By Mike Scarcella
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A U.S. judge blocked provisions of President Donald Trump’s order targeting attorneys at Perkins Coie on Wednesday, saying the legal profession was “watching in horror” at what the law firm was experiencing.
U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell said Perkins Coie was likely to ultimately prevail in court with its challenge of Trump’s executive order, which was prompted by the firm’s diversity, equity and inclusion policies and its prior work for Trump’s political opponent Hillary Clinton.
“I am sure many in the legal profession are watching in horror about what Perkins Coie is going through here,” she said at a court hearing in Washington.
The judge granted Perkins Coie’s request for a temporary restraining order against an executive order that sought to prevent the firm from doing business with federal contractors and to deny its lawyers access to government officials and buildings.
Trump’s executive order also suspended Perkins Coie lawyers’ security clearances, but the law firm did not raise that issue in its request for a temporary restraining order.
The executive order “is like a tsunami waiting to hit the firm,” Perkins Coie’s lawyer Dane Butswinkas told Howell at Wednesday’s hearing. “It truly is life-threatening. It will spell the end of the law firm.”
Perkins Coie in a statement called Howell’s ruling “an important first step in ensuring this unconstitutional Executive Order is never enforced.”
Neither the White House nor the Department of Justice responded to requests for comment.
A lawyer for the U.S. Justice Department, Chad Mizelle, argued at the hearing that the president has broad power to determine that some individuals and companies cannot be trusted with the country’s secrets.
The lawsuit marked an escalation of a growing feud between Trump and law firms that he has accused of being aligned against his administration’s interests.
Perkins Coie, founded in Seattle, sued Trump’s administration on Tuesday, arguing his executive order violated the firm’s rights under the U.S. Constitution, including protections for free speech, free association and due process.
According to the lawsuit, at least seven Perkins Coie clients, including a major government contractor, have already withdrawn legal work because of Trump’s order or were considering doing so, costing the firm “significant revenue.”
Government employees have discouraged or blocked Perkins Coie attorneys from attending meetings due to the order, the lawsuit said.
Trump in February issued another order targeting the law firm Covington & Burling, though his restrictions were not as broad as those against Perkins Coie.
Covington currently represents Jack Smith, the special counsel appointed during Democratic former President Joe Biden’s administration who brought criminal charges against Trump in two cases.
Perkins Coie and Covington are among more than a dozen prominent law firms representing clients in lawsuits challenging Trump administration policies and priorities, including its efforts to curtail immigration, agency grants and transgender rights.
Trump’s order against Perkins Coie criticized the firm over its internal workforce diversity and inclusion policies and its work for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. Clinton was the Democratic candidate who lost to the Republican Trump in the 2016 election that first put him in office.
“We have a lot of law firms that we’re going to be going after, because they were very dishonest people,” Trump told the Fox News “Sunday Morning Futures” program on Sunday.
(Reporting by Mike Scarcella in Washington; Editing by David Bario, Will Dunham and Howard Goller)