PPP In the News
In the News: Pro Bono Is Broken
PPP's own Steve Kennedy writes for Balls & Strikes: For firms, highlighting their pro bono work burnishes their reputations with current and prospective clients, and helps recruit lawyers and law students who hope to serve their communities while still bringing...
In the News: Biden Turns to Lower Court Backlog After Jackson Confirmation
Madison Alder writes for Bloomberg Law about the backlog of open judicial seats as midterm elections grow closer: “While we were assured repeatedly by the White House that they wouldn’t stall lower court nominations during the Supreme Court confirmation process, we’ve...
In the News: Watching the Ketanji Brown Jackson Hearing as a Survivor of Childhood Sexual Assault
Our Organizing Director here at the People's Parity Project, Steve Kennedy, wrote for Slate about watching Judge Jackson's hearing as a survivor of childhood sexual assault: "I have rarely felt so seen by someone other than a fellow survivor as I did hearing Jackson’s...
In the News: Why Clarence Thomas’ wife is a major problem for the Supreme Court
Jon Skolnik writes in Salon: Progressive advocacy groups are calling on Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas to recuse himself from cases relating to the activism of his wife, Ginni Thomas, a prominent conservative operative whose political activities, the groups...
In the News: On the Courts, the Battle to Confirm Jackson is Only the Beginning
Trip Brennan writes for Blue Tent: “...the right-wing takeover of the courts is also a story of liberal failure. Part of that failure was an inability to recognize key differences between the right and left when it comes to building power; groups that attempted to ape...
In the News: The first Black woman appointed to the Supreme Court will be extraordinary, but she can’t save the Supreme Court
PPP’s own Tristin Brown, with Tamara Brummer and Meagan Hatcher-Mays, writes for The Grio: Representation is important, but it is not enough when the institution that the first Black female justice is entering is broken. If we are to see the fullness of this historic...
In the News: Biden Supreme Court pick seems likely to make progressives happy
Hanna Trudo writes for the Hill: “There’s general agreement that we don’t need someone who’s been a management-side attorney on the Supreme Court,” said Molly Coleman, executive director of People’s Parity Project, without mentioning Childs by name. “That’s not an...
In the News: Progressives Urge Biden to Nominate Justice on Side of Workers, Not Corporations
Julia Conley writes for Common Dreams: Tristin Brown, policy and program director at People's Parity Project—a network of law students and lawyers "organizing to unrig the legal system and build a justice system that values people over profits"—told The Hill that...
In the News: Clyburn’s favorite for high court faces scrutiny over corporate work
Harper Neidig writes for The Hill: Tristin Brown, the policy and program director at People’s Parity Project, a progressive network of law students and young lawyers advocating to reform the legal system, said that past corporate legal work should be carefully...
In the News: Everyone’s Got Something To Say About Justice Stephen Breyer’s Retirement
Staci Zaretsky of Above the Law quoted People’s Parity Project’s Policy & Program Director Tristin Brown: “We applaud Justice Stephen Breyer for making the decision to retire and allow President Biden the opportunity to carry out his promise of nominating the...
In the News: Biden Looks Beyond BigLaw, Prosecutors With Judicial Picks
Justin Wise of Law360 quotes Tristin Brown, PPP's Policy and Program Director, in his latest article: As he rushes to fill vacancies on the federal bench, President Joe Biden is making good on a pledge to diversify not just the personal but the professional...
In the News: The Shadow Docket: How Supreme Court Conservatives Are Manipulating Justice
PPP's own Tristin Brown and Daniel Wade write for Teen Vogue: "...this conservative Court has used its shadow docket to destabilize American law and force conservative outcomes on the public in the dead of night." Read more in Teen Vogue.