Friday, April 25, 2025. Annette’s Roundup for Democracy.
Today’s Summary of Fighting Back.
Democrats thinking out-of-the-box.
A Senator from Connecticut and a Representative from Florida are in North Carolina.
North Carolina Republican Richard Hudson, pictured below, is nowhere to be found—so Senator Chris Murphy and Congressman Maxwell Alejandro Frost are hosting a town hall in his district. pic.twitter.com/gKKGk0TMiY
— S Brown (@SusieQ6shooter) April 24, 2025
Over 1,000 people here with us in the small rural town of Saxapahaw, North Carolina. @ChrisMurphyCT pic.twitter.com/wSeePhOqGq
— Maxwell Alejandro Frost (@MaxwellFrostFL) April 25, 2025
Another Senator and another Representative keep flying.
These Bernie and AOC rallies during a non-election year is crazy! America is waking up to the very bad choice it made for president. pic.twitter.com/1EFDYkgxYG
— Alex Cole (@acnewsitics) April 15, 2025

A former Senator from PA is holding a Town Hall in PA.
Huge crowd in Lansdale last night. People ask why we do these. Democracy must be seen to be believed now. Trump wants people to see only him, and slowly stop believing. Nope. Everyone deserves to be listened to and told the truth. That’s America, that’s why we do town halls pic.twitter.com/ekzcZ9eJ3a
— Conor Lamb (@ConorLambPA) April 24, 2025
A Democratic candidate for Congress is holding a Town Hall.
Virginia Foxx hasn't held a town hall in 15 years, so I'm stepping up and holding them in every corner of this district — starting with Greensboro on May 8 and Boone on May 12.
— Chuck Hubbard (@ChuckHubbardNC) April 23, 2025
📍 May 8: Greensboro Public Library at 5:30pm
📍 May 12: Boone Town Hall at 5:30pm
Shareholders fighting back.

Young lawyers fighting back.
Law Students Signing Pledge To Refuse Offers From Collaborating Biglaw
As more Biglaw firms sell out their integrity in exchange for relief from illegal retaliation from the Trump administration, lawyers and clientsare distancing themselves from the settling firms. Some law students have already walked away from recruiting efforts by these firms.
A pledge circulating among law schools gathers signatures from students willing to go on record that they won’t be joining firms that give in to the administration or those that try to squelch fully legal diversity initiatives just because the White House would like to pretend they aren’t.
Yesterday, the People’s Parity Project publicly announced a Law Student Firm Pledge that started among law school chapters of the organization, though signing on is certainly open to all law students.
Law students from People’s Parity Project chapters across the country have come together to call the legal profession to its greater ideals. From UCLA to Harvard, and Georgia State to the University of Chicago, students are calling for a more ethical legal profession. And the law students are not only pushing for an affirmation of basic legal principles, but for affirmative actions by firms to ensure the rule of law, such as firms joining amicus briefs in litigation against unconstitutional targeting of firms for specific legal stances or efforts to suborn firms into a fascist project to eliminate criticism of the regime.
In addition to “refus[ing] to work for any firm that gives in to Trump administration demands regarding diversity, equity, and inclusion or the types of cases handled by the firm,” the pledge adds four specific planks that firms need to meet:
Joining an amicus brief in opposition to Trump’s executive orders targeting law firms and lawyers,
Publicly refusing to audit or alter hiring practices that recognize the structural disadvantages that continue to prevent historically marginalized groups from entering the legal profession,
Publicly refusing to release personal information about firm employees or take any adverse action against employees in response to administration threats, and
Publicly committing to pro bono representation of individuals and groups targeted by the Trump administration.
So far, the Order of the Obsequious affirmatively giving in to Trump remains limited, but these additional asks implicate a lot more of Biglaw right now. That said, these are critical demands because standing up to the administration is almost as important as not caving. Indeed, settling firms have suggested that the lack of support from law firms keeping their heads down contributed to the decision to cave because the rest of the market tried to use the prospect of escaping Trump’s retribution as a partner poaching overture. Personally, I don’t buy it as an excuse… those same firms are now pitching “don’t you want to get out from under this stigma” to poach business so it was a fool’s gambit to believe signing on with Trump would slow down lateral recruiting.
But that doesn’t diminish the importance of encouraging a supportive Biglaw culture. Amicus briefs are often useless — if not unethical — but the cases challenging Trump’s attack on law firms are exactly where they’re valuable. Third parties explaining how the case impacts them uniquely, showing the widespread chaos that could arise if the case spins out beyond the caption. Hopefully, law students demonstrating that they aren’t going to let firms try to hide from this moment can incentivize Biglaw to do what all the other segments of the legal profession are doing and finally step up for their peer firms.
These students see themselves as the future of the legal profession and are not interested in facilitating authoritarian policies in the name of ideological diversity. They are committed to serving the people of this country, whether that places them in opposition to Trump’s government or not.
That last part is important. There are a lot of legal luminaries on the right willing to stand up to this administration even if they wouldn’t necessarily be in opposition to many Republican goals. Opposing the administration’s authoritarian efforts just isn’t a partisan issue at this point.
The form to sign is available here (Above the Law)
Universities fighting back.

Harvard's president Alan Garber: “The school will not compromise on its rights with the Trump administration.”
— A (@bluhue123) April 24, 2025
Raise your hand ✋ if you stand with Alan Garber pic.twitter.com/XtGZgHrGKb
And the polls keep tumblin’ down.
Fox. Yes. Fox.

Trump was squealing.
Then came this one.
Reuters


Tomorrow is Pope Francis’ funeral.
Thousands gathered in St. Peter's Square as Pope Francis's remains were brought to rest for three days of viewing by the public. The pontiff, who died Monday at age 88, will be celebrated this Saturday in an elaborate funeral mass.@MalcolmBrabant reports. pic.twitter.com/IQ2N0RE1st
— PBS News (@NewsHour) April 23, 2025

_______________________________________
See you on Tuesday, unless there is news I can’t resist sharing. In the meantime, let the spring, the courage of some and the polls lift your spirits. We are in this together.
