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Reuters

Reuters

US Politics

US Politics

Trump's orders targeting law firms raise constitutional concerns, experts say

Reuters
Summary
Nutrition label

77% Informative

The two firms targeted by the Republican president have represented Trump adversaries.

Legal experts say the manner in which Trump targeted the firms could run afoul of the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment protections against government abridgment of speech and Fifth Amendment guarantee of due process.

Perkins Coie represented the campaign of 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton , who Trump defeated in his first presidential run.

Covington currently represents Jack Smith , who brought criminal charges against Trump in two cases.

Legal scholars say any legal challenge against the orders could be messy and protracted.

Legal scholars said they could not cite other examples of a U.S. president taking official action against a law firm over its representation of a client.

Covington and Perkins Coie are among nearly a dozen major law firms representing clients in lawsuits against the Trump administration.

VR Score

87

Informative language

91

Neutral language

81

Article tone

formal

Language

English

Language complexity

70

Offensive language

possibly offensive

Hate speech

not hateful

Attention-grabbing headline

not detected

Known propaganda techniques

not detected

Time-value

short-lived

External references

no external sources

Source diversity

no sources

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