Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Liberal Legal Group Positions Itself as a Top Trump Administration Foe
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 5 months ago on
November 14, 2024

A student group run by the ACLU on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 25, 2024. Groups that used lawsuits and protests to stymie the first Trump administration will face longer odds this time — courts are more conservative, and patrons are tired. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Democracy Forward, a liberal-leaning legal organization that frequently battled the first Trump administration in court, on Thursday unveiled a large-scale new effort aimed at thwarting President-elect Donald Trump’s second-term agenda from his first day in office.

More than 800 lawyers at 280 organizations have begun developing cases and workshopping specific challenges to what the group has identified as 600 “priority legal threats” — potential regulations, laws and other administrative actions that could require a legal response, its leaders said. The project, called Democracy 2025, aims to be a hub of opposition to the new Trump administration.

Unlike in 2017, when Democratic lawyers were unprepared for the onslaught of conservative policies, the intent is to be ready to unleash a flurry of lawsuits immediately.

“We’re leveling up and lawyering up,” said Skye Perryman, the CEO of the organization. “This wasn’t something that just everybody woke up the day after the election and started to plan.”

Democracy Forward has spent the last two years working to identify the possible actions the new Trump administration could take on issues Democrats see as key priorities to defend, the group’s leaders said, using as a blueprint Trump’s first-term actions, his campaign promises and plans released by his allies, including the Heritage Foundation and its Project 2025 agenda.

Issues Include Abortion Rights, Climate

Those issues include abortion rights, health care, climate, union protections, environmental protections and immigration. But the group has also given particular weight to Trump’s promises to weaponize the systems of government, particularly the Justice Department, against those he sees as foes, along with his vows to dismantle federal agencies and fire thousands of government workers.

The flotilla of lawyers is preparing to challenge new regulations released by the Trump administration, even beginning the process of recruiting potential plaintiffs who would have legal standing in court. But they’re also exploring ways to take over the defense of Biden administration policies mired in litigation, such as student debt relief and women’s health protections, that are currently being defended by the Justice Department. A new Trump administration would be unlikely to continue that defense.

How the effort fits into a broader constellation of Democratic Party leaders, advocacy groups and others developing plans to push back against the Trump administration remains unclear.

Democracy Forward has deep ties to a number of prominent party strategists and lists Marc Elias, a powerful election lawyer, and Ron Klain, President Joe Biden’s former White House chief of staff, as members of its board.

The group spent much of the first Trump administration challenging policies like Republican attempts to roll back the health care law and impose new restrictions on immigration. During the Biden administration, it provided legal support for Democratic efforts to protect emergency abortion care, uphold the ability of Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug pricing and regulate e-cigarettes.

The coalition has built a multimillion-dollar war chest for its new focus. Its partners include a broad swath of organizations, including unions, immigration advocacy organizations and groups working on abortion rights, civil rights and consumer protection. The group’s legal efforts will be paired with a website designed to showcase its work for the public and to encourage more lawyers, experts and civilians to join its cases.

“This is still a huge uphill battle, and it’s going to take everybody doing their part,” Perryman said. “It’s not just lawyers. It’s going to take institutions willing to stand up against extremism.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Lisa Lerer/Eric Lee
c. 2024 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Madera Vehicle Burglary Leads to Arrests, Gang Charges for Juveniles

DON'T MISS

Why Texas Is Ahead of California on Bilingual Education

DON'T MISS

US Universities Help Foreign Students Weather Trump Deportations

DON'T MISS

Alphabet Says Waymo May Offer Robotaxis for Personal Ownership in Future

DON'T MISS

US Pharma Tariffs Would Raise US Drug Costs by $51 Billion Annually, Report Finds

DON'T MISS

Beware of Scammers Saying You Won the Publishers Clearing House Drawing

DON'T MISS

Abundance Meets Resistance: Are CA Dems Finally Ready to Go All In on Building Housing?

DON'T MISS

Less Than Half of Californians Think K-12 Schools Are on the Right Track: Poll

DON'T MISS

Yastrzemski and Chapman Homers Help Giants Rally Past the Brewers

DON'T MISS

Fresno City Council Finally Passes a Tough Smoke Shop Ordinance

UP NEXT

Why Texas Is Ahead of California on Bilingual Education

UP NEXT

US Universities Help Foreign Students Weather Trump Deportations

UP NEXT

Alphabet Says Waymo May Offer Robotaxis for Personal Ownership in Future

UP NEXT

US Pharma Tariffs Would Raise US Drug Costs by $51 Billion Annually, Report Finds

UP NEXT

Beware of Scammers Saying You Won the Publishers Clearing House Drawing

UP NEXT

Abundance Meets Resistance: Are CA Dems Finally Ready to Go All In on Building Housing?

UP NEXT

Less Than Half of Californians Think K-12 Schools Are on the Right Track: Poll

UP NEXT

Yastrzemski and Chapman Homers Help Giants Rally Past the Brewers

UP NEXT

Fresno City Council Finally Passes a Tough Smoke Shop Ordinance

UP NEXT

Fresno Unified Trustee Wittrup Says District Had Stronger Candidates Than Misty Her

Alphabet Says Waymo May Offer Robotaxis for Personal Ownership in Future

48 minutes ago

US Pharma Tariffs Would Raise US Drug Costs by $51 Billion Annually, Report Finds

51 minutes ago

Beware of Scammers Saying You Won the Publishers Clearing House Drawing

1 hour ago

Abundance Meets Resistance: Are CA Dems Finally Ready to Go All In on Building Housing?

1 hour ago

Less Than Half of Californians Think K-12 Schools Are on the Right Track: Poll

1 hour ago

Yastrzemski and Chapman Homers Help Giants Rally Past the Brewers

15 hours ago

Fresno City Council Finally Passes a Tough Smoke Shop Ordinance

16 hours ago

Fresno Unified Trustee Wittrup Says District Had Stronger Candidates Than Misty Her

17 hours ago

Trump Poised to Offer Saudi Arabia Over $100 Billion Arms Package, Sources Say

18 hours ago

Lights, Camera, Board Vote: Fresno Unified’s Carefully Choreographed Production

18 hours ago

Madera Vehicle Burglary Leads to Arrests, Gang Charges for Juveniles

Madera police arrested two juveniles Friday in connection with an in-progress vehicle burglary near Chablis and Merlot avenues, the Madera P...

14 minutes ago

A pedestrian was killed in a traffic collision early Monday morning in Madera, and police are asking for witnesses to come forward.
14 minutes ago

Madera Vehicle Burglary Leads to Arrests, Gang Charges for Juveniles

26 minutes ago

Why Texas Is Ahead of California on Bilingual Education

Demonstrators hold a banner during a "Stand Up for Internationals" rally on the campus of Berkeley University in Berkeley, California, U.S., April 17, 2025. (REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo)
45 minutes ago

US Universities Help Foreign Students Weather Trump Deportations

48 minutes ago

Alphabet Says Waymo May Offer Robotaxis for Personal Ownership in Future

U.S. dollar banknote and medicines are seen in this illustration taken, June 27, 2024. (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration//File Photo)
51 minutes ago

US Pharma Tariffs Would Raise US Drug Costs by $51 Billion Annually, Report Finds

1 hour ago

Beware of Scammers Saying You Won the Publishers Clearing House Drawing

1 hour ago

Abundance Meets Resistance: Are CA Dems Finally Ready to Go All In on Building Housing?

1 hour ago

Less Than Half of Californians Think K-12 Schools Are on the Right Track: Poll

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend