Ranking the most liberal and conservative law firms among the top 140, 2021 edition

One of my most popular posts remains “Ranking the most liberal and conservative law firms.” That post is from 2013, and an update is long overdue.

At the outset, “ranking” a firm or calling it “conservative” or “liberal” is imperfect, I know, but I picked a title eight years ago and I’m sticking with it…. Better to call it, “which law firms contribute the most to Democrats or Republicans.” But I am updating the methodology, and I look forward to doing some even more interesting things with the data in the short term.

First, I looked at 140 law firms. I broke them out into two groups. The first are the AmLaw 100. The second are a group of 40 firms that fit the NLJ500 or Legal 500 plaintiffs’ firms. (Two firms appear in both lists, Paul Weiss and Quinn Emanuel.)

Second, unlike my 2013 ranking (where I looked at contributions to Barack Obama’s or Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns), I expanded the window. This time, I focused on contributions to the Joe Biden campaign (including “victory fund) and the Donald Trump campaign (including “victory fund” and “Make America Great Again Committee”); the major party organizations (DCCC, DSCC, DNC, NRCC, NRSC, and RNC); and two major aggregators of campaign contributions, ActBlue (Democratic) and WinRed (Republican). There’s a little asymmetry here—Trump had four years of campaigning to Biden’s shorter window, ActBlue is more established than WinRed, etc.—but I think it evens out. These accounted for about 1/3 of all campaign contributions. (Future research will look at more.) I looked at the 2017-2020 period, a four-year window.

Third, I did not look at just attorney contributions, but I looked at any contributions from those employed by these firms. (See update below.) There are often different titles for attorneys (partner, counsel, summer associate, etc.) that are self-reported and are tougher to capture. And I thought it would be useful to include all contributions, even from consultants, paralegals, administrative assistants, and others employed by the firm for a broader portrait of the firm. Again, a judgment call here. I also looked for common misspellings, abbreviations, or alternative names for the firm (e.g., separating out the two Steptoe & Johnsons, etc.) to capture the most contributions.

So, that said, I’m sure there are errors in the data, but it’s a fairly good snapshot.

All told, I captured about $61 million in contributions to Democratic-affiliated groups compared to about $11 million for Republican-affiliated groups in 2017-2020, nearly a 6-to-1 ratio. (See update below.)

Below is a visualization of the AmLaw100 law firms. (By “percentage of contributions,” I mean by dollar figures, not individual instances.)

Many firms had fewer than 10% of contributions go to major Republican outlets. A handful had at least 25%, and just three crossed 50%. Even among those the figures are deceptive. At White & Case, for instance, there was a single $500,000 contribution to the Trump Victory Fund, more than half of all Republican contributions in this four-year time period.

The 40 plaintiffs’ firms results are below (asterisks denote the second listing):

Nine of these firms had $0 in contributions to major Republican outlets in this four-year period; another 6 had less than $100. And while some firms’ contributions were relatively modest (Bernstein, for instance, logged less than $1000 in total giving to these outlets, another deceptive way of looking at this data), others had contributions in the high six figures. Two firms, however, skewed toward Republicans.

Among the ten firms that gave the most money in raw dollars to Democratic outlets (see update below):

Paul Weiss $2,084,171

Latham $1,877,357

Kirkland $1,820,246

Covington $1,794,277

Sullivan & Cromwell $1,579,112

Wilmer $1,424,903

Sidley $1,416,481

Morgan Lewis $1,352,160

Skadden $1,310,634

Boies Schiller $1,080,094

And among the ten firms that gave the most money in raw dollars to Republican outlets (note, of course, duplicates among the largest law firms, and the caveat for White & Case!):

White & Case $966,401

Kirkland $822,685

Proskauer $697,230

Gibson Dunn $468,283

McGuireWoods $383,280

Paul Weiss $353,148

Akin Gump $343,102

Womble Bond $330,725

Holland & Knight $297,266

Kasowitz Benson $291,990

Below is a table with all 138 firms (excluding the pair of duplicate listings), sorted by percentage of contributions to Democratic outlets. As I mentioned, there’s more to come in the months ahead—this is my first cut at many ways of slicing this data.

Firm D R D%
Berger Montague $563,692 $0 100.0%
Grant & Eisenhoffer $379,781 $0 100.0%
Kaplan Fox $77,572 $0 100.0%
Hagens Berman $71,775 $0 100.0%
Hausfeld $35,142 $0 100.0%
Berman Tabacco $21,182 $0 100.0%
Joseph Saveri Law $6,284 $0 100.0%
MoginRubin LLP $5,231 $0 100.0%
Bernstein Liebhard $635 $0 100.0%
Lief Cabraser $764,357 $30 100.0%
Herman, Herman $284,946 $15 100.0%
Bernstein Litowitz $205,015 $15 100.0%
Simons Hanley Conroy $424,296 $50 100.0%
Baron & Budd $472,147 $95 100.0%
Kessler Topaz $200,699 $55 100.0%
Cohen Milstein $294,106 $135 100.0%
Susman Godfrey $489,486 $500 99.9%
Seeger Weiss $131,268 $230 99.8%
Boies Schiller $1,080,094 $2,045 99.8%
Burg Simpson Eldredge $103,696 $262 99.7%
Fenwick $849,559 $2,970 99.7%
Seledny & Gay $68,150 $305 99.6%
Levin Papantonio $32,177 $151 99.5%
Beasley, Allen, Crow $123,253 $585 99.5%
Zelle $28,104 $162 99.4%
Labaton Sucharow $82,877 $546 99.3%
Kramer Levin $384,389 $2,845 99.3%
O'Melveny $948,486 $8,382 99.1%
Perkins Coie $964,601 $10,769 98.9%
Dicello Levitt $8,632 $100 98.9%
Morgan & Morgan $290,895 $3,555 98.8%
Shearman & Stearling $332,843 $5,047 98.5%
Pomerantz $19,756 $300 98.5%
Weitz Luxenberg $139,621 $2,245 98.4%
Schulte Roth $361,008 $6,081 98.3%
Debevoise $688,869 $11,802 98.3%
Covington $1,794,277 $33,529 98.2%
Robbins Geller $220,058 $4,157 98.1%
Reed Smith $536,807 $10,284 98.1%
Cleary Gottlieb $715,532 $15,909 97.8%
Jenner & Block $456,977 $11,051 97.6%
Crowell & Moring $448,249 $10,893 97.6%
Arnold & Porter $1,010,582 $27,555 97.3%
Morrison & Foerster $686,565 $20,164 97.1%
Gibbs Bruns $34,679 $1,200 96.7%
Goodwin Procter $633,974 $22,821 96.5%
McDermott $645,730 $24,701 96.3%
Fried Frank $343,140 $13,632 96.2%
Motley Rice $204,325 $8,147 96.2%
Orrick $512,834 $21,077 96.1%
Wachtell $781,376 $33,328 95.9%
Squire Patton $452,120 $19,432 95.9%
Milbank $226,005 $9,768 95.9%
Ballard Spahr $466,882 $20,190 95.9%
Napoli Shkolnik $14,702 $706 95.4%
Willkie $382,835 $19,520 95.1%
Robins Kaplan $119,526 $6,498 94.8%
Cooley $666,688 $36,707 94.8%
Skadden $1,310,634 $80,853 94.2%
Jackson Lewis $168,690 $11,035 93.9%
Morgan Lewis $1,352,160 $88,704 93.8%
Wilson Sonsini $419,257 $28,105 93.7%
Mintz Levin $161,211 $10,974 93.6%
Davis Wright $400,839 $27,564 93.6%
Latham $1,877,357 $135,776 93.3%
Wilmer $1,424,903 $104,317 93.2%
MoloLamken $22,682 $1,687 93.1%
Weil $304,943 $22,734 93.1%
Loeb & Loeb $253,448 $19,305 92.9%
Venable $515,986 $40,034 92.8%
DLA Piper $1,023,423 $80,517 92.7%
Fragomen $147,320 $11,746 92.6%
Cahill $260,935 $24,916 91.3%
Ropes & Gray $524,768 $51,262 91.1%
Bryan Cave $466,366 $48,313 90.6%
Kilpatrick Townsend $188,884 $19,787 90.5%
Simpson Thacher $531,328 $55,795 90.5%
Faegre Drinker $165,891 $17,446 90.5%
Troutman Pepper $411,574 $43,744 90.4%
Cozen O'Connor $450,877 $50,052 90.0%
Blank Rome $419,866 $47,306 89.9%
Haynes and Boone $187,019 $21,364 89.7%
Paul Hastings $651,679 $80,412 89.0%
Seyfarth $316,918 $41,631 88.4%
Steptoe $444,029 $58,651 88.3%
Sidley $1,416,481 $188,789 88.2%
Sullivan & Cromwell $1,579,112 $213,897 88.1%
Dorsey $236,890 $32,327 88.0%
Quinn Emanuel $706,382 $104,250 87.1%
Hogan Lovells $720,025 $110,101 86.7%
Nixon Peabody $279,456 $42,747 86.7%
Norton Rose $240,355 $36,880 86.7%
Paul Weiss $2,084,171 $353,148 85.5%
McKool Smith $95,052 $16,652 85.1%
Nelson Mullins $317,407 $57,335 84.7%
Cadwalader $147,453 $26,716 84.7%
Olgetree Deakins $156,117 $29,215 84.2%
Greenberg Traurig $774,034 $144,995 84.2%
Baker McKenzie $278,722 $57,845 82.8%
Polsinelli $194,899 $40,510 82.8%
Jones Day $825,506 $180,284 82.1%
King & Spalding $831,622 $182,858 82.0%
Duane Morris $351,147 $81,164 81.2%
Littler $283,479 $66,001 81.1%
Fox Rothschild $207,568 $48,615 81.0%
Davis Polk $580,987 $144,977 80.0%
Katten $235,807 $59,367 79.9%
Mayer Brown $584,028 $149,546 79.6%
Sheppard Mullin $292,187 $76,171 79.3%
Locke Lord $131,402 $37,901 77.6%
Lewis Brisbois $149,093 $44,052 77.2%
Cravath $347,924 $103,555 77.1%
Pillsbury $321,200 $99,733 76.3%
Akin Gump $1,064,087 $343,102 75.6%
Dechert $359,039 $118,551 75.2%
Baker Botts $203,823 $67,908 75.0%
Akerman $336,528 $116,927 74.2%
Husch Blackwell $169,494 $60,715 73.6%
Foley & Lardner $224,329 $82,964 73.0%
Winston & Strawn $575,472 $242,797 70.3%
Kirkland $1,820,246 $822,685 68.9%
Vinson & Elkins $213,491 $97,663 68.6%
Alston & Bird $22,338 $10,362 68.3%
Baker Donelson $169,876 $80,649 67.8%
Gibson Dunn $933,762 $468,283 66.6%
Baker & Hostetler $187,262 $105,942 63.9%
Gordon Rees $89,923 $51,160 63.7%
Holland & Knight $467,830 $297,266 61.1%
K&L Gates $387,345 $254,137 60.4%
Fish $122,748 $85,136 59.0%
Womble Bond $408,260 $330,725 55.2%
Hunton Andrews $170,952 $143,421 54.4%
Barnes & Thornburg $219,289 $189,661 53.6%
McGuireWoods $295,863 $383,280 43.6%
Proskauer $417,600 $697,230 37.5%
White & Case $493,656 $966,401 33.8%
Kasowitz Benson $129,835 $291,990 30.8%
The Lanier Law Firm $51,399 $269,337 16.0%

UPDATE 11/8: Some have asked about whether it makes sense to include all contributors, regardless of job title, into this framework. As I mentioned, attorneys use a variety of titles, and others are ambiguous (e.g., “consultant”). I ran tests at a few of the larger law firms, and I looked at only those who unambiguously identified themselves in some attorney capacity. At these firms, they are 97.5% to 98% of the dollars given. It does not strike me that at many firms—if any—it would materially change the allocation if I did another refinement to include only those who unambiguously identified themselves in some attorney capacity.

UPDATE 11/11: Due to a data entry error, some Perkins Coie contributions were double-counted, which led to an inflated count. The data has been corrected.