+ Arnold & Porter reps Brazil on tariffs

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The Afternoon Docket

The Afternoon Docket

A newsletter by Reuters and Westlaw

 

By Karen Sloan

What's going on today?

  • Santa Clara University School of Law is addressing looming federal student loan caps with $16,000 scholarships for all new students in 2026. 
  • The Federal Trade Commission  and seven states accused Live Nation and its ticketing arm Ticketmaster of costing fans millions of dollars by tacitly allowing ticket brokers to scoop concert tickets and sell them at a significant markup.
  • The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services's internal watchdog office is investigating whether people caught up in President Trump's Washington crime crackdown are improperly enrolled in some federal benefits.
 

Trump asks US Supreme Court to allow firing of fed governor Lisa Cook

 

REUTERS/Ken Cedeno/Pool/File Photo

President Donald Trump's administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday to let him move ahead with firing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook—a move without precedent since the central bank's founding in 1913—in a legal battle that imperils the Fed's independence.

The Justice Department asked the justices to lift U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb's September 9 order temporarily blocking the Republican president from removing Cook, an appointee of Democratic former President Joe Biden. Cobb ruled that Trump's claims that Cook committed mortgage fraud before taking office, which Cook denies, likely were not sufficient grounds for removal under the law that created the Fed.

"This application involves yet another case of improper judicial interference with the President's removal authority—here, interference with the President's authority to remove members of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors for cause," the Justice Department said in the filing.

Cook took part in the Fed's highly anticipated two-day meeting in Washington on Tuesday and Wednesday in which the central bank decided to cut interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point, as policymakers responded to concerns about weakness in the job market. Cook was among those voting in favor of the cut announced on Wednesday.

Read more from Jan Wolfe and Andrew Chung.

 

More top news

  • US Supreme Court to hear Trump's tariffs case on November 5
  • Trump says US may extend deadline on TikTok sale
  • FTC accuses Live Nation, Ticketmaster of colluding with ticket brokers 
  • Facing federal loan caps, US law school gives $16,000 to all new students
  • Trump administration may not end Venezuelan migrants' protections, court rules
  • Ropes & Gray IP leader takes 21-lawyer team to rival Sheppard Mullin
  • US immigration judge orders Khalil deportation, his lawyers say separate ruling protects him for now
  • Tennessee joins states eying end to ABA's role in law school accreditation
  • Exclusive: US probes people swept up in Trump Washington crackdown for benefits fraud
  • Partner at UK's Carter-Ruck faces misconduct case over OneCoin lawsuit threat
  • US judge keeps block on Trump effort to deport Guatemalan unaccompanied children
 

Arnold & Porter filings detail Brazil work as tariff dispute looms

 

REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo

Filings under the Foreign Agents Registration Act shed new light on Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer's representation of the Brazilian government, after the South American country hired the U.S. law firm last month ahead of a potential legal challenge to Trump administration tariffs.

The Brazilian Attorney General's Office expects to pay Arnold & Porter up to $3.542 million over the next 48 months for the work, the firm said in a FARA registration last week. The team for Brazil includes international finance partner Eli Whitney Debevoise II, who is a former U.S. executive director of the World Bank, and Gregory Harrington, head of the firm's sovereign finance practice, additional filings showed.

Arnold & Porter's disclosure said it is representing Brazil on matters related to "administrative sanctions and similar measures applied by the government of the United States." 

Read about the disclosure and more from Mike Scarcella and David Thomas in this week’s Billable Hours.

 

In other news ...

Disney's ABC yanks 'Jimmy Kimmel Live' off air after remarks about Charlie Kirk ... Nvidia bets big on Intel with $5 billion stake, chip partnership ... Health and Human Service Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is rewriting U.S. vaccine policy fast and on his terms ... French unions strike against austerity, pressuring President Emmanuel Macron ...Gaza hit by telecoms blackout as Israeli tanks and infantry advance ... Meta launches smart glasses with built-in display, reaching for 'superintelligence' ... How a Thailand trip led to a trafficking nightmare ... Barcelona's epic Sagrada Familia could be finished in 10 years ... and our photos of the day.