L4GG Files Amicus Brief Supporting Youth Climate Plaintiffs in Ninth Circuit Appeal

WASHINGTON — Yesterday, Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) filed an amicus brief in support of youth plaintiffs represented by Our Children’s Trust in Lighthister, et al. v. Trump, et al., a case before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit appealing the dismissal of claims challenging federal executive actions designed to expand fossil fuel use.

The brief urges the Ninth Circuit to reverse the district court’s ruling, which held that despite “overwhelming” evidence that the Plaintiffs are suffering tangible injury caused by the implementation of the challenged laws, the harm was not redressable by the courts. L4GG argues that this conclusion misapplies binding precedent and, if allowed to stand, would severely weaken the judiciary’s role in protecting fundamental rights.

The brief, which you can read in full here, argues that federal courts have both the authority and the obligation to declare unconstitutional executive actions invalid—particularly where those actions are the legal cause of ongoing harm to young people’s health, safety, and lives.

Specifically, the brief explains:

  • Declaratory relief is meaningful redress. Longstanding Supreme Court precedent—including Brown v. Board of Education—establishes that invalidating an unconstitutional legal mandate itself constitutes redress, even where full compliance may take time or face resistance.

  • The district court misread Juliana v. United States. Unlike Juliana, where plaintiffs sought a court-designed national climate plan, the youth plaintiffs here seek a narrow, traditional remedy: a declaration that specific executive orders are unconstitutional and ultra vires.

  • Courts are not powerless simply because a remedy is incomplete. Article III does not require courts to solve a policy problem in full—only to eliminate the legal cause of a constitutional injury. Declaring the challenged executive orders invalid would withdraw their legal force and reduce the harms they are causing.

  • Denying redressability here would undermine the rule of law. If courts may not invalidate unconstitutional executive mandates simply because they do not control every downstream effect, entire categories of constitutional claims would become nonjusticeable.

“Federal courts do not lose their constitutional role simply because a case involves climate change or executive policy,” said Charles Dell’Ario, counsel for amicus, and pro bono volunteer for Lawyers for Good Government. “When an executive order is the legal cause of constitutional injury, courts have both the power and the duty to say what the law is and to withdraw that mandate from the legal system.”

"When courts find that the administration has caused a constitutional injury—as the court did here—the government cannot evade liability by arguing that there is nothing a court can do about it,” added Amy Powell, Litigation Director, Pro Bono Litigation Corps, Lawyers for Good Government. “Rather, a declaratory judgment invalidating the challenged executive actions is real relief with real meaning. The rule of law requires no less."

If you’d be interested in discussing the case and this brief further, we’d be happy to connect you to one of our spokespeople at L4GG’s Pro Bono Litigation Corps, for any comment.

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Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) is a nonprofit organization that harnesses the power of 125,000 lawyers, law students, and advocates in the fight for justice. We identify where lawyers can make the greatest impact and mobilize them to defend democracy and the rule of law, protect civil and human rights, and advance environmental justice through coordinated legal action and advocacy efforts that create meaningful change for all Americans.

Five Years After January 6: We Are Still Defending Democracy—and We Are Not Backing Down

Five Years After January 6: We Are Still Defending Democracy—and We Are Not Backing Down

Five years after January 6, the threat to our democracy has only deepened. What began as an authoritarian attempt to overturn an election has evolved into sustained attacks on the rule of law, the independence of our institutions, and the separation of powers meant to protect us all. Accountability for January 6 was never fully realized, and in some cases has been actively dismantled. At Lawyers for Good Government, we are building the legal firewalls this moment demands—mobilizing the legal community to defend democratic institutions, protect vulnerable communities, and hold power accountable. We are still here. We are still organizing. And we are not backing down.

L4GG Responds to D.C. Circuit Granting En Banc Review in Green Bank Litigation

WASHINGTON — Jillian Blanchard, Vice President of Climate Change & Environmental Justice at Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG), issued the following statement in response to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit granting en banc review in litigation challenging the termination of the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF), a $20 billion Congressionally authorized clean energy and climate resilience program:

“The D.C. Circuit’s decision to grant en banc review is a major inflection point in the fight for affordable energy, climate resilience, and the rule of law. For months, the administration has tried to dismiss these funds as waste while families across the country are paying record electricity bills and struggling to keep the lights on. 

“The Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund was designed to deliver cheaper, homegrown energy, backup power, and real resilience where it’s needed most — lowering costs for everyday people and strengthening communities before disaster strikes. This funding was built to keep energy bills down for Americans who are already stretched thin and to build critical markets to support these projects.

“Full-court review is relatively rare, and the fact that the court expressly cited L4GG’s amicus brief on behalf of 40 Members of Congress underscores how serious the constitutional and statutory issues are here. Nearly $20 billion lawfully appropriated by Congress is at stake, and this case will determine whether an administration can simply override Congress’s spending decisions by fiat, eroding a basic principle of our democracy.”

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Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) coordinates large-scale pro bono programs and issue advocacy efforts to protect human rights, defend the environment, and ensure equal justice under the law, and has a network of 125,000+ lawyers to assist in its efforts. lawyersforgoodgovernment.org.

FEMA Whistleblowers Reinstated

FEMA retaliated against employees who signed a letter of dissent, the Katrina Declaration;  after whistleblower complaints were filed, the reprisals ended 

WASHINGTON—Today, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) employees who  were illegally terminated or placed on administrative leave for exercising their First  Amendment and whistleblower rights returned to work. On August 25, 2025, the  employees sent a dissent letter to Congress -- The FEMA Katrina Declaration -- protesting  gross waste and mismanagement, abuses of authority, dangers to public health and  safety, and violations of laws, rules and regulations by Agency management.  

The next day, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) put the public signers on  indefinite administrative leave, ordered them to cease all work and not contact anyone at  FEMA and DHS. FEMA’s Office of Professional Responsibility then began retaliatory  investigations of the public signers. The employees acknowledged they had in fact signed  the Declaration following which the Agency terminated an employee on the sole charge  that signing the declaration was “Conduct Unbecoming a Federal Employee.” According to  the Specification supporting the charge, the Declaration: 

[I]ncluded multiple disparaging comments and allegations directed at the Federal  Emergency Management Agency, the Department of Homeland Security, the  current Administration, and its members, which undermined the Agency’s goals  and mission. 

During this time, the public signers filed whistleblower complaints with the U.S. Office of  Special Counsel (OSC). They were assisted by Government Accountability Project, in  partnership with Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) and Stand Up for Science (SUFS),  and pro bono counsel Brandy Mai (brandy@bmailawyer.com), Andrew D. Rotstein  (andrew.d.rotstein@gmail.com) and Joshua R. Cohen and Ellen R. Kramer  (jcohen@crklaw.com). 

Today, the employees returned to work after FEMA ceased retaliating. According to FEMA  management:

Although the [Report oof Investigation] substantiated the employee’s involvement  with the so-called Katrina Declaration, FEMA’s legal counsel has advised that the  employee’s actions are protected under the Whistleblower Protection Act (5 U.S.C.  § 2302(b)(8)) and the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. These protections  ensure that employees can disclose information related to misconduct, abuse, or  violations of law without fear of retaliation, provided the disclosure is made in good  faith and aligns with statutory protections. As a result, my recommendation is that  this matter be closed with no disciplinary action

David Z. Seide, Senior Counsel at Government Accountability Project, said: 

FEMA did the right thing. This case is important precedent. It reaffirms what should  be obvious: it is unlawful to retaliate against federal employees who exercise their  free speech and whistleblower rights by publicly dissenting against agency policies,  especially those that place lives in danger. 

Amy Powell, Litigation Director of Lawyers for Good Government, said: 

Lawyers for Good Government and our volunteers are proud to stand with the FEMA  whistleblowers. All of our clients who were placed on administrative leave have now  been fully reinstated, but reinstatement is just the first step. These public servants  fulfilled their legal and moral obligation by exposing serious threats to public safety,  and future whistleblowers deserve protection, not punishment. We urge both FEMA  and Congress to take their warnings seriously and begin the critical work of reform,  ensuring accountability for the failures they exposed. 

Colette Delawalla, Founder and Executive Director of Stand Up for Science, said: 

Our team at Stand Up for Science is pleased to see all Katrina Declaration signers  reinstated. We are proud of these public servants for speaking up and continue to  rally behind all who desire to use their First Amendment rights and whistleblower protections to call attention to the harms this Administration’s policies are causing  for the American public.

We share the following statement from the Katrina  Declaration Signers:  

We’re thrilled that our coworkers have been reinstated and are back to  serving the American people. These actions reaffirm what we’ve said all  along: these employees did nothing wrong. Their retaliation was part of a  broader pattern that also targeted employees at the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, The United States Department of Agriculture and the National Institutes of  Health. We call for every one of those workers be reinstated immediately. 

The retaliation was a wasteful and costly political stunt, and the concerns we  raised in the Katrina Declaration remain unresolved. Programs are still  stalled, funding remains frozen, and our ability to respond to disasters  continues to be weakened. As we work toward real solutions, it’s critical that  leaders listen to the people who know this work best, the experts and  professionals who understand what it takes to build a stronger FEMA. We  urge Congress to advance the FEMA Act now so the agency can restore stability, uphold its legal obligations, and protect communities effectively.  The work ahead is significant, and we will continue to stand up and speak out  for disaster survivors everywhere. 

L4GG Launches Court of Federal Claims Clinic to Support Organizations Harmed by Unlawful EPA Grant Terminations

WASHINGTONLawyers for Good Government (L4GG) today announced the launch of a new Court of Federal Claims (COFC) Clinic designed to support nonprofits, Tribes, local governments, and community organizations whose environmental and climate justice grants were unlawfully terminated by federal agencies this year. The Clinic is launching in partnership with the Environmental Protection Network (EPN), to help onboard grantees seeking assistance.

While grantees’ continue to assert constitutional claims that would restore funding nationwide, hundreds of communities have been left in limbo. Recent court decisions have pushed grantees toward the slower, more burdensome Court of Federal Claims, where each organization must file individually, secure legal counsel, and shoulder costs that many cannot afford.

“This entire process is designed to make people walk away, but L4GG’s Court of Federal Claims Clinic aims to stop this strategy of divide and exhaust from succeeding. If the government breaks a binding grant agreement, the law still provides a remedy, and we are here to help grantees pursue it.”

”Forcing hundreds of under-resourced organizations into one-by-one lawsuits is not justice. These communities were promised and constitutionally obligated funding by Congress to protect themselves from pollution, storms, and public health threats. Our clinic ensures they won’t be abandoned or bullied into submission just because the administration wants these programs to disappear.”
— Jillian Blanchard, Vice President of Climate Change & Environmental Justice at L4GG.

The COFC Clinic offers two forms of  support:

  • Remote Pro Bono Clinic: L4GG and volunteer attorneys will help terminated grantees prepare their claims for filing, including reviewing documents, assessing damages, developing legal strategy, and drafting complaints.

  • Coordinated Pro Bono/Low Bono Representation in COFC: L4GG will match grantees with trained attorneys prepared to litigate COFC cases, ensuring organizations receive high-quality representation without draining limited budgets already strained by termination of their grants.

Under the administration’s approach, grantees cannot seek reinstatement of their programs in the Court of Federal Claims. COFC provides monetary damages only, creating an enormous barrier to justice, forcing communities to absorb the cost and time to litigate individually, and pressuring smaller organizations to give up entirely. L4GG’s COFC Clinic ensures they have the tools, representation, and support needed to fight back. 

Hundreds of organizations across the country continue to confront flooding, wildfire risk, toxic air pollution, failing infrastructure, and rising energy costs—problems their grants were designed to address. Many have already experienced direct harm, including layoffs, lost contracts, stalled community projects, and worsening climate impacts.

If you are interested in learning more about L4GG’s COFC Clinic, or potentially talking with any of the more than 50 communities that have already signed up for assistance, we’d be happy to help arrange an interview.

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Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) is a nonprofit organization that harnesses the power of 125,000 lawyers, law students, and advocates in the fight for justice. We identify where lawyers can make the greatest impact and mobilize them to defend democracy and the rule of law, protect civil and human rights, and advance environmental justice through coordinated legal action and advocacy efforts that create meaningful change for all Americans.

Launching Project Corazon’s Next Chapter: Standing with Immigrant Communities This Giving Tuesday

Written by Estuardo Cifuentes, Project Corazon Program Manager

You’ve seen the headlines and watched the videos – every day, immigrants are facing new attacks from ICE and the Trump administration. People who are torn from their families in raids on schools, homes, worksites, and even courthouses are being swept into detention centers. And they’re made to navigate the legal system – and face deportation – alone.

I have lived this system’s injustices firsthand. When I first crossed into the US to seek asylum, I spent days in a detention center before being sent back to Mexico for over 18 months, and it was only through the legal support of Project Corazon that I was finally able to secure asylum. My experience has given me the conviction to fight so that others do not have to endure the same conditions.

Over 60,000 immigrants are now in detention centers, but the administration isn’t stopping there. They’re aiming to reach 100,000 by December 31. That’s 40,000 more people in squalid conditions, deprived of basic due process, and without access to legal representation.

Threats like these are why we at L4GG founded Project Corazon. Since 2018, we’ve been bridging the justice gap for immigrant communities. From setting up systems to provide remote representation in Credible Fear Interviews for detained asylum seekers to building pro bono legal clinics from the ground up in Matamoros, Mexico, we have a proven track record of delivering for immigrant rights. But we’re up against our biggest challenges yet, and now is the time to fight back. 

This Giving Tuesday, we’re raising the funding needed to launch Project Corazon’s next chapter: the Detention Bridge Project. This two-stage approach will overcome gaps in detention center transparency and legal representation by:

  • Building the first public database of detention center procedures—eliminating hundreds of wasted hours for volunteer attorney

  • Deploying volunteer lawyers to underserved facilities providing advocacy declarations, DHS complaints, and parole requests

  • Serving hundreds of detained immigrants annually who would otherwise face deportation alone

The human impact of these attacks on immigrant communities can’t be reduced to numbers. Behind every figure is a life, a loved one, a family – a story like mine.


Tomorrow is Giving Tuesday—and it matters. We'll be sharing exactly how the Detention Bridge Project will make a difference and how you can be part of this critical work. Donate here if you're ready to act now, or watch for our message tomorrow to learn more about what's at stake and how your support will help us ensure no asylum seeker has to face detention alone.

Lawyers for Good Government Launches ‘Rights in Reel Time Challenge,’ a New National Competition Bringing Constitutional Rights to Life Through Video Storytelling

Lawyers for Good Government Launches ‘Rights in Reel Time Challenge,’ a New National Competition Bringing Constitutional Rights to Life Through Video Storytelling

Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG), in partnership with Tidal Water Consulting, today announced the launch of the Rights in Reel Time Challenge, a new national competition inviting law students to explain core constitutional rights through short, compelling videos.

L4GG Files Amicus Brief Documenting the Routine Use of Independent Commissions During the Founding of the Republic

L4GG Files Amicus Brief Documenting the Routine Use of Independent Commissions During the Founding of the Republic

As counsel to amici Professor Victoria Nourse and Lawyers Defending American Democracy, Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) filed an amicus brief in Donald J. Trump, et al. v. Rebecca Kelly Slaughter, et al., a case before the U.S. Supreme Court challenging the constitutionality of the Federal Trade Commission’s structure and threatening the future of independent federal agencies across government. 

Nonprofits, Tribes, and Local Governments Appeal Ruling Allowing EPA to Terminate Environmental Justice Grants

Plaintiffs ask D.C. Circuit to restore congressionally mandated funds; without relief, 350+ pollution-reduction and climate-resilience projects remain frozen

WASHINGTON — A coalition of nonprofits, Tribes, and local governments today filed an appeal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, challenging the lower court ruling that suggests the District Court does not have jurisdiction to hear claims related to EPA’s termination of the Congressionally-mandated Environment and Climate Justice (ECJ) Block Grant program, which Congress mandated to fund local projects addressing pollution, flooding, and climate resilience.

The plaintiffs—represented by Earthjustice, the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC), the Public Rights Project, and Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG)—seek to restore $3 billion in Congressionally authorized funding that has been unlawfully terminated for more than 350+ grantees.

VIEW THE FILING HERE 

Across the country, hundreds of local projects remain stalled, including critical infrastructure work in the Native Village of Kipnuk, Alaska, where recent catastrophic flooding washed away homes and infrastructure that were set to be protected under an EPA-funded riverbank stabilization project. Kipnuk is now facing another winter without housing or protection, and has had to start a Go Fund Me page to pay for emergency services. And, they are far from alone. With hurricane season underway, communities in every region—in particular, the Southeast—remain more vulnerable to storms, flooding, and pollution because this funding was taken away.

“We’re already seeing the human toll of EPA’s unlawful decision in these flood-ravaged Alaskan villages, which could have had $20M available for emergency riverbank stabilization work if the EPA hadn’t terminated the Kipnuk grant in May of this year. This is the result of an Administration prioritizing tax breaks for billionaires at the cost of human lives and critical infrastructure,” said Jillian Blanchard, Vice President of Climate Change & Environmental Justice at Lawyers for Good Government.
“Inevitably, we will see more tragedies in coastal towns as hurricane season approaches that could have been mitigated.  Resilience hubs in Louisiana will not be built, and as more natural disasters strike due to the heartless rescission of these grants, we’re likely to see more and more avoidable tragedies. The Administration’s choice to strip away these lifelines endangers lives, undermines the law, and abandons the very communities Congress promised to protect. If you consider these terminations with the significant reduction in disaster-relief FEMA funding, we’re staring down the barrel of a climate catastrophe waiting to happen. We’re appealing because the stakes couldn’t be higher.”

If successful, the appeal would reinstate the ECJ grants, allowing more than 350 communities and Tribal governments to resume critical projects—ranging from flood prevention to community resilience  hubs—before more preventable destruction occurs.

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Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) is a nonprofit organization that harnesses the power of 125,000 lawyers, law students, and advocates in the fight for justice. We identify where lawyers can make the greatest impact and mobilize them to defend democracy and the rule of law, protect civil and human rights, and advance environmental justice through coordinated legal action and advocacy efforts that create meaningful change for all Americans.