Trump says he is suing Perkins Coie law firm after it filed suit against executive order – live

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Trump says he is suing Perkins Coie after law firm filed suit against punitive executive order

Donald Trump said he was suing Perkins Coie law firm for “egregious and unlawful acts” and cited the conduct of an unidentified member of the firm.

Trump did not elaborate in his Truth Social post. Trump issued an executive order last month that calls to terminate federal contracts held by Perkins Coie’s clients if the firm performed any work on them. Perkins Coie sued the Trump administration in response, arguing the president’s order violated constitutional protections.

In his post, Trump wrote:

I’m suing the law firm of Perkins Coie for their egregious and unlawful acts, in particular the conduct of a specific member of this firm, only to find out that the Judge assigned to this case is Beryl Howell, an Obama appointment, and a highly biased and unfair disaster. She ruled against me in the past, in a shocking display of sick judicial temperament, on a case that ended up working out very well for me, on appeal. Her ruling was so pathologically bad that it became the “talk of the town.” I could have a 100% perfect case and she would angrily rule against me. It’s called Trump Derangement Syndrome, and she’s got a bad case of it. To put it nicely, Beryl Howell is an unmitigated train wreck. NO JUSTICE!!!

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Law firms targeted by Trump ask judges to permanently bar executive orders against them

Law firms Perkins Coie and WilmerHale will ask federal judges in Washington DC on Wednesday to permanently bar Donald Trump’s executive orders against them, calling the measures acts of retaliation that violate US constitutional protections.

The court hearings will be the latest flashpoint in a legal battle pitting prominent law firms against the Republican president and his administration. Trump announced earlier this morning he was suing Perkins Coie.

Trump’s orders against Perkins Coie and WilmerHale sought to restrict their lawyers’ access to federal buildings and to end government contracts held by their clients, citing the firms’ connections to his legal and political enemies.

US district judge Beryl Howell will hear Perkins Coie’s request for summary judgment at 11am ET, followed by a hearing in WilmerHale’s case at 2pm. before US district judge Richard Leon.

Leon, a Republican appointee, issued a temporary order last month blocking key provisions of the order against WilmerHale, an 1,100-lawyer firm that has a large office in Washington. Howell, a Democrat appointee, also temporarily blocked Trump’s order last month against Perkins Coie. Two other judges weighing lawsuits by other firms have issued similar orders.

The Justice Department has defended the executive orders as lawful presidential directives.

Nine law firms, including Paul Weiss, Skadden Arps, Latham & Watkins and Kirkland & Ellis, settled with the White House to avoid a similar order being issued against them. They and several others have cumulatively pledged nearly $1bn in free legal services and made other concessions in their deals with Trump. Some lawyers at law firms that have cut deals with Trump have resigned in protest.

Hundreds of law firms, thousands of lawyers and dozens of attorney bar groups have backed the law firms suing the administration, calling the executive orders an illegal attempt to intimidate firms from representing clients adverse to Trump’s interests.

US treasury secretary Scott Bessent on Wednesday called on the International Monetary Fund and World Bank to refocus on their core missions of macroeconomic stability and development, claiming they have strayed too far into vanity projects such as climate change that have reduced their effectiveness.

Reuters reports that Bessent, in remarks outlining his vision for US engagement with the IMF and World Bank on the sidelines of the institutions’ spring meetings, said that they serve critical roles in the international financial system.

“And the Trump administration is eager to work with them, so long as they can stay true to their missions,” Bessent said in prepared remarks to the Institute of International Finance.

“The IMF and World Bank have enduring value. But mission creep has knocked these institutions off course. We must enact key reforms to ensure the Bretton Woods institutions are serving their stakeholders - not the other way around,” he said, calling on US allies to join the effort. He added:

America First does not mean America alone.

Trump’s announcement that he’s suing Perkins Coie comes after the law firm successfully sued his administration for punitive executive orders which stripped security clearances from the firm’s lawyers, mandated the termination of any contracts and barred federal government employees from engaging with its attorneys or allowing them access to government buildings.

Trump has punished several law firms with executive orders because of their connection to adversaries or involvement in causes against him. The orders threaten to cripple the firms by essentially making it impossible for them to do business with any client that has business before the government.

Per NPR, Trump’s executive order accused Perkins Coie of a range of nefarious actions over the years allegedly seeking to undermine democratic elections as well as the integrity of US courts and law enforcement.

The order specifically mentioned the firm’s representation of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, and the role attorneys at Perkins Coie played in the creation of a dossier of unsubstantiated allegations about possible Trump-Russia ties.

While five other law firms sought to cut deals with the Trump administration to avoid being similarly targeted, Perkins Coie and two others sued the administration, its lawsuit pushing back against any allegation of wrongdoing. It noted that Trump filed a lawsuit in 2022 against Perkins Coie, Clinton and others alleging a conspiracy against him. The case was dismissed months later by a federal court.

A federal judge on 12 March temporarily blocked most of the executive order Trump issued against Perkins Coie, finding it probably violated the US constitution. The judge ruled that the president used national security concerns as a pretext to punish the firm Perkins Coie for once working with Hillary Clinton.

And in 4 April more than 500 legal firms moved to file an amicus brief signed a brief in support of Perkins Coie’s fight back against Trump’s punitive actions.

The firm and others named in the executive orders earlier are each representing clients in lawsuits against the Trump administration over issues such as immigration, transgender rights and firings of government workers.

Trump says he is suing Perkins Coie after law firm filed suit against punitive executive order

Donald Trump said he was suing Perkins Coie law firm for “egregious and unlawful acts” and cited the conduct of an unidentified member of the firm.

Trump did not elaborate in his Truth Social post. Trump issued an executive order last month that calls to terminate federal contracts held by Perkins Coie’s clients if the firm performed any work on them. Perkins Coie sued the Trump administration in response, arguing the president’s order violated constitutional protections.

In his post, Trump wrote:

I’m suing the law firm of Perkins Coie for their egregious and unlawful acts, in particular the conduct of a specific member of this firm, only to find out that the Judge assigned to this case is Beryl Howell, an Obama appointment, and a highly biased and unfair disaster. She ruled against me in the past, in a shocking display of sick judicial temperament, on a case that ended up working out very well for me, on appeal. Her ruling was so pathologically bad that it became the “talk of the town.” I could have a 100% perfect case and she would angrily rule against me. It’s called Trump Derangement Syndrome, and she’s got a bad case of it. To put it nicely, Beryl Howell is an unmitigated train wreck. NO JUSTICE!!!

Sam Levine

Sam Levine

Analysis: A battle looms over rule of law as some courts start to flex their muscles against Trump

The US supreme court and other federal courts have begun flexing their muscles to push back on Donald Trump’s efforts to defy judicial orders, escalating a hugely consequential battle over the rule of law.

The supreme court issued a significant order early Saturday morning blocking the federal government from removing people who had been detained in northern Texas from the US. Separately, US district judge James Boasberg has found probable cause to hold the government in contempt for defying his orders to halt deportations.

In another case, the US district judge Paula Xinis has forced the government to provide daily updates in its efforts to comply with court orders to “facilitate” the return of Kilmar Ábrego García – the man who was wrongly deported to El Salvador.

It is a dynamic that underscores how a constitutional crisis between Trump and the courts is likely to be a push and pull between the government and judges that is simmering through the legal system and could very well break it.

US senator Peter Welch of Vermont, a Democrat, met with Mohsen Mahdawi on Monday at the prison and posted a video account of their conversation on X. Mahdawi said he was “in good hands”. He said his work is centered on peacemaking and that his empathy extends beyond the Palestinian people to Jews and to the Israelis.

“I’m staying positive by reassuring myself in the ability of justice and the deep belief of democracy,” Mahdawi said in Welch’s video. “This is the reason I wanted to become a citizen of this country, because I believe in the principles of this country.”

I just met with Mohsen Mahdawi where he’s being held in Vermont.

He was detained when he showed up for his citizenship interview.

He should be released so he can become a citizen.

— Senator Peter Welch (@SenPeterWelch) April 21, 2025

When I met with Mohsen Mahdawi today, we spoke about how appreciative he is to have the support of so many people in Vermont.

He said one of the reasons he wanted to become a citizen was because of his belief in American democracy.

He hopes that justice will prevail in his… pic.twitter.com/1bEz9kND3E

— Senator Peter Welch (@SenPeterWelch) April 21, 2025

Federal judge in Vermont to consider request for immediate release of detained Palestinian student Mohsen Mahdawi

A federal judge is scheduled to consider a request on Wednesday to immediately release a Palestinian man who led protests against Israel’s war on Gaza as a student at Columbia University and was arrested during an interview about finalizing his US citizenship.

Mohsen Mahdawi, a legal permanent resident for 10 years, was arrested on 14 April at the US Citizenship and Immigration Services office in Colchester, Vermont, by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents, his lawyers said. He is being detained at the Northwest state correctional facility in St Albans.

Mahdawi’s lawyers say he was detained in retaliation for his speech advocating for Palestinian human rights. “We ask this court to suspend this unlawful retaliation and slow the grave threat to free speech posed by his continued detainment by releasing Mr. Mahdawi on bail,” they ask in a court document filed on Tuesday.

The government also filed a response on Tuesday. US district court filings in Mahdawi’s case, with the exception of judicial orders, are not publicly available online. A representative of Mahdawi and a justice department lawyer did not immediately respond to an emailed Associated Press request for the document on Wednesday morning.

Mahdawi had attended his interview, answered questions and signed a document that he was willing to defend the US constitution and laws of the nation. “It was a trap,” his lawyers said. They said masked Ice agents entered the interview room, shackled Mahdawi and put him in a car. A judge later issued an order barring the government from removing him from the state or country.

Mahdawi is still scheduled for a hearing date in immigration court in Louisiana on 1 May, his attorneys said. His notice to appear says he is removable under the Immigration and Nationality Act because the secretary of state has determined his presence and activities “would have serious adverse foreign policy consequences and would compromise a compelling US foreign policy interest”.

Last month, secretary of state Marco Rubio said the state department was revoking visas held by visitors who were acting counter to national interests, including some who protested Israel’s war on Gaza and those who face criminal charges.

According to the court filing, Mahdawi was born in a refugee camp in the West Bank and moved to the US in 2014. He recently completed coursework at Columbia and was expected to graduate in May before beginning a master’s degree program there in the fall.

As a student, Mahdawi was an outspoken critic of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and organized campus protests until March 2024.

Fears grow that Signal leaks make Pete Hegseth top espionage target

Ben Makuch

Ben Makuch

As more develops about the US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, and his repeated disclosures of sensitive military intelligence in unsecured Signal group chats, there are growing concerns his behavior has weakened the Pentagon in the eyes of its foreign adversaries and made him and his entourage a top espionage target.

Pete Hegseth
Pete Hegseth texted highly sensitive information on active strikes in Yemen in Signal group chats. Photograph: Ken Cedeno/Reuters

Allies, already concerned by Donald Trump’s aggressive tariffs, have also begun to see the US as an intelligence-sharing liability. There are fears that the increasing firings and leak inquiries in Hegseth’s orbit, along with his inability to manage these internal crises, exposes the entire global US war footing – especially, if a geopolitical and external crisis comes across his desk.

“[What if] a foreign entity, whether it be a state actor or non-state actor, is able to intercept the movements of troops or department personnel, or something like that, capture them and hold them to ransom,” said Kristofer Goldsmith, an Iraq war veteran and CEO at Task Force Butler. “That kind of thing could very easily happen.”

Former officials serving in national security positions under Joe Biden’s administration also told the Guardian on background that the situation is perilous and that Hegseth has endangered the secrets of the defense department and the White House. One person said Russian and Chinese spies were no doubt directly targeting susceptible people in Hegseth’s inner circle.

Goldsmith, a threat intelligence expert, said there were many scenarios wherein a foreign government could gain access to those chats, without the need to directly compromise Hegseth’s devices.

“Pete Hegseth is texting his wife and his wife is posting on Instagram, clicks a link, and gets malware on her phone,” said Goldsmith, describing a hypothetical scenario. “Then the Chinese or the Iranians or the Russians just happen to be like, ‘Oh, shit, we’ve got Mrs Hegseth, [without] even targeting her.’”

To Goldsmith, Hegseth, who came into power on the heels of publicly characterizing the Pentagon as a “woke” shambles after years of ignoring “war fighters”, has already undermined the overall power of the US military in his months-long reign.

These kinds of leaks, anticipating troop movements, anticipating attacks – those can put our adversaries in position to intercept pilots or convoys or ships, which could create an international incident. It could mean a nuclear or a biological or a chemical crisis of some kind.

My colleagues Dan Sabbagh and Pjotr Sauer have more on Marco Rubio’s abrupt cancelation of his trip to London to discuss ending Russia’s war in Ukraine and the subsequent downgrading of the talks.

Ministerial-level Ukraine peace talks that were due to take place in London on Wednesday have been postponed at the last minute amid speculation that Russia is willing to change its position and after the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, said he could not attend.

The UK Foreign Office indicated that ministerial-level meetings would be replaced by discussions at an official level – though initial public comments from the Kremlin suggested Moscow still opposed Nato countries sending peacekeepers to Ukraine.

The late downgrade came after reports apparently from Russia and the US suggesting the two countries had made progress in separate bilateral peace discussions between the White House and Kremlin.

Leaks to the Financial Times and other media indicate that Russia is willing to abandon its territorial claims to three Ukrainian regions it only partly occupies after three years of fighting in return for the US formally recognising the annexation of Crimea as part of a ceasefire agreement.

At present neither Russia nor the US has gone on the record to confirm the reports, though on Monday the US president, Donald Trump, said he would be providing “full detail” on the peace proposals “over the next three days”.

But a source familiar with Moscow’s thinking confirmed to the Guardian that Vladimir Putin had offered to freeze the conflict in Ukraine along the current frontlines during recent talks with Steve Witkoff, Trump’s Middle East envoy.

However, the source cautioned that it remained unclear what other demands Putin might present – and cautioned that the apparent concession could be a tactic to draw Trump into accepting broader Russian terms.

Talks between the US, Ukraine and European officials to discuss ending Russia’s war in Ukraine faltered on Wednesday as US secretary of state Marco Rubio abruptly cancelled his trip to London and negotiations were downgraded, reports Reuters.

Rubio’s no show prompted a broader meeting of foreign ministers from Ukraine, the UK, France and Germany to be cancelled, although talks continued at a lower level. The US would now be represented by Ukraine envoy Gen Keith Kellogg.

The downgrading of the talks comes at a critical time, just days after president Donald Trump warned that Washington could walk away if there was no progress on a deal soon. Trump raised the pressure on Sunday when he said he hoped Moscow and Kyiv would make a deal this week to end the three-year war.

According to Reuters, a source close to the discussions said the downgrading of the trip came after Ukraine drafted a paper for the Europeans on Tuesday, in which it said there would be no discussions on territorial issues until “a full and unconditional ceasefire”.

The source told Reuters that the apparent US nervousness could indicate that the Ukrainian position did not align with what Washington’s representatives had agreed so far with the Russians.

Rubio spoke to the UK foreign secretary, David Lammy, late on Tuesday and said he looked forward to rescheduling his trip in the coming months after Wednesday’s “technical meetings”.

Speaking on his arrival in London with the foreign and defense ministers, Ukrainian presidential adviser Andriy Yermak said the talks would focus on ways to achieve a full and unconditional ceasefire as a first step to peace. “Despite everything, we will work for peace,” he said on social media.

The meeting is a follow-up to a similar session in Paris last week where US, Ukrainian and European officials discussed ways to move forward and narrow positions. During those talks, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff presented a paper to the participants outlining proposals in which Ukraine in particular, but also Russia, would need to make concessions, according to three diplomats aware of the talks, Reuters reports.

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