Yes, according to George Conway, Michael Luttig, and Barbara Jean Comstock, who wrote this essay in the New York Times.
Why, you ask?
Because it's still beholden to Trump. So they've started the Society for the Rule of Law Institute -- a competitor to the Federalist Society with no Trump ties. It is "an organization of conservative lawyers committed to the foundational constitutional princoples we once all agreed upon," including "the primacy of American democracy, the sanctity of the Constitution, and the rule of law.?
From the NY Times:
We
were members of the Federalist Society or followed the organization
early in our careers. Created in response to left-liberal domination of
the courts, it served a principled role, connecting young lawyers with
one another and with career opportunities, promoting constitutional
scholarship and ultimately providing candidates for the federal bench
and Supreme Court.
But the
Federalist Society has conspicuously declined to speak out against the
constitutional and other legal excesses of Mr. Trump and his
administration. Most notably, it has failed to reckon with his effort to
overturn the last presidential election and his continued denial that
he lost that election. When White House lawyers are inventing cockamamie theories to stop the peaceful transition of power and copping pleas to avoid jail time, it’s clear that we in the legal profession have come to a crisis point.
We are thankful that there were lawyers in the Trump administration who opted to resign or be fired rather But
these exceptions were notably few and far between. More alarming is the
growing crowd of grifters, frauds and con men willing to subvert the
Constitution and long-established constitutional principles for the
whims of political expediency. The actions of these conservative
Republican lawyers are increasingly becoming the new normal. For a group
of lawyers sworn to uphold the Constitution, this is an indictment of
the nation’s legal profession. Any legal movement that could foment such
a constitutional abdication and attract a sufficient number of lawyers
willing to advocate its unlawful causes is ripe for a major reckoning.
We
must rebuild a conservative legal movement that supports and defends
American democracy, the Constitution and the rule of law and that
incentivizes and promotes those lawyers who are prepared to do the same.
To that end, we have formed a nonprofit organization, the Society for the Rule of Law Institute, to bring sanity back to conservative lawyering and jurisprudence.
There
is a need and demand for this new legal movement that the legal
profession can readily meet. Pro-democracy, pro-rule-of-law lawyers who
populate our law school campuses, law firms and the courts decry what is
happening in our profession. They deserve an outlet to productively
channel these sentiments.
Or you could just join the American Constitution Society!