Southeast Firm Leaders Predict Stability, Growth in Second Trump Administration
"If he doesn't do anything radically different than what he did his first term, we're probably not looking at any tectonic shift in how the outlook is for law firms in the United States," said FisherBroyles founder Kevin Broyles.
November 07, 2024 at 11:24 AM
4 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Daily Report
What You Need to Know
- Leaders of some Southeast-rooted law firms foresee the transition to a new presidential administration having little or no negative effect on their businesses.
- Changes to labor law among the few areas in which demand for counsel definitely could increase, one leader said.
Leaders of some Southeast-rooted law firms expect demand to remain robust under a new presidential administration, predicting a stable outlook for the legal industry following Donald Trump's victory Tuesday.
Brad Adler, an executive committee member with Atlanta-rooted Freeman Mathis & Gary, said any time there is change in the political party occupying the White House it was "natural there is some mild uncertainty in how such a change" will affect the law firm world.
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