William S. Consovoy William Consovoy, who has experience arguing before the Supreme Court, represented Trump in recent New York state court cases. Consovoy, 46, works primarily on appellate cases.
Since March 2018, the firm has been representing President Trump as Trump faces a federal lawsuit over his undivested business interests. Consovoy has been acting as the president’s personal lawyer.
Marc A. Scaringi Marc Scaringi, a lawyer in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, is leading the Trump campaign’s legal effort in that state. Scaringi, 51, focuses his practice on business and corporate law and has about 20 years of experience. Scaringi worked on then-Rep. Rick Santorum’s campaign for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania.
Consovoy has been acting as the president’s personal lawyer. On April 5, Consovoy sent a letter to the Treasury Department, arguing that the House Ways and Means Committee has no “legitimate committee purpose” for requesting the president’s income tax returns.
List of White House counselOfficeholderTerm startPresidentEmmet Flood ActingOctober 18, 2018Donald TrumpPat CipolloneDecember 10, 2018Dana RemusJanuary 20, 2021Joe BidenStuart DeleryJuly 202243 more rows
Strawbridge served as a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, Judge Morris Sheppard Arnold of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, and Justice Howard Dana of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine. Previously, Mr. Strawbridge was a partner at two large international law firms.
Roy CohnEducationColumbia University (BA, LLB)OccupationLawyerKnown forJulius and Ethel Rosenberg trial (1951) Joseph McCarthy's chief counsel (1953–1954) Donald Trump's attorney and mentor (1973–1985)Parent(s)Dora Marcus Albert C. Cohn4 more rows
Michael Dean Cohen (born August 25, 1966) is an American disbarred lawyer who served as an attorney for U.S. president Donald Trump from 2006 to 2018.
California Former Attorneys GeneralMatthew Rodriguez2021 – 2021Kamala D. Harris2010 – 2017Edmund G. Brown, Jr.2007 – 2011Bill Lockyer1999 – 2007Daniel E. Lungren1991 – 199929 more rows
William BarrPresidentGeorge H. W. BushPreceded byDonald B. AyerSucceeded byGeorge J. Terwilliger IIIUnited States Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel30 more rows
Consovoy also is defending the president in a separate lawsuit that alleges that Trump is violating the Constitution’s anticorruption ban on presidents receiving payments or gifts — known as emoluments — by doing business with foreign and state governments at his D.C. hotel. That case and a second lawsuit filed by congressional Democrats mark ...
Their subpoena power is not unlimited and must be connected to a “legitimate legislative purpose.”. Trump’s private lawyers are distinct from the White House Counsel’s Office and the Justice Department, which defends the president in his official capacity. Story continues below advertisement.
From law school, he went to work for Wiley Rein, a Washington law firm with deep Republican ties.
Andrew Consovoy had his own run-in with race and politics in the fall of 1981 as a close aide to the Republican candidate for governor of New Jersey, Thomas H. Kean. Mr. Kean won narrowly, and the Democrats accused his campaign of creating a “ballot security task force” to intimidate minority voters at the polls.
While he was at the parole board, Andrew Consovoy got his son — who had graduated from Monmouth University but was still working in an administrative role for the school basketball team — an entry-level job with the Division of Parole, then a separate agency, monitoring parolees with drug problems.
Some months later, William Consovoy told his father that he had been accepted to law school at George Mason, in Arlington, Va. “I had no clue,” his father said. “I was shocked. I was thrilled.”. The younger Consovoy said he had chosen George Mason largely to save money by living with relatives nearby.
But the Democrats’ leading electoral lawyer, Marc Elias, likened Shelby to Citizens United, the Supreme Court decision that amplified the power of wealthy donors. “What Citizens United meant to people is that big money in politics is OK,” he said.
Katherine Frey/The Washington Post, via Getty Images. He came to see Justice Thomas , the most idiosyncratic and uncompromising member of the Supreme Court, “as my hero,” he once wrote, and is the only George Mason law school alumnus to have clerked at the high court.
The Kean campaign claimed voter fraud, and the Republican governor of Illinois, Jim Thompson, later sent two Chicago police officers to help New Jersey Republicans advance their fraud claims, according to Mr. Consovoy, who worked with them.
William Consovoy, who has experience arguing before the Supreme Court, represented Trump in recent New York state court cases.
Clark was deputy national political director for Trump’s 2016 campaign, then became director of the Office of Public Liaison in the White House after the New York developer was elected president.
Sekulow founded the European Centre for Law and Justice based in Strasbourg, France, the seat of the European Court of Human Rights. He opened ECLJ offices in France, Russia, Zimbabwe, Pakistan, and Israel.
After Santorum won in 1994, Scaringi became his legislative correspondent in Washington. Scaringi returned to Pennsylvania to work for Mike Fisher’s campaign for state attorney general, and served as an executive assistant to Fisher as attorney general from 1997 to 2001.
Sekulow, 64, is chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice, a conservative legal group.
Bondi gained national prominence while Florida’s attorney general as one of the key Republican state attorneys general who sued to overturn the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. The Supreme Court upheld the law in 2012.
Pam Bondi is a former two-term Florida attorney general, elected in 2010 and again in 2014. Bondi, 55, already familiar to viewers of Fox News Channel, became a familiar figure early in 2020 as one of Trump’s lawyers during his Senate impeachment trial. She made strong arguments for the president on the Senate floor, ...
Another lawyer, William Consovoy, the litigator who filed the supreme court challenge on behalf of the Trump campaign, helped to bankroll a high-profile Federalist Society dinner in Kavanaugh’s honour in 2019.
Consovoy has been involved in several high-profile disputes involving the Trump administration as well as the president personally . He and his firm have, according to a recent New York Times profile, argued against affirmative action at Harvard and for a near-ban on abortion in the state of Georgia. He has also argued on Trump’s behalf in calls to keep the president’s tax records private. He has separately argued that Trump could not be prosecuted while in office.
The activists accused Consovoy and others of “rebuilding” Kavanaugh’s image through their support of the Federalist Society. At the time, Demand Justice said it was seeking to hold accountable those individuals who had helped to rehabilitate a “sexual predator”, a reference to allegations that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted a classmate when he was in high school. Kavanaugh denied the assault occurred.
Demand Justice, the progressive activist group, targeted Consovoy’s firm and other top law firms in a 2019 ad campaign which pointed to their sponsorship of the Federalist Society’s black tie annual dinner, in which Kavanaugh was given a standing ovation.
Activist Chris Kang, who serves as chief counsel for Demand Justice, a progressive group that has said it is trying to restore federal courts’ “legitimacy”, said the relationships between Consovoy, Clark and Kavanaugh, were “alarming”.
Justin Clark, a senior lawyer for Donald Trump’s campaign, helped shepherd Kavanaugh’s controversial 2018 confirmation through the Senate in his previous role as White House congressional liaison.
Consovoy and Clark did not respond to a request for comment. The Federalist Society did not respond to a request for comment.