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Inside Trump’s Campaign Against Law Firms

Scholars warn the moves represent an ‘across the board’ attack on the independence of the legal system.

Happy Wednesday! We’re happy to announce that we have renamed every Dispatch Slack channel “Houthis PC Small Group.” 👊🔥🇺🇸

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Ukraine and Russia have agreed to halt fighting in the Black Sea, the Trump administration announced Tuesday. According to the White House, the U.S.-brokered pair of deals—which followed three days of negotiations in Saudi Arabia—would “ensure safe navigation, eliminate the use of force, and prevent the use of commercial vessels for military purposes in the Black Sea.” However, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that Moscow’s participation in the agreement would be contingent on the lifting of Western sanctions on Russian banks and companies involved in exporting agricultural products. Asked by a reporter whether the U.S. plans to heed the Russian demand, President Donald Trump responded: “There are five or six conditions. We are looking at all of them.” Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said it was “too early to say that it will work.” 
  • Hundreds of people took to the streets of the northern Gazan city of Beit Lahia on Tuesday to demand an end to Hamas’ rule, in what appeared to be the largest Palestinian demonstration against the terrorist group since its attack on Israel on October 7, 2023. The protests—which included chants of “Hamas out,” “Hamas terrorists,” and “Yes to peace, no to the ongoing war”—followed the collapse of a U.S.-brokered ceasefire and hostage deal last Tuesday. Hamas has long suppressed internal dissent, and growing signs of domestic opposition to the terrorist group likely signal its weakness following more than a year of fighting with Israel.
  • A Tokyo district court on Tuesday ordered the closure of the Japanese branch of the controversial Unification Church following a government investigation into the organization’s alleged practices of manipulating members—known as “Moonies”—into making financially ruinous donations. The ruling, which the church can appeal, would strip it of its tax-exempt status and mandate that it liquidate its assets, though it wouldn’t bar worshippers from practicing in Japan. The religious sect founded by Sun Myung Moon came under heightened scrutiny after the 2022 assassination of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose killer blamed the church for bankrupting his family. 
  • A Monday airstrike by the Sudanese Armed Forces on a market in the country’s western Darfur region killed hundreds of people, according to the Emergency Lawyers Group, an independent war monitor. A military spokesman on Tuesday denied claims that Sudan’s army had targeted civilians, though video footage and satellite imagery corroborated the monitor’s claim that the strike had hit a densely populated commercial area. The civil war between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has left at least 28,000 people dead and displaced 11 million others since April 2023. 
  • Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe on Tuesday denied sharing classified information in a group chat between several top national security officials earlier this month. In the chat—outlined by Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg, who was accidentally included in the text thread—Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reportedly shared sensitive information about forthcoming U.S. airstrikes targeting the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen. Appearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday, Ratcliffe told senators that his communications did not break any laws on the sharing of sensitive government information. Gabbard, meanwhile, claimed that “no classified material” had been transmitted in the chat, which was conducted over the commercial messaging app Signal.
  • President Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order seeking to significantly reform U.S. elections, including requiring all voters to show proof of citizenship, mandating that all ballots be received by Election Day, and conditioning federal funding on state compliance with the rules. Many election law experts immediately cast doubt on Trump’s legal authority to enact many of the order’s components, including directing the Election Assistance Commission, an independent agency, to add the proof of citizenship requirement to national voter registration forms. 
  • The Senate voted 54-47 on Tuesday to confirm Dr. Jay Bhattacharya as director of the National Institutes of Health. Meanwhile, the upper chamber voted 56-44 to confirm Dr. Marty Makary, a Johns Hopkins University surgeon and researcher, as head of the Food and Drug Administration. Both men will be charged with overseeing President Trump’s efforts to cut spending at the health agencies.
  • The Senate voted 74-25 on Tuesday to confirm Michael Kratsios, President Trump’s chief technology officer during his first term, to lead the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy. Through the position, Kratsios will be tasked with shaping the U.S. approach to artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and other emerging technologies. 

Trump Takes Aim at Lawyers

President Trump Attends Ambassador Meeting In White House Cabinet Room
President Donald Trump holds an executive order he signed on March 25, 2025 in Washington, D.C.. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump delivered a speech in the Great Hall of the Justice Department. But he did not laud the impartial application of the law, as past presidents have done in the staid space. Instead, he took the opportunity to signal some score-settling against the lawyers involved in legal challenges against him. 

“They spied on my campaign; launched one hoax and disinformation operation after another; broke the law on a colossal scale; persecuted my family, staff, and supporters; raided my home, Mar-a-Lago; and did everything within their power to prevent me from becoming the president of the United States,” Trump said, referencing his past campaigns and some of the criminal and civil cases brought against him. He went on to single out several lawyers allegedly involved in the scheme by name, including “radicals like Marc Elias, Mark Pomerantz” and “scum” like “Andrew Weissmann, deranged Jack Smith.” 

As of Tuesday, each of those attorneys has something else in common: They all have current or former ties to law firms now in Trump’s crosshairs. Over the last month, Trump has threatened four law firms in what appears to be a broader campaign of intimidation directed at ...


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Today’s Must-Read

The cool-ification of the nation’s capital is a symptom of America’s broader urban revival and is indicative of shifting demographics and changing expectations among its young and affluent residents. Hip coffee shops, Michelin quality dining, and cocktails that don’t suck are no longer a pipe dream for Hill staffers wondering why they didn’t just take that job in New York—they’re an everpresence, and an expectation. But high-end craft cocktail bars like Press Club couldn’t have existed two decades ago. Even in the recent past, you would have struggled to find a bartender in the city who knew how to make the most basic classic cocktail, let alone a bar that squeezed fresh citrus or knew to refrigerate its vermouth. But today, the city’s cocktail bars are packed with well-informed patrons clamoring to drop $20 on everything from a classic Manhattan to avant-garde concoctions derived from laboratory centrifuges and rotary evaporators.

Toeing the Company Line

White House Deputy Chief Of Staff Stephen Miller Speaks To Reporters

White House Adviser Makes Misleading Accusation About District Court Judges

Peter Gattuso /

Stephen Miller tweeted that district court judges ‘unilaterally dictate the policies of the entire executive branch.’

whittington

Judicial Impeachments Should Be a Last Resort

Keith E. Whittington /

Trump’s push to remove judges who rule against him undermines the rule of law.

Donald Trump Delivers Joint Address To Congress

Democrats Need to Dig Deep

Jeremiah Johnson /

The party needs to rethink its policies, not its messaging.

Congress Meets To Work On Budget Reconciliation Process

GOP Considering Its Options in Moving Against Judges

Charles Hilu /

Bills introduced in the House and Senate aim to limit injunctive relief.

Judge James Boasberg

Instead of Impeaching Judges, Congress Could Just Do Its Job

Jonah Goldberg /

If the judiciary is overplaying its role, that’s only because lawmakers have abdicated theirs.

REMNANT SITE THUMB (2)

Contempt for Congress

Jonah Goldberg /

Be the change you wish to see.

Worth Your Time

  • Why are incumbents worldwide, on the left and right, so deeply unpopular? In the Atlantic, Moisés Naím argued it’s because citizens now expect governments to do far more than they can actually deliver on. “Public sectors the world over may be structurally unable to fulfill voters’ expectations, not necessarily because government-service provision is bad (though in many cases it is bad) but because the growth of expectations could well have escaped the capacities of governments to keep up,” he wrote. “Leaders of all stripes may be scrambling to provide services that their constituents will consider even adequate, let alone good. That the anti-incumbent mood will turn on the populists it helped get elected is reasonable to expect. The world of gate-kept media that filters extreme views and moderates discontent is gone for good. Everybody-to-everybody communications are a permanent feature of modern societies. And although public-sector reforms could make some difference on the margin to help bureaucracies do their jobs better, governments will not likely overcome runaway expectations driven by the new information age.”
  • Writing for his Substack, Slow Boring, Matt Yglesias highlighted persistent problems with the Democratic strategy on immigration—and outlined recommendations for how to fix them. “Unfortunately for Democrats, the advocacy groups they outsourced their immigration policy thinking to are very anchored in the community of immigration lawyers and in broad progressive skepticism of law enforcement. It’s not just that those voices can push fairly extreme positions, it’s that they don’t really have a coherent account of why immigration is good that is persuasive to most American voters,” he wrote. “Politicians still need to have policy ideas they can explain when directly asked and a blueprint for how to govern the country. Shining a light on the most egregious instances of Trump’s cruelty in enforcement is important, but if that’s all Democrats do, they’ll end up with an immigration policy that amounts to ‘do less enforcement,’ which doesn’t really work. We need to start with the premise that economic growth is good, that good immigration policy can contribute to economic growth if approached with an empirical spirit rather than cultural panic, and come up with ideas that facilitate that.”

Presented Without Comment

Politico: [Democratic Rep.] Jasmine Crockett Called Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, Who Uses a Wheelchair, ‘Governor Hot Wheels’

Reached in the halls of the Capitol, Crockett told POLITICO her statement “speaks for itself.”

But in a post on X several hours later, Crockett said she wasn’t thinking about the governor’s condition, but “about the planes, trains, and automobiles he used to transfer migrants into communities led by Black mayors, deliberately stoking tension and fear among the most vulnerable.”

In the Zeitgeist

The countdown to the second season of Andor, a Star Wars spinoff series, continues. To hold us over until the April 22 release date, Disney+ just dropped a new trailer.

Charlotte Lawson is the editor of The Morning Dispatch, currently based in southern Florida. Prior to joining the company in 2020, she studied history and global security at the University of Virginia. When Charlotte is not keeping up with foreign policy and world affairs, she is probably trying to hone her photography skills.
Grayson Logue is a staff writer for The Dispatch and is based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prior to joining the company in 2023, he worked in political risk consulting, helping advise Fortune 50 companies. He was also an assistant editor at Providence Magazine and is a graduate student at the University of Edinburgh, pursuing a Master’s degree in history. When Grayson is not writing pieces for the website, he is probably working hard to reduce the number of balls he loses on the golf course.
James P. Sutton is a Morning Dispatch Reporter, based in Washington D.C. Prior to joining the company in 2024, he most recently graduated from University of Oxford with a Master's degree in history. He has also taught high school history in suburban Philadelphia, and interned at National Review and the Foreign Policy Research Institute. When not writing for The Morning Dispatch, he is probably playing racquet sports, reading a history book, or rooting for Bay Area sports teams.

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