As Donald Trump’s second-term agenda accelerates, Democracy Forward and its fast-growing coalition of litigators are mounting an aggressive legal blockade — battling executive overreach, Supreme Court fast-tracking, and internal tensions on the left while reshaping the future of resistance lawyering.
At a discreet office suite just blocks from the White House, Skye Perryman stared into a bank of monitors as a dozen senior litigators dialed in. They were there for what has become a near-daily ritual: a strategy session to dissect the next round of emergency legal battles against the Trump administration.
As president again, Donald Trump has unleashed a sweeping wave of executive actions—from civil service purges to agency reorganizations to immigration crackdowns—at a speed that outpaces even his tumultuous first term. And Democracy Forward, the once-niche progressive legal advocacy group Perryman leads, is now positioning itself as the central operational headquarters for the legal resistance.
Midway through the meeting, the team received news they had been dreading: The administration had petitioned the Supreme Court for an emergency stay—again—this time to reverse a lower-court decision blocking the firing of the U.S. Copyright Office director. It was a reminder of the group’s two greatest adversaries: the pace of Trump’s agenda and a Supreme Court increasingly willing to greenlight it.
Welcome to the new legal battleground of Trump 2.0.















