
Capitalisn't The Economics of Law Firms’ Resistance to Trump, with John Morley
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May 1, 2025 John Morley, Augustus E. Lines Professor of Law at Yale University and a legal economics expert, dives into the pressing challenges facing law firms in today's political climate. He discusses how some firms have capitulated to Trump's executive orders while others resist, revealing the financial motivations behind these decisions. Conversations explore the transformation of law firms into corporate structures and the implications for their independence and the rule of law. This moment may reshape the future of democracy and capitalism in the U.S.
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Transaction Lawyers and Government Goodwill
- Transaction lawyers rely heavily on government goodwill and access, increasing susceptibility to political pressure.
- Litigation lawyers are less vulnerable as adversarial courts oversee government actions.
Settlements as Theater of Obedience
- Firms that settled agreed only to apolitical pro bono work, not defense of Trump policies.
- Trump aims to humiliate and weaken firms’ standing, not just extract concrete concessions.
Dignity Limits Firm Compliance
- Lawyer dignity has limits; firms will reject orders crossing ethical lines despite pressure.
- Firms prefer to risk collapse rather than violate core legal ethics or represent oppressive policies.
