Talk About Platner’s Other Perversions and Creepiness; Leave His VA Stuff Out of...
Look Who's Surging in Alabama's Senate Race
The Free Press: 'Graham Platner's Ex-Girlfriend Wants to Set the Record Straight'
Skid Row: Uh, We Got Paid By Dems to Vote for Their People
Here's the Man Roy Cooper Refused to Lock Up
CBS News' Editor-in-Chief's Next Assignment Will Certainly Cause Libs to Melt Down
ICE Raids Are Coming to This Major City Soon
When Leadership Loses Its Moral Compass
Our Informational World Is Getting Smaller
Kristen Welker Insults President Trump With 'No Evidence' Guff
An Obama-Era Border Crosser
More Money Won’t Fix Our Schools. Mississippi Data Proves It.
College Grads Hurt by H-1B Visas
Fight Night at 1600: The Outrage Industry Meets the Octagon
June Belongs to the Nuclear Family, Not LGBTQ Activists
Tipsheet

Defending DOMA

Defending DOMA
Paul Clement, a former Solicitor General in the George W. Bush administration, has resigned from his former law firm, King & Spalding, because of its decision to withdraw from defending the Defense of Marriage Act.  Paul had been the attorney defending the statute on behalf of a bipartisan group of congressmen.
Advertisement

His letter of resignation is here, and it is must-reading for every student of legal ethics and anyone who wonders whether any lawyers have principles.

Note that Paul (who has been a long-time friend) declines to state whether he, personally, agrees with DOMA.  His position -- a sound one -- is that, having undertaken a representation, it is wrong for a law firm to abandon it simply because it has become unpopular and controversial in some quarters.

If there were any consistency on the left, all those who have saluted the fervent advocates of terrorist detainees would be hailing Paul as a man of principle.  Don't hold your breath in anticipation, though -- you'll turn blue and die.  

It's remarkable that, in a city where defending people who want to kill innocent Americans is tolerated (and even celebrated by some), representing proponents of the age-old understanding of marriage simply requires too much moral courage for King & Spalding.  All its clients now must wonder if, should they become inconveniently controversial, their cases will be jettisoned by the firm, as well.
Advertisement

Paul will now be working at Bancroft PLLC.  He is a fine lawyer (one of the nation's best) -- and also, as his  behavior attests, a fine man.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement