Big Law leaders who cut deals with the Trump administration believe their decisions to provide pro bono legal services, commit attorney hours, and pledge institutional cooperation in exchange for the administration withdrawing executive orders targeting their firms represent principled negotiation that protected their clients, their attorneys, and the rule of law rather than a straightforward capitulation to governmental coercion that established the precedent that the executive branch can selectively target law firms whose work it dislikes and extract institutional concessions by threatening the business relationships whose disruption would be financially catastrophic, converting the legal profession’s independence from governmental pressure from a constitutional principle into a negotiating position whose value was revealed by how quickly it was abandoned when the financial stakes became clear. Convenient because principled negotiation framing converts institutional self-preservation into strategic wisdom, allowing managing partners to present their capitulation as sophisticated crisis management rather than as the destruction of the professional independence norm whose protection would have required accepting the financial consequences that the firms’ partnership structures made intolerable.
Big Law leaders believe that the pro bono commitments and attorney hour pledges extracted by the administration represent voluntary expressions of civic responsibility rather than coerced concessions whose extraction through the threat of executive orders targeting specific firms establishes that governmental power can be used to redirect private legal resources toward the administration’s preferred causes, that the legal profession’s claim to serve the rule of law rather than the ruling party is negotiable when the financial pressure is sufficient, and that the independence of legal representation from governmental approval is a principle that applies most reliably when its defense is costless and most flexibly when its costs are borne by the partnership’s profit per equity partner. Convenient because voluntary civic responsibility framing launders coerced concessions into charitable generosity, allowing firms to present what was extracted under threat as what they would have chosen to provide anyway, protecting the managing partners from accountability to the clients, attorneys, and professional norms whose interests the capitulation compromised.
Big Law leaders believe that their decisions were made after careful legal analysis determined that resistance would be futile or counterproductive rather than after careful financial analysis determined that the threat to government contracting relationships, security clearances, and the corporate clients whose own government relationships made association with targeted firms a liability was sufficient to overcome whatever professional independence commitments the partnership’s culture nominally maintained, and that the legal analysis conveniently arrived at the conclusion that the financial analysis had already reached, which is the characteristic output of any institution where the lawyers doing the analysis understand what conclusion their principals need them to reach. Convenient because careful legal analysis framing converts a financial calculation into a professional judgment, allowing firms to present their capitulation as the product of rigorous legal reasoning rather than as the output of a partnership governance process in which the equity partners whose income was threatened by resistance had the institutional authority to ensure that the analysis produced the conclusion their financial interests required.
Big Law leaders believe that their cooperation with the administration does not compromise their ability to represent clients in matters adverse to the government rather than that the commitments extracted, the pro bono hours directed toward administration priorities, the institutional cooperation pledged, the public statements issued, have signaled to every sophisticated observer that these firms have accepted a subordinate relationship to executive branch preferences that will shape, consciously or not, how their attorneys approach matters where aggressive representation of client interests would displease the administration, how their partners calibrate the advice they give clients about the risks of challenging governmental action, and how their recruiting and retention of attorneys who specialize in government-adverse litigation will proceed in an environment where the firm’s relationship with the administration is a business asset to be protected. Convenient because representation independence framing maintains the fiction that institutional cooperation with the administration can be cleanly separated from the advocacy positions the institution takes on behalf of clients, protecting the firms from the straightforward inference that their clients now have reason to wonder whether they are being represented by lawyers whose first loyalty is to the client or by lawyers whose institution has negotiated a relationship with the government that the client’s case might threaten.
Big Law leaders believe that their decisions should be evaluated in light of the specific pressures their firms faced rather than against the standard that the legal profession claims as its foundational commitment, which is that lawyers provide independent representation without fear of governmental retaliation, and that the reasonableness of the capitulation given those pressures is a relevant consideration rather than precisely the kind of situational ethics whose rejection is what makes the professional independence principle meaningful, because a principle that holds only when its defense is convenient is not a principle but a preference, and the profession’s claim to special constitutional status, its claim to the attorney-client privilege, the work product doctrine, the ethical rules that protect client confidences, rests on the premise that lawyers are genuinely independent of governmental pressure in ways that their capitulation has now demonstrated they are not when the financial stakes are sufficiently high. Convenient because situational evaluation framing converts the abandonment of a foundational professional principle into a reasonable response to extraordinary circumstances, protecting leaders from the straightforward accountability that follows from the gap between the principle they claim and the behavior they exhibited.
Big Law leaders believe that firms which resisted the administration’s pressure, which litigated the executive orders rather than negotiating concessions, were taking unnecessary risks with their attorneys’ livelihoods and their clients’ interests rather than demonstrating that the capitulation was a choice rather than a necessity, that the financial consequences of resistance were manageable for institutions with the resources that major law firms command, and that the precedent established by resistance, that executive branch targeting of law firms for their advocacy work will be met with litigation rather than negotiation, would have produced better long-term outcomes for the profession’s independence than the precedent established by capitulation, which is that targeting works and that the financial pressure required to produce concessions from even the most prestigious legal institutions is within the executive branch’s practical capacity to apply. Convenient because unnecessary risk framing converts the courage of firms that resisted into recklessness, protecting capitulating firms from the comparison that their managing partners most fear, which is the straightforward observation that some firms faced the same pressure and chose differently, and that the choice reveals something about institutional character rather than about the impossibility of resistance.
Big Law leaders believe that their firms’ long-term reputation will not be damaged by their decisions because sophisticated clients understand the pressures that produced the capitulation rather than that the clients who most need aggressive representation in matters adverse to the government, the clients facing regulatory enforcement, the clients challenging governmental action, the clients whose interests require lawyers willing to take positions that displease the administration, now have reason to evaluate whether the firms that negotiated concessions with the administration are the appropriate counsel for matters where the firm’s institutional relationship with the administration creates a conflict between the firm’s business interests and the client’s legal interests, and that the reputational damage will be realized not in immediate client departures but in the gradual migration of the most consequential government-adverse litigation to firms whose institutional independence was not compromised by the negotiation. Convenient because sophisticated client understanding framing converts a reputational liability into a non-issue, protecting managing partners from accountability for the business consequences that will arrive on a timeline longer than the immediate crisis that the capitulation was designed to manage.
Big Law leaders believe that the junior associates, counsel, and partners whose commitment to public interest law, government accountability litigation, and civil liberties work drew them to their firms have been adequately consulted, their concerns addressed, and their professional values respected in the decision-making process rather than that the partnership governance structures of major law firms concentrate consequential decisions in the hands of equity partners whose financial interests in the firm’s government contracting relationships, whose personal relationships with administration officials, and whose career calculations about future governmental appointments created a systematic conflict of interest between the decision-makers and the attorneys whose professional identities were most directly compromised by the capitulation, and that the internal communication process that produced the managing partner’s announcement was designed to manage associate dissent rather than to incorporate it. Convenient because consultation framing converts a unilateral financial decision into a participatory governance process, protecting managing partners from accountability to the attorneys whose professional values were sacrificed to protect the partnership’s profit structure and whose departure from the firms that capitulated will be described as individual career choices rather than as the institutional accountability that the governance process was designed to prevent.
Big Law leaders believe that the bar associations, law school deans, former judges, and legal scholars who criticized the capitulations were engaging in performative criticism that failed to account for the practical realities of running a major law firm rather than identifying a genuine professional responsibility issue whose stakes extend beyond the specific firms involved to the broader question of whether the legal profession’s independence from governmental pressure is a real institutional commitment or a rhetorical one, and that the critics’ failure to run major law firms disqualifies their assessment of the decisions rather than that the critics’ institutional independence from the financial pressures that produced the capitulation is precisely what enables them to apply the professional standards that the capitulating firms’ financial entanglements prevented them from applying to themselves. Convenient because practical reality framing converts the professional responsibility critique into naive idealism, protecting managing partners from accountability to the professional standards that their firms publicly claim to embody and that the critics are accurately applying, by presenting those standards as aspirational rather than operational whenever their application would require accepting financial consequences.
Big Law leaders believe that history will judge their decisions as reasonable responses to an unprecedented governmental assault on legal independence rather than as the moment when the legal profession’s most prestigious institutions demonstrated that their independence from governmental pressure was contingent on the pressure remaining below the financial threshold that their partnership structures could tolerate, that the principle of lawyer independence whose protection is supposed to be the profession’s foundational commitment was revealed to be a negotiating position rather than a constitutional commitment, and that the firms that capitulated provided future administrations of any political orientation with the demonstrated proof of concept that targeting law firms for their advocacy work produces concessions, establishing an incentive that will shape executive branch behavior toward the legal profession long after the specific political moment that produced the original targeting has passed. Convenient because reasonable response framing protects managing partners from the historical accountability that will be most clearly visible only after the precedent their capitulation established has been used by future administrations in ways that the current moment’s crisis framing makes it possible to not yet see.