Watchdog warns legal powerhouse has made far-left advocacy their 'dominant focus' over the last decade

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A conservative watchdog group is adding fodder to the debate over whether the American Bar Association has become a politicized institution favoring the left.

A new report released by Trump-aligned lawfare group America First Legal, co-founded by one of the president's top advisors, Stephen Miller, claims that the ABA's Standing Committee on Amicus Curiae Briefs over the last decade has produced 80% of left-leaning liberal arguments, 20% neutral and zero that are conservatively-aligned. 

Meanwhile, in all 6 cases the ABA has filed amicus briefs involving Trump, the ABA went against the president or his allies.

President Donald Trump's second term has included attacks against the ABA, arguing it has politicized its accrediting power, and has favored Democratic Party-backed candidates when vetting judicial nominees. The ABA's size and legacy make it the premier trade association for the legal sector, but some conservatives fear the group's power is becoming a "monopoly."

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American Bar Association logo

America First Legal exposes the American Bar Association's left-wing bias in a new report. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

"The ABA requires that amicus briefs be authorized by its Board of Governors and must be consistent with existing ABA policy or involve matters of ‘special significance to lawyers or the legal profession,'" a press release from AFL argued. "Briefs on birthright citizenship, transgender healthcare for minors, and the Texas heartbeat law fall well outside that mandate."

According to AFL's audit, which scanned briefs filed between April 2016 and February 2026, there were a total of 87 filed. Seventy of them "favored a liberal or progressive outcome," AFL argues, while none they came across were "conservative-aligned" the group added. The remaining covered what AFL described as neutral issues, such as a patent law case.

"The ABA does not categorize it's amicus briefs as conservative or liberal but base them on the law. The ABA files amicus briefs that take positions that reflect official ABA policy that has been debated and adopted by the House of Delegates," the ABA told Fox News Digital. "The House is the ABA’s policy-making body comprising hundreds of delegates from state bars across the country and a wide range of ABA subject-matter entities, and adopts policy only after engaging in a deliberative and representative process. Throughout it all,  defending the rule of law is our North Star. "


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The audit also found that cases where Trump, or a Trump official, was named, and the ABA filed an amicus brief, every time they argued in the direction contrary to the Trump official or Trump himself.

Trump in New York courtroom

U.S. President Donald Trump sits in the courtroom during his civil fraud trial at New York Supreme Court on January 11, 2024 in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago)

"The ABA presents its amicus program as advancing the interests of the legal profession and the rule of law," said Gene Hamilton, President of America First Legal.

"The data tells a different story," Hamilton continued. "More than four in five briefs push a progressive agenda, immigration advocacy has become the program's dominant focus, and the organization has not once — in ten years and across two Trump administrations — filed a brief that could be characterized as supportive of a conservative legal position. The ABA is not a neutral arbiter and should be treated no differently than any other liberal advocacy group."

In President Trump's second term, the Trump administration has taken several steps to push back against what it says is bias at the ABA. In February 2025, Federal Trade Commission Chairman Andrew Ferguson announced a new policy prohibiting FTC political appointees from holding leadership roles in the American Bar Association (ABA), participating in ABA events, or renewing their ABA memberships. 

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That early action was also followed by several others, such as a May letter to the ABA's president from Attorney General Pam Bondi indicating the Department of Justice would no longer be engaging in its traditional partnership related to vetting judicial nominees, citing "refusal to fix the bias in its ratings process, despite criticism."

Meanwhile, in April, Trump signed an Executive Order that singled out the ABA and other powerful accrediting groups, warning that anyone engaging in unlawful discrimination would be refused federal recognition.

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