investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election. Trump went after Jenner for its affiliation to Andrew Weissmann, who was part of Mueller’s team.

The president said the moves—scrapping security clearances, blocking access to federal buildings, and threatening government contracts for the firms’ clients—were meant to address national security risks and hiring discrimination in Big Law. Four federal judges disagreed, ruling that Trump violated the Constitution’s free speech and due process protections.

DOJ initially said in a March 2 court filing that it would drop the appeal, allowing the lower court decisions blocking the orders to stand. It reversed course less than 24 hours later, with a Trump administration official later saying the previous filing was inadvertent.

Courts “cannot tell the President how to handle national security clearances,” deputy associate attorney general Abhishek Kambli wrote in March in an appellate brief. “And they cannot interfere with Presidential directives instructing agencies to investigate racial discrimination that violates federal civil rights laws.”

Jenner is represented by a team of Cooley LLP lawyers, including Biden solicitor general Elizabeth Prelogar. The firm highlighted DOJ’s about-face in its court filing.

“Faced with defending the indefensible—and after wavering on whether to maintain this appeal at all—the government has little to say,” Jenner said in its brief. “On the merits, it protests that the Order has nothing to do with Jenner’s representations or associations, but instead was prompted by unspecific and unsubstantiated allegations of hiring discrimination. To read the Order is to refute that argument.”

The firm also took aim at Paul Weiss, which it said “capitulated” to Trump, and others who opted to strike deals with the White House.

“As the White House put it, the settlements built the President ‘an unrivaled network of Lawyers’ to advance his agenda,” the firm said in its court filing. “Jenner chose a different path: suing to safeguard its ability to represent its clients.”

The case is: Jenner and Block v. DOJ, D.C. Cir., 25-05265, 3/27/26

To contact the reporters on this story: Justin Henry in Washington DC at jhenry@bloombergindustry.com; Meghan Tribe in New York at mtribe@bloomberglaw.com

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Opfer at copfer@bloombergindustry.com

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