The Columbus Dispatch

Columbus lawyers ponder representi­ng Trump

- Jessica Silver-greenberg, Rachel Abrams and David Enrich

Like many big law firms, Jones Day, whose roots go back to Cleveland in the late 1800s, has prided itself on representi­ng controvers­ial clients.

There was Big Tobacco. There was the bin Laden family. There was even the hated owner of the Cleveland Browns football team as he moved the franchise to Baltimore.

Now Jones Day is the most prominent firm representi­ng President Donald Trump and the Republican Party as they prepare to wage a legal war challengin­g the results of the election. The work is intensifyi­ng concerns inside the firm about the propriety and wisdom of working for Trump, according to lawyers at the firm.

Doing business with Trump – with his history of inflammatory rhetoric, meritless lawsuits and refusal to pay what he owes – has long induced heartburn among lawyers, contractor­s, suppliers and lenders. But the concerns are taking on new urgency as the president seeks to raise doubts about the election results.

Some senior lawyers at Jones Day, one of the country’s largest law firms, are worried that it is advancing arguments that lack evidence and may be helping Trump and his allies undermine the integrity of American elections, according to interviews with nine partners and associates, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect their jobs.

At another large firm, Porter Wright Morris & Arthur, based in Columbus, Ohio, lawyers have held internal meetings to voice similar concerns about their firm’s election-related work for Trump and the Republican Party, according to people at the firm. At least one lawyer quit in protest.

Already, the two firms have filed at least four lawsuits challengin­g aspects of the election in Pennsylvan­ia. The cases are pending.

The latest salvo came on Monday evening, when the Trump campaign filed a suit in federal court in Pennsylvan­ia against the Pennsylvan­ia secretary of state and a number of county election boards. The suit – filed by lawyers at Porter Wright – alleged that there were ‘‘irregulari­ties’’ in voting across the state.

While it is not clear which law firms will be filing the suits, Jones Day has been one of Trump’s most steadfast legal advisers.

As Trump campaigned for president in 2016, a Jones Day partner, Donald Mcgahn, served as his outside lawyer, leading recount fights in critical states. Mcgahn later became Trump’s White House counsel, before returning to Jones Day.

At the time, some senior lawyers at Jones Day objected to working closely for a polarizing presidenti­al candidate, according to three partners at the firm. They grimaced at the sight of Mcgahn standing with Trump onstage after he won the New Hampshire primary in February 2016. A month later, the firm hosted a meeting at its Capitol Hill office with Trump and Republican lawmakers as he sought to win over the party establishm­ent.

The firm’s work for Trump has also garnered it unfavorabl­e public attention. ‘‘Jones Day, Hands Off Our Ballots,’’ read a mural painted on the street outside the law firm’s San Francisco offices late last week.

During the Trump presidency, Jones Day has been involved in some 20 lawsuits involving Trump, his campaign or the Republican Party, and it worked for the Trump campaign on government investigat­ions into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

The work has been lucrative. Since 2015, Jones Day has received more than $20 million in fees from the Trump campaigns, political groups linked to Trump and the Republican National Committee, according to federal records. Jones Day lawyers said that was a small portion of the firm’s overall revenue.

In addition to Mcgahn, a number of other partners at the firm joined the Trump administra­tion. Noel Francisco became Trump’s first solicitor general. Eric Dreiband is an assistant attorney general in the Justice Department.

After the election, as Trump’s reported lead in Pennsylvan­ia was evaporatin­g, Jones Day and Porter Wright petitioned the Supreme Court to segregate all ballots received after Nov. 3. Pennsylvan­ia, they wrote in their brief, ‘‘may well determine the next President of the United States.’’

A prominent Republican lawyer, John M. Gore, is helping to lead the effort at Jones Day. He previously served as an assistant attorney general in Trump’s Justice Department.

On Friday evening, Justice Samuel Alito ordered election officials in Pennsylvan­ia to keep late-arriving ballots separate and not to include them in announced vote tallies. (Pennsylvan­ia’s secretary of state had already given the same guidance.)

Six Jones Day lawyers said that given the small number of late-arriving ballots involved in the litigation, and the fact that they already had been segregated, the main goal of the litigation seemed to be to erode public confidence in the election results.

Jones Day did not respond to a request for comment.

The outcry at Porter Wright, which like Jones Day was founded in the 1800s in Ohio, appears more intense.

In the past week, the firm has filed multiple lawsuits in Pennsylvan­ia, trying to poke holes in the reliabilit­y of the election results on behalf of the Trump campaign and the RNC, among others. Porter Wright has received at least $727,000 in fees this year from the Trump campaign and RNC, according to federal records.

Over the summer, some lawyers at Porter Wright were dismayed to learn that the firm would be representi­ng the Trump campaign in Pennsylvan­ia, according to three current and former employees.

Chief among their concerns: How could lawyers, whose profession is based on the rule of law, represent someone who they felt had frequently tried to flout it? One lawyer said he was concerned that the firm might be asked to try to delay the election. Another said he quit in response to the decision to represent Trump in Pennsylvan­ia.

At two meetings, associates at Porter Wright told the firm’s partners that they objected to the work for the Trump campaign, according to the three current and former employees. They were told that the assignment was limited to the election in Pennsylvan­ia. That assurance struck some attendees as hollow, since the state might decide the election.

Robert J. Tannous, the firm’s managing partner, declined to comment in detail on the work for Trump. He said, ‘‘Porter Wright has a long history of representi­ng candidates, political parties, interest groups and individual­s at the local, state and federal levels on both sides of the aisle, and as a law firm will continue to do so.’’

c.2020 The New York Times Company

Jones Day is the most prominent firm representi­ng President Donald Trump and the Republican Party as they prepare to wage a legal war challengin­g the results of the election.

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