Two Law Firms That Settled with Trump
Are Asked to Help on Trade Deals
Boris
Epshteyn, a personal lawyer for President Trump, connected two firms — Kirkland
& Ellis and Skadden Arps — to the Commerce Department.
Summary
·
Key Players: President Trump’s personal lawyer, Boris
Epshteyn, connected law firms Kirkland & Ellis and Skadden Arps to the Commerce
Department.
·
Background: These firms had previously reached deals
with Trump to avoid executive orders, agreeing to provide pro bono legal work for
causes he supports.
·
New Developments:
o
Epshteyn
facilitated their involvement in government trade negotiations.
o
Kirkland
& Ellis worked on trade deals with Japan and South Korea announced in July.
o
Skadden
Arps’ involvement remains unclear.
·
Controversy:
o
Trump
claimed the pro bono agreements extended to supporting his administration and potentially
representing him personally.
o
Critics
argue the deals are unconstitutional and politically coercive.
o
Internal
divisions have emerged within firms over cooperating with the administration.
·
Official
Responses:
o
The White
House emphasized ending D.E.I. (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) in major law firms.
o
The Commerce
Department praised the involvement of top legal minds but did not name specific
firms.
·
Broader
Impact:
o
Nine firms
pledged nearly $1 billion in pro bono work.
o
Some firms
were pressured due to past representation of Trump’s political opponents.
o
The legal
community has raised concerns about the ethics and legality of these arrangements.
[ABS
News Service/16.08.2025]
Two of
the law firms that reached deals with President Trump this year to avoid punitive
executive orders were connected in recent months with the Commerce Department about
working on trade deals, according to three people briefed on the matter.
The firms,
Kirkland & Ellis and Skadden Arps, were connected to the department by Mr. Trump’s
personal lawyer, Boris Epshteyn, two of the people said.
Mr. Epshteyn,
who does not hold a government position, played a direct role in brokering the initial
deals
between Mr. Trump and the law firms, in which the firms agreed to do pro bono work on causes the president
has championed, like helping veterans, military families and first responders.
His previously
undisclosed efforts connecting the firms with the Commerce Department show how he
is seeking to impose Mr. Trump’s expansive view of the deals, including recruiting
firms to work for the government in advancing the administration’s agenda.
After
Mr. Epshteyn helped connect the firms with the government in recent months, Kirkland
and Ellis went on to work on the trade deals the administration struck with Japan
and South Korea, which were announced in July, according to three of the people.
It is unclear if Skadden Arps has done work for the administration.
Earlier
this year, after the law firms struck deals with Mr. Trump, the president said that
he had a broader understanding of the terms than the firms had let on, saying the
pro bono work included helping the administration on trade deals and could even
be applied to representing him in a personal capacity.
It’s unclear
whether Kirkland & Ellis did the work for free or charged the Commerce Department.
But the revelation of the firm’s work marks the first time that it has been publicly
known that one of the firms that cut a deal with Mr. Trump is now doing work for
the administration.
Representatives
of Kirkland & Ellis and Skadden Arps did not immediately respond to requests
for comment.
When asked
for comment, Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, did not directly address
the latest developments. Instead he said that Mr. Trump
“has radically changed the business of discrimination, including by ending D.E.I.
in Big Law.”
He added:
“Law firms that have for years propelled one-sided justice by providing pro bono
resources to those causes that make our nation more dangerous and less free have
started serving their nation.”
Benno
Kass, the director of public affairs for the Commerce Department, said the agency
and the secretary, Howard Lutnick, “are working with some of America’s top law firms
and legal minds to cement the truly historic trade deals that President Trump negotiated
for the American people.” He did not specify which firms or what work they were
doing.
Mr. Epshteyn
would not provide comment.
Nine firms
reached deals with Mr. Trump to head off executive orders. In total, the firms pledged
nearly a billion dollars in pro bono legal work. At least some of the other firms
are said to have been connected with the administration to do work for the government,
but it’s unclear which firms or what issues they were discussing working on.
None of
the firms have acknowledged any wrongdoing. They were targeted with punitive executive
orders or implicit threats for representing or aiding Mr. Trump’s political foes
or employing people he sees as having used the legal system to come after him.
The deals
have been criticized by many in the legal community as unconstitutional and undemocratic,
and have led to splits inside some of the firms about the wisdom of agreeing to
terms with the White House.