President-elect Donald Trump named his personal attorney Alina Habba to serve as counselor to the president in his next administration, marking the latest in a string of Trump’s personal attorneys who have been rewarded with government roles since his election.
Alina Habba, attorney for Donald Trump, onstage during preparations for the fourth day of the … [+]
Key Facts
Alina Habba: Trump made Habba his White House counselor—the role filled in his first term by advisor Kellyanne Conway—as the attorney has become one of Trump’s better-known personal lawyers, representing him in court during his second trial against writer E. Jean Carroll and the civil fraud trial against him and his company, neither of which were successful, as well as championing Trump as one of his public surrogates in the media and representing him in other personal cases.
Habba previously worked as a fashion merchandiser and was a low-profile lawyer who represented a parking garage company before she took on Trump as a client in 2021, the Washington Post reported, and has garnered controversy for her work with Trump, as she and Trump were sanctioned for nearly $1 million for bringing a lawsuit against Hillary Clinton—and she was repeatedly chastised by the judge during Carroll’s trial for not following proper procedures.
David Warrington: Trump named Warrington to be his next White House counsel—replacing initial nominee Bill McGinley—after Warrington previously represented the Trump campaign as its general counsel and is representing Trump in his civil cases seeking to hold him liable for the Jan. 6 riot.
Warrington serves as a partner at Dhillon Law Group, which has represented Trump and his campaign in a number of cases, such as the recent challenges to his candidacy under the 14th Amendment, and is a Marine Corps veteran who previously led the Republican National Lawyers Association, worked on Trump’s 2016 campaign and served as counsel for then-Republican Party candidate Ron Paul’s 2012 presidential campaign.
Pam Bondi: While best known for her former role as Florida’s attorney general, Trump’s U.S. attorney general pick served on his legal team for his first impeachment in 2019, when Trump faced allegations of asking Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden in exchange for military aid, and Politico reports she also worked with Rudy Giuliani after the 2020 election to try and challenge Pennsylvania’s election results.
Bondi served as Florida’s top law enforcement official from 2011 to 2019, after previously serving as a local prosecutor in the state’s Hillsborough County, and has more recently worked as a lobbyist and led legal efforts for America First Policy Institute, a right-wing nonprofit that’s reportedly crafting policy plans for Trump’s second term.
Will Scharf: Trump named Scharf to serve as his White House staff secretary—who handles the inflow of reports and briefings that go to Trump—after previously representing him in court as part of Trump’s federal criminal case to overturn the 2020 election and related court battle over whether Trump is immune from criminal charges.
Scharf is an attorney and former assistant U.S. attorney at the Justice Department who previously ran for Missouri’s attorney general, but ultimately lost in the primary election.
Doug Collins: Trump tapped Collins, a former congressman, to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, after Collins previously served as part of the former president’s legal team, with Politico reporting in 2021 that Collins represented Trump when Democratic lawmakers were investigating him after he left office.
Collins is an Air Force veteran and pastor who previously represented Georgia’s 9th district in Congress from 2013 to 2021, and ran for Senate in Georgia in 2020 but failed to make it to the general election.
Todd Blanche: Trump named Blanche to serve as deputy attorney general in his administration—the Justice Department’s number two role—after the attorney represented Trump at his criminal trial in Manhattan based on hush money payments made before the 2016 election, also serving on Trump’s legal team in his two federal criminal cases, for trying to overturn the 2020 election and allegedly withholding White House documents.
Blanche left law firm Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft in order to represent Trump—after representing Trump allies like former campaign chair Paul Manafort and adviser Boris Ephsteyn, according to The New York Times—and entered private practice after previously working at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York as a violent crimes prosecutor.
Emil Bove: Trump tapped Bove as the principal associate deputy attorney general in his DOJ, after the lawyer—a partner at Blanche’s firm Blanche Law—represented Trump at his Manhattan trial and also served on his legal team in both federal cases.
Bove has flown more under-the-radar on Trump’s legal team as compared with some of his other attorneys, representing the ex-president after previously serving as an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and co-leading its national security unit and narcotics unit, where he oversaw cases against figures like Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
Dean John Sauer: Trump picked Sauer to serve as his solicitor general—the attorney who argues cases on behalf of the administration at the Supreme Court—after Sauer argued to the Supreme Court that Trump should be immune from criminal charges, and also represented Trump in civil court as the former president appealed writer E. Jean Carroll’s case accusing him of defamation and sexual assault.
Sauer previously served as Missouri’s solicitor general before moving to private practice, also serving as a law clerk to late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and retired appeals court Judge J. Michael Luttig, a conservative-leaning judge who has since become known for his opposition to Trump and Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
How Did The Lawyers Fare Representing Trump?
While Habba’s cases have largely been unsuccessful, the attorney has overseen some Trump wins, like a court ruling the ex-president could move forward with a lawsuit against his niece Mary Trump, which remains ongoing. Though Trump was impeached by the House for his Ukraine dealings, he was ultimately acquitted by the Senate after Bondi argued on Trump’s behalf on the Senate floor. Blanche was the key lawyer representing Trump in his hush money trial earlier this year, with the attorney getting a mixed reception even as the jury ultimately declared Trump guilty. Blanche was praised during his cross-examination of ex-Trump attorney Michael Cohen for seemingly catching Cohen off-guard by showing evidence suggesting a call Cohen claimed to have with Trump about the hush money payment in question may have actually been about a totally separate matter, as texts suggested Cohen was actually calling Trump’s bodyguard to discuss him being pranked by a 14-year-old. The lawyer was also chastised by Judge Juan Merchan when he was trying to argue Trump didn’t violate the gag order against him, with Merchan telling Blanche he was “losing all credibility with the court.” The other two federal cases against Trump that Blanche and Bove are involved with are expected to end without going to trial before Trump takes office. While Trump’s appeal of the Carroll case is still pending, Sauer’s argument on Trump’s behalf led to the Supreme Court ruling in the ex-president’s favor, declaring him immune from at least some criminal charges. An appeals court ruled against Trump after Sauer argued on immunity there, however, and the attorney made waves during both court appearances when he suggested former presidents should be immune from prosecution even if they assassinate political rivals.