Solicitor general
The Solicitor General of the United States is the fourth-ranking official in the Department of Justice (DOJ), tasked with representing the federal government in litigation before the Supreme Court of the United States.[1] Appointed by the President with Senate confirmation and reporting to the Attorney General, the Solicitor General heads the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), which supervises government appeals from lower federal courts, decides whether to seek Supreme Court review, conducts oral arguments and briefing in Supreme Court cases, and files amicus curiae briefs on behalf of the United States in cases of public interest.[2][3] Established by statute in 1870, the position originated to centralize federal appellate advocacy amid growing caseloads in the post-Civil War era, evolving into a role of substantial institutional influence due to the OSG's high success rate in Supreme Court petitions and arguments—historically winning about two-thirds of argued cases—and its tradition of candor toward the Court, including voluntary confessions of error in misguided government positions.[4] Notable solicitors general, such as Charles Fahy and Archibald Cox, have exemplified this by withdrawing flawed appeals or briefs, reinforcing the office's reputation for prioritizing legal merit over partisan outcomes despite representing the executive branch.[4] The Solicitor General's dual role as government advocate and Court officer has led to its informal designation as the "Tenth Justice," reflecting deference from justices to OSG recommendations on certiorari petitions and the office's unique access to confidential Court deliberations via practices like the "call for the views of the Solicitor General."[5] While the office commands respect for its professional ethos, it has faced scrutiny for aligning litigation with administration priorities, as seen in shifts under different presidencies on issues like antitrust enforcement or civil rights, though empirical analyses affirm the OSG's enduring commitment to precedential integrity over short-term policy gains.[4] Over 50 individuals have served since 1870, with several ascending to the Supreme Court, underscoring the position's prestige and grooming ground for judicial leadership.[6]Overview
Definition and General Role
The Solicitor General is a senior government law officer, typically ranking immediately below the Attorney General, responsible for representing the executive branch in high-level judicial proceedings, particularly before appellate and supreme courts. This position entails overseeing government litigation, deciding which cases merit appeal, preparing legal briefs, and advocating on behalf of state interests in matters of constitutional or national significance.[7] In common law systems, the role originated as a deputy to the chief law officer, evolving to emphasize both zealous representation and candid assessment of legal merits to uphold judicial integrity.[8] Core duties include supervising civil and criminal appeals, providing authoritative legal advice on prosecutorial and litigation strategies, and ensuring consistency in the government's legal positions across jurisdictions. For instance, the office often authorizes or conducts arguments in cases involving statutory interpretation, administrative actions, or challenges to executive authority, balancing political directives with professional ethical obligations.[9] Unlike private advocates, Solicitors General are expected to prioritize long-term institutional interests, such as confessing error in flawed lower court wins or filing amicus briefs to signal the government's view on broader legal questions, fostering trust with the judiciary.[5] The position's influence stems from its dual mandate as both government advocate and officer of the court, requiring independence in evaluating case viability even against executive preferences. This structural tension—defending enacted laws while acknowledging potential unconstitutionality—underscores the Solicitor General's role in bridging executive policy and judicial review, with variations by jurisdiction reflecting local constitutional frameworks.[10]Distinctions from Attorney General and Other Officers
In the United States, the Solicitor General serves as a subordinate officer within the Department of Justice, reporting directly to the Attorney General, who functions as the department's chief executive and a Cabinet member responsible for overarching policy, enforcement strategies, and coordination with other federal agencies. The Attorney General's role encompasses broad administrative leadership, including directing investigations, setting prosecutorial priorities, and advising the President on legal matters, whereas the Solicitor General's duties are more specialized, centering on appellate litigation—particularly supervising the preparation of briefs, selecting cases for Supreme Court review, and conducting oral arguments on behalf of the federal government in approximately 60-70% of the Court's cases each term. This division allows the Solicitor General to maintain a reputation for candor and independence as an "officer of the Court," often recommending against pursuing weak appeals or confessing error in prior government positions, a practice less feasible for the politically accountable Attorney General.[1][4][11] In contrast to United States Attorneys, who manage trial-level prosecutions and civil enforcement in 94 federal districts under the Attorney General's oversight, the Solicitor General does not engage in district court work but instead handles nationwide appellate coordination, ensuring consistency in federal legal positions across circuits and the Supreme Court. State-level Solicitors General, present in over 40 U.S. states as of 2023, similarly differ from their state Attorneys General by focusing on appeals and high-court advocacy rather than the elected or appointed Attorneys General's executive and policy roles, such as consumer protection or legislative drafting.[5][9] In the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth jurisdictions like Australia, the Solicitor General typically acts as the deputy Law Officer to the Attorney General, sharing duties in advising the government and Crown on constitutional and international law but with the Attorney General holding primary Cabinet attendance and superintendence over prosecution services. The U.K. Solicitor General, for instance, assists in parliamentary scrutiny of legislation and may deputize in court or advisory capacities, yet lacks the Attorney General's veto power over certain prosecutions or direct involvement in security-related consents; in Australia, the Solicitor General provides independent High Court representation and opinions, operating with greater autonomy from the Attorney-General's political portfolio to emphasize legal rather than ministerial priorities. These arrangements underscore the Solicitor General's consistent emphasis on judicial advocacy and detached counsel, distinct from the Attorney General's blend of legal, political, and administrative authority.[12][13][14]Importance in Government Litigation
The Solicitor General serves as the chief litigator for the executive branch in federal courts, particularly by supervising appeals from lower courts and determining which cases merit escalation to the Supreme Court, thereby acting as a gatekeeper that filters the government's docket to prioritize cases aligning with national interests and resource constraints.[4][5] This role ensures coordinated advocacy across federal agencies, preventing fragmented positions that could undermine executive authority, as evidenced by the office's consolidation of control over Supreme Court appearances, reducing reliance on external counsel from 15 cases in 1869 to none by 1872.[4] In Supreme Court proceedings, the Solicitor General's office represents the United States in nearly all cases where the federal government is a party, preparing briefs, conducting oral arguments in about 75-80% of merits cases per term, and filing amicus curiae briefs to influence outcomes even when not directly involved.[5][4] This extensive involvement is vital because the government litigates a disproportionate share of high-stakes constitutional and statutory disputes, and the office's recommendations on certiorari petitions carry substantial weight with the Court, shaping its agenda and promoting uniform interpretation of federal law.[5] The position's importance is amplified by its elevated credibility, often termed the "Tenth Justice" for the tradition of candid assessments that assist the Court in resolving complex issues, fostering a symbiotic relationship where the Solicitor General balances zealous advocacy with institutional duties to the judiciary.[4] This trust contributes to win rates typically exceeding 70% in argued cases, far surpassing private litigants, which enables effective defense of executive policies and statutes while providing the Court with reliable factual and legal framing.[15][16] Historically, this unified litigation strategy has yielded cost savings—over $100,000 annually in the 19th century—and reinforced the rule of law by harmonizing government positions in pivotal cases like antitrust enforcement and civil rights prosecutions.[4]Historical Development
Origins in English Common Law
The office of the Solicitor General emerged in England during the reign of Edward IV, with the Crown's first appointment of a "king's solicitor" occurring in 1461 through letters patent under the great seal.[17] This position functioned as a subordinate to the Attorney General, who had been established earlier in the same century, to manage the expanding volume of the Crown's legal business in common law courts, including representation in litigation and preliminary advisory duties.[4] The role reflected the practical necessities of the common law system, where the sovereign required dedicated agents to navigate disputes in royal, ecclesiastical, and local jurisdictions, distinct from the Attorney General's higher-profile parliamentary and counsel functions.[17] The title "Solicitor General" appeared in official documents by 1485 via letters patent, though it was not fully standardized until around 1536, with intermittent use of "king's solicitor" persisting into the 16th century.[17] Richard Fowler's 1461 appointment as King's Solicitor is recognized as the foundational precedent, evolving under Tudor monarchs like Henry VIII to encompass broader assistance in Crown prosecutions and legal opinions.[18] By the early 16th century, the Solicitor General routinely deputized for the Attorney General in court appearances and advisory roles, handling routine litigation to alleviate the senior officer's burden amid increasing state complexity.[4] This development solidified the Solicitor General's place within English common law as a key instrument of royal prerogative, prioritizing the Crown's interests in adversarial proceedings without the fused executive-judicial tensions later seen in continental systems.[17] The office's early emphasis on empirical legal representation—drawing on case precedents and statutory interpretation—underpinned its causal role in enabling efficient governance, as the sovereign's legal capacity depended on such specialized delegation rather than ad hoc serjeants or counsel.[18] By the 17th century, these foundations had matured into the dual functions of litigation support and constitutional counsel, influencing subsequent adaptations in Commonwealth jurisdictions.[17]Adoption in Commonwealth Nations
The office of Solicitor General was adopted in several Commonwealth nations as a junior law officer to the Attorney General, drawing from English common law traditions to provide legal advice and represent government interests in higher courts, though implementations varied by jurisdiction in timing, independence, and scope. In Australia, the Commonwealth Solicitor-General position was formally established by the Solicitor-General Act 1916, with Sir Robert Garran appointed as the inaugural holder, building on an informal precedent set by Sir Charles Powers from 1903 to 1913 in a draftsman role that included advisory and representational duties.[19] State-level offices predated federation, such as in New South Wales where the role assisted the Attorney General from the 19th century onward, evolving into a non-parliamentary position by 1922.[20] In New Zealand, the Solicitor-General was created in 1867 as a political office to support the Attorney General, with the first substantive appointment occurring on 31 March 1875; the role gained permanence through the Crown Law Office established on 30 September 1873, emphasizing non-partisan legal counsel and court appearances thereafter.[21][22] By the late 20th century, it solidified as a public service position under the Constitution Act 1986, section 9A, allowing the Solicitor-General to exercise Attorney General functions when needed.[23] Canada introduced the federal Solicitor General in 1892, modeled on the British counterpart as a secondary law officer, but the position diverged significantly, absorbing responsibilities for policing, corrections, and public safety by the 20th century rather than focusing solely on appellate advocacy; it was briefly subsumed under the Attorney General from 1936 to 1945 before re-establishment via the Solicitor General Act 1945, and ultimately abolished in 2005 with duties transferred to the Minister of Public Safety.[24] Provincial solicitor generals, such as Ontario's dating to Upper Canada foundations, similarly emphasized administrative oversight over pure legal representation.[25] In India, the Solicitor General emerged post-independence under the Constitution of 1950, with C.K. Daphtary as the first appointee serving from 1950 to 1963; positioned as the second-highest law officer subordinate to the Attorney General per Article 76 provisions, it handles government litigation in the Supreme Court and advisory roles, reflecting British colonial precedents adapted to federal republican governance. These adoptions generally prioritized institutional continuity from imperial structures, yet local constitutional evolutions introduced differences, such as greater emphasis on independence in Australia and New Zealand compared to Canada's security-oriented shift.[26]Establishment and Evolution in the United States
The Office of the Solicitor General was established by the Act of June 22, 1870 (16 Stat. 162), which created the United States Department of Justice as a cabinet-level department to centralize federal legal functions previously scattered across executive agencies.[4] The statute specified that the Solicitor General, appointed by the President with Senate confirmation, would assist the Attorney General by arguing cases on behalf of the United States before the Supreme Court, supervising litigation in lower federal courts, preparing legal opinions, and overseeing district attorneys in certain duties.[4] This creation addressed inefficiencies in government litigation, as prior to 1870, the Attorney General handled Supreme Court arguments personally amid growing caseloads, while ad hoc solicitors managed specific matters.[4] Benjamin H. Bristow, a Kentucky lawyer and former Union Army colonel, became the first Solicitor General, serving from November 1870 to December 1872 under President Ulysses S. Grant.[27] In its early years, the office bore broader administrative responsibilities than its modern incarnation, including directing the preparation of briefs, reviewing appeals from circuit courts, and even aiding in the prosecution of high-profile cases such as those against the Ku Klux Klan under the Enforcement Acts of 1870–1871, where Bristow played a key role in securing convictions that curtailed Klan violence.[4] However, the 1870 Act's expansive mandate—to "try causes" in the Supreme Court and manage departmental legal work—proved overly ambitious given limited resources, leading to practical constraints where the Solicitor General prioritized appellate advocacy over routine supervision, which gradually devolved to other DOJ components as the department expanded.[4] By the late 19th century, successors like Samuel F. Phillips (1872–1885) solidified the role's focus on Supreme Court representation, arguing landmark cases such as United States v. San Jacinto Tin Co. (1888), which tested federal claims against state actions.[4] Over the 20th century, the Solicitor General's function evolved into the federal government's premier appellate advocate, handling nearly every Supreme Court case involving the United States as a party and earning a reputation for institutional independence through practices like selective petitioning for certiorari—filing writs in only a fraction of lost appeals—and the "confession of error" doctrine, where the office admits government wrongdoing to promote judicial integrity, a tradition traceable to the 1920s under figures like William Howard Taft's influence as Chief Justice.[4] This shift reflected causal pressures from the Supreme Court's docket growth and the DOJ's bureaucratization: administrative oversight migrated to assistant attorneys general created in 1933, allowing the Solicitor General to cultivate candor and expertise that justices valued, often dubbing the office the "Tenth Justice" for its advisory-like influence on case selection and outcomes, with win rates historically exceeding 70% in argued cases.[4][5] Despite partisan appointments, the role's evolution emphasized long-term institutional norms over short-term advocacy, as evidenced by solicitors general from varied administrations maintaining high credibility through restrained filing strategies—averaging fewer than 10 paid petitions annually by the mid-20th century.[4]United States
Appointment Process and Organizational Structure
The Solicitor General of the United States is nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 505, which mandates that the appointee be "learned in the law."[28] This process mirrors the appointment of other principal officers in the executive branch, involving presidential selection often informed by recommendations from the Attorney General or White House counsel, followed by Senate Judiciary Committee hearings, debates, and a floor vote requiring a simple majority for confirmation.[5] The position carries no fixed term, with incumbents serving at the President's pleasure and typically departing upon a change in administration, though some have continued briefly into a successor's term for transition purposes.[29] The Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) operates as a specialized litigating division within the Department of Justice, directly subordinate to the Attorney General and focused exclusively on Supreme Court matters.[2] At its apex is the Solicitor General, who oversees all operations and personally decides the government's appellate strategy, including whether to seek certiorari or confess error in cases.[1] Reporting to the Solicitor General is the Principal Deputy Solicitor General, who manages day-to-day affairs in the incumbent's absence, alongside a small cadre of Deputy Solicitors General (typically three to four) responsible for substantive oversight of case sections such as civil, criminal, and constitutional litigation.[30] The core legal workforce consists of Assistants to the Solicitor General—usually around 18 career and political appointees—who draft petitions for certiorari, merits briefs, and reply documents, and argue cases before the Court when not handled by the Solicitor General personally.[10] These assistants lead specialized teams divided by subject matter, supported by a handful of staff attorneys, one-year fellows from recent law graduates (often post-clerkship), and administrative personnel including an Executive Officer for operations and legal support staff.[31] The OSG's compact size, totaling roughly 25 attorneys, enables intensive review of government positions, with all filings requiring the Solicitor General's sign-off to ensure institutional consistency and candor toward the judiciary.[1]Core Responsibilities and Supreme Court Advocacy
The Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), headed by the Solicitor General, bears primary responsibility for conducting all Supreme Court litigation on behalf of the United States and its agencies.[32] This encompasses supervising the preparation of legal documents, including merits briefs, reply briefs, and jurisdictional statements, to represent the federal government's interests in cases where it is a party.[1] The OSG reviews every adverse decision against the government from lower federal courts to determine whether to seek Supreme Court review, exercising independent judgment on the legal merits and broader implications for federal policy.[33][34] In Supreme Court advocacy, the Solicitor General plays a pivotal role in filing petitions for writs of certiorari to request review of lower court rulings, as well as oppositions to such petitions filed by opposing parties.[33] The office also participates extensively through amicus curiae briefs, often at the Court's invitation via a "call for the views of the Solicitor General" (CVSG), providing the government's perspective on cases not directly involving it as a party; these briefs influence the Court's decision to grant certiorari and shape merits outcomes.[35] The OSG's filings emphasize rigorous legal analysis over partisan advocacy, contributing to its reputation for reliability among justices.[4] Oral advocacy constitutes a core component of the Solicitor General's duties, with the office conducting arguments in the majority of cases involving the federal government.[35] The Solicitor General personally argues high-stakes matters, while deputies and assistants handle others under supervision, ensuring consistent representation during the Court's oral argument sessions, which typically occur in 70-80 cases annually from October to April.[1][36] This direct engagement allows the government to respond to justices' questions and clarify positions, underscoring the Solicitor General's function as the federal government's chief appellate advocate.[3]Notable Solicitors General and Key Cases
Thurgood Marshall served as Solicitor General from August 1965 to June 1967, arguing 19 cases before the Supreme Court on behalf of the federal government, including Miranda v. Arizona (1966), where he defended the validity of confessions obtained without explicit warnings, though the Court established the landmark Miranda rights requirement in a 5-4 decision.[37] His tenure advanced civil rights litigation strategies, building on his prior NAACP work, and contributed to victories upholding federal authority in areas like voting rights enforcement.[38] Erwin N. Griswold held the office from 1965 to 1973, arguing over 120 Supreme Court cases during an era of transformative rulings, notably New York Times Co. v. United States (1971), where he urged prior restraint on Pentagon Papers publication to protect national security, a position rejected 6-3 in favor of First Amendment protections.[39] He also argued United States v. Caldwell (1972), defending compelled testimony from reporters amid Watergate investigations, influencing emerging reporter's privilege doctrines despite mixed outcomes.[39] Griswold's long service emphasized institutional candor, including practices like confessing errors in flawed government positions. Elena Kagan's brief stint as Solicitor General from 2009 to 2010 involved arguing six cases, including a reargument in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010), where she maintained restrictions on corporate political spending under campaign finance laws, which the Court invalidated 5-4 as violating free speech.[40] Her advocacy highlighted the office's role in defending executive policies amid ideological divides. Paul D. Clement, serving from 2005 to 2008, supervised high-stakes arguments on national security and administrative law, achieving strong win rates for the office—around 70-80% in key terms—while navigating post-9/11 litigation like detainee rights challenges.[6] [41] At least eight Solicitors General have ascended to the Supreme Court, underscoring the position's prestige: William Howard Taft (1890-1892), Charles Evans Hughes (1916-1916), Harlan Fiske Stone (1924-1925), Stanley F. Reed (1935-1938), Robert H. Jackson (1938-1940), Tom C. Clark (1945-1949), Thurgood Marshall (1965-1967), and Elena Kagan (2009-2010).[6] Early office holders like Benjamin H. Bristow (1870-1872) set precedents by arguing 27 cases in a single year, often on Reconstruction-era enforcement and tax disputes, establishing the Solicitor General's courtroom dominance.[4]Influence, Success Rates, and Practices like Confession of Error
The United States Solicitor General wields significant influence on Supreme Court proceedings, often regarded as the "tenth justice" due to the Court's deference to the office's arguments, particularly in its role as amicus curiae in private disputes.[42] This influence arises from the Solicitor General's reputation for candor, rigorous briefing, and institutional expertise, enabling participation in approximately 60% of the Court's argued cases either as a party or amicus.[43] The office shapes outcomes by recommending certiorari denials or grants and providing neutral analysis that justices frequently cite in opinions, thereby guiding the Court's agenda and doctrinal development.[44] Empirical analyses confirm this sway, showing the Solicitor General's positions correlating with shifts in judicial voting patterns beyond mere partisan alignment.[16] Success rates for the Solicitor General's Office in Supreme Court cases have historically exceeded those of private litigants, reflecting the Court's trust in its advocacy. In the October 2021 term, the office achieved a 67% overall win rate across its docket.[45] Earlier assessments, such as for the 2013 term, reported a 71% win rate when categorizing decisions as favorable to the government, with even higher rates—up to 80%—during the Reagan administration amid a lighter caseload and ideologically aligned Court.[15][46] These figures encompass both direct party representations and amicus interventions, where the office prevails in over 70% of instances, outperforming typical advocates due to selective case selection and high-quality preparation.[16] Variations occur across administrations and issue areas, with lower rates in specialized domains like copyright litigation.[47] A hallmark practice enhancing the office's credibility is the "confession of error," whereby the Solicitor General acknowledges governmental overreach or legal missteps in lower court victories, prompting the Supreme Court to vacate and remand for reconsideration.[48] This doctrine, rooted in the office's ethical duty to prioritize justice over wins, dates to the Solicitor General's inception and occurs sparingly—typically two to three times per term—to preserve institutional integrity.[49] Notable instances include Solicitor General Charles Fried's 1986 confession in Vasquez v. Hillery, leading to reversal of a flawed conviction, and Robert Bork's similar admission in cases underscoring non-partisan application across ideologies.[48] More recently, in Grzegorczyk v. United States (2022), the office confessed error in a circuit court's analysis despite its ultimate ruling, facilitating remand without full merits review.[50] Such confessions bolster the rule of law by signaling restraint, though critics argue selective use can strategically influence outcomes or evade plenary scrutiny.[51]Politicization, Partisan Shifts, and Controversies
The Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) has faced increasing scrutiny for politicization, departing from its historical reputation as a relatively independent advocate prioritizing legal merits over partisan goals. While the SG has always represented the executive branch's position, norms of candor and consistency historically tempered overt partisanship, fostering the office's influence as the "tenth justice." However, analyses indicate that recent administrations, particularly since the 1990s, have directed the OSG to align more aggressively with presidential policy priorities, such as in church-state litigation where SGs under Presidents Clinton and George W. Bush advanced administration-specific ideologies on separation versus accommodation.[52] This shift reflects causal pressures from polarized politics, where the SG's Supreme Court advocacy serves as a tool for executive agenda advancement, eroding perceived neutrality despite the office's empirical success rates remaining high.[44] Partisan shifts are evident in frequent reversals of litigation positions upon changes in administration, often justified as "further reflection" but tied to policy realignments. For instance, the Trump administration reversed Obama-era stances in at least four major Supreme Court cases, including seeking to invalidate the Affordable Care Act after prior defenses and altering positions on regulatory deference.[44][53] Similarly, the Obama OSG disavowed Bush administration arguments, such as in immigration enforcement, citing evolved legal interpretations aligned with Democratic priorities.[54] These flips, documented in over a dozen high-profile instances since 2000, undermine OSG credibility when prior positions are rejected without new empirical evidence, as reversals correlate more with electoral turnover than doctrinal evolution.[55] Such patterns prioritize short-term partisan gains over long-term institutional consistency, with data showing reversals peaking during transitions like 2017.[56] Controversies have centered on aggressive advocacy and internal disruptions, notably under the Trump administration where Solicitor General Noel Francisco defended policies like the travel ban with positions shifting from prior OSG neutrality, prompting accusations of misleading the Court on factual premises during oral arguments.[57] Francisco's tenure also drew criticism for prioritizing executive directives, including objections to subpoenas in Trump-related investigations, amid broader OSG involvement in partisan litigation.[58] High turnover exacerbated tensions, with at least half of the office's front-line attorneys departing or planning to leave by April 2025 due to intensified emergency filings and perceived political pressure, straining resources for non-partisan functions like confession of error practices.[59] Recent nominations, such as D. John Sauer's in November 2024, have fueled debate over forfeiting judicial deference through provocative claims, like equating non-compliance with a "dead country," signaling continued erosion of the office's apolitical ethos.[60][61] Critiques of these developments, often from academia and mainstream outlets, warrant caution given systemic left-leaning biases in such institutions, yet the factual record of reversals and exits underscores genuine institutional strain.[44]United Kingdom
Relationship to the Attorney General
The Solicitor General for England and Wales acts as the principal deputy to the Attorney General for England and Wales, supporting the latter in fulfilling the duties of the government's chief legal adviser.[62] This relationship is formalized under the Law Officers Act 1997, which stipulates that any function of the Attorney General may be exercised by the Solicitor General, with actions taken by the deputy treated as if performed by the Attorney General herself.[63] In practice, the Solicitor General assumes delegated responsibilities, such as specific legal advisory matters, oversight of prosecuting authorities, and interventions in court proceedings, particularly when the Attorney General's workload or absence necessitates it.[62] Both positions constitute the Law Officers of the Crown, jointly responsible for safeguarding the rule of law, providing independent legal advice to the government, and superintending bodies like the Crown Prosecution Service.[12] The Solicitor General frequently collaborates with the Attorney General on high-profile issues, including referrals for contempt of court and parliamentary questions on legal policy, while maintaining the capacity to represent the government independently in legal proceedings.[64] This deputy structure ensures continuity and specialized division of labor, with the Solicitor General often handling routine or technically complex tasks to allow the Attorney General to focus on strategic oversight and Cabinet-level engagements.[65] Appointments to the Solicitor General role are typically aligned with the Attorney General's political affiliation, reflecting the government's composition, though both must possess substantial legal expertise, often as King's Counsel.[66] The relationship underscores a hierarchical yet interdependent dynamic, where the Solicitor General's authority derives from and complements that of the Attorney General, without independent statutory powers beyond delegation.[63] Historical precedents, such as joint swearing-in ceremonies, highlight their paired operational roles within the Attorney General's Office.[67]Duties in Prosecution and Advisory Roles
The Solicitor General for England and Wales serves as the deputy to the Attorney General, providing legal advice to the UK Government on a range of matters, including support in advising Cabinet members and individual ministers.[14] This advisory function encompasses civil law issues, constitutional questions, and delegated responsibilities from the Attorney General, such as participation in the Parliamentary Business and Legislation Cabinet Committee.[62] In fulfilling these duties, the Solicitor General helps ensure that government actions align with legal obligations, drawing on the Law Officers' tradition of offering candid, independent counsel despite their political appointment.[68] In prosecution roles, the Solicitor General assists the Attorney General in superintending key prosecuting authorities, including the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and the Serious Fraud Office (SFO), which handle the majority of criminal cases in England and Wales.[14] This oversight involves monitoring compliance with public interest criteria in charging decisions and prosecutions, as well as shared accountability to Parliament for these bodies' performance.[65] The Solicitor General may also exercise statutory functions, such as granting consents required for specific prosecutions under legislation like the Official Secrets Act 1989 or terrorism-related offenses.[14] Additionally, the Solicitor General contributes to public interest litigation by deputizing for the Attorney General in reviewing and referring unduly lenient sentences to the Court of Appeal, a process governed by the Criminal Justice Act 1988 and applicable within 28 days of sentencing for eligible offenses.[65] In court, the Solicitor General may represent the government in higher judicial proceedings, particularly appeals or cases involving significant public policy implications, reinforcing the Law Officers' role in upholding prosecutorial integrity without direct involvement in routine trial work handled by the CPS.[14] These functions underscore a balance between governmental support and independent judgment, with the Solicitor General often handling delegated caseloads to maintain efficiency in the Attorney General's Office.[62]Historical and Recent Appointments
The office of Solicitor General for England and Wales originated in 1461, when the Crown began appointing a king's solicitor by letters patent to assist the Attorney General in legal matters, marking the formal establishment of the role as a deputy law officer.[17] Early appointments, such as those under the Tudors, focused on experienced barristers providing counsel without mandatory parliamentary ties, though the title "Solicitor General" was first used in 1515.[18] Over time, the position evolved to include political dimensions, with 19th- and 20th-century holders increasingly serving as Members of Parliament and advancing to higher offices like Attorney General or the bench, reflecting the government's need for aligned legal advocacy in Parliament and courts. Appointments have traditionally been made by the Prime Minister, often selecting King's Counsel with strong advocacy records, and the role changes with ministerial reshuffles or elections, ensuring continuity in government legal representation. Notable historical figures include Sir Edward Coke, appointed in 1594, who later became Attorney General and Chief Justice, influencing common law development through cases like Drake v. Drake.[69] In the 20th century, appointees such as Sir Hartley Shawcross (1945–1946) transitioned to Attorney General, prosecuting war crimes at Nuremberg, underscoring the office's role in major prosecutions.[70] Recent appointments align with this pattern, prioritizing parliamentarians with prosecutorial or advisory experience amid shifting administrations. Following the Labour government's formation in July 2024, Lucy Rigby MP served briefly before a September 2025 reshuffle.[71] Ellie Reeves MP, sister of Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, was appointed Solicitor General on 6 September 2025 and sworn in on 1 October 2025 at the Royal Courts of Justice, tasked with supporting Attorney General Lord Hermer in litigation and policy.[72][73] Prior Conservative-era holders included Michael Tomlinson KC (September 2022–July 2024) and Edward Timpson CBE (July–September 2022), both barristers who handled delegated prosecutions and Supreme Court arguments during tenure.[74][75] These selections emphasize loyalty to the government alongside legal expertise, with turnover averaging 1–2 years per term since 2010.Canada
Federal Solicitor General and Public Safety Focus
The position of Federal Solicitor General of Canada, established as a cabinet portfolio in the early 20th century, primarily focused on federal public safety through oversight of law enforcement, corrections, and national security agencies. Responsibilities included administering the federal prison system via Correctional Services Canada, managing the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) as the primary federal policing body, and supervising the National Parole Board to handle offender rehabilitation and conditional release decisions.[76] These duties emphasized maintaining public order by coordinating federal responses to crime, terrorism, and border security threats, with the Solicitor General acting as the minister accountable to Parliament for these operations.[77] In 1984, the portfolio expanded to include responsibility for the newly created Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), focusing on intelligence gathering to counter domestic and international threats to public safety, separate from direct law enforcement.[76] The Solicitor General also led policy initiatives in crime prevention, such as promoting community policing programs and inter-agency dialogue on criminal justice reforms, aiming to reduce recidivism rates—for instance, through targeted rehabilitation efforts that reported varying success, with federal recidivism hovering around 20-30% for certain offender categories in departmental evaluations during the 1990s.[78] This public safety mandate distinguished the role from the Attorney General's legal advisory functions, prioritizing operational enforcement over prosecutorial or legislative duties.[76] The department under the Solicitor General coordinated emergency responses and national security protocols, including early involvement in counter-terrorism strategies post-9/11, though critiques from parliamentary reviews noted occasional overlaps with provincial jurisdictions leading to inefficiencies in areas like organized crime interdiction. By the early 2000s, the portfolio encompassed broader resilience-building, such as integrating public awareness campaigns on safety risks, but faced scrutiny for resource allocation amid rising federal correctional populations, which exceeded 20,000 inmates by 2002.[77] In December 2003, the office was restructured and effectively abolished under Prime Minister Paul Martin's government, with responsibilities transferred to the newly created Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness (now Public Safety Canada), reflecting a shift toward integrated threat management encompassing disasters, cyber risks, and transnational crime.[76] The successor department continues the public safety focus, providing federal policy leadership on law enforcement coordination and offender rehabilitation, though without the standalone ministerial title of Solicitor General; as of 2025, no equivalent position exists in the federal cabinet, with duties absorbed by the Minister of Public Safety.[79] This evolution addressed historical silos but has drawn commentary on diluted accountability for core enforcement functions.[76]Provincial Variations and Legal Advocacy
In Canadian provinces, the Solicitor General's responsibilities diverge from federal counterparts and international norms by emphasizing operational oversight of public safety rather than appellate or Supreme Court advocacy. Typically subordinate to the Attorney General—who handles legal advice, prosecutions, and civil litigation—the provincial role focuses on administering policing contracts, correctional institutions, emergency management, and regulatory enforcement such as liquor control and motor vehicle licensing. This structure reflects provincial jurisdiction over property and civil rights under section 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867, prioritizing implementation over courtroom representation.[25][80] Variations across provinces include differences in ministerial titles, departmental integration, and specific mandates. In Ontario, a dedicated Ministry of the Solicitor General, established in its current form by 2018, manages over 25,000 correctional inmates annually, contracts with municipal police services covering 87% of the population, and oversees fire safety standards, without authority for litigation conducted by the separate Ministry of the Attorney General. British Columbia's Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General, as of 2023, integrates gaming policy and consumer protection alongside policing for its 5.5 million residents and correctional facilities housing about 2,500 offenders, maintaining separation from the Attorney General's prosecutorial duties. Alberta's combined Ministry of Justice and Solicitor General, restructured in 2012, coordinates RCMP provincial policing under contracts valued at over CAD 100 million yearly, victim support programs serving 40,000 clients in 2022, and offender rehabilitation, though core legal advocacy remains with the Attorney General's civil law division.[81][82][83] Not all provinces employ the "Solicitor General" title; for example, Quebec designates a Minister of Public Security for analogous functions, including oversight of the Sûreté du Québec serving 8 million residents, while Saskatchewan uses a Minister of Corrections, Policing and Public Safety. Legal advocacy in provincial contexts, such as defending government actions in superior courts or intervening in constitutional matters, falls exclusively to the Attorney General or ministry lawyers, as affirmed in provincial justice acts and the separation of portfolios evident since the 1970s reorganization in multiple jurisdictions. This delineation avoids dual roles, ensuring specialized focus amid rising demands like a 15% increase in correctional populations across provinces from 2018 to 2023.[80][25]Historical Changes and Modern Role
The office of the Solicitor General of Canada was established by Statute 50-51 Victoria, chapter 14, assented to on June 23, 1887, and proclaimed in force on December 3, 1892, to assist the Minister of Justice primarily in parliamentary legal matters.[76] Initially a non-departmental junior portfolio, it involved supporting legislative drafting, procedural guidance in the House of Commons, and occasional handling of prosecutions or advisory roles subordinate to the Department of Justice. Between 1936 and 1945, its functions were temporarily administered by the Minister of Justice due to wartime administrative consolidations. The Solicitor General Act of 1945 reinstated the position with renewed emphasis on federal legal administration. Significant expansion occurred in 1966 with the creation of the Department of the Solicitor General under Statute 14-15 Elizabeth II, chapter 25, assented to on June 16, 1966, and effective October 1, 1966, transforming it into a full cabinet-level department overseeing operational public safety elements.[76] Responsibilities broadened to include supervision of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), federal corrections and penitentiaries, the National Parole Board, and related law enforcement policies, as delineated in the Department of the Solicitor General Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. S-13), which assigned jurisdiction over parliamentary matters related to prisons, policing, and offender management. By 1984, the portfolio incorporated oversight of the newly formed Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), reflecting heightened national security priorities. A proposed 1993 restructuring to a "Public Security" framework was deferred due to parliamentary dissolution, but planning for integration accelerated post-2001 terrorist attacks, with transition initiatives commencing on December 12, 2003.[76] The position was formally abolished on April 4, 2005, via Statute 53 Elizabeth II, chapter 10, assented to on March 23, 2005, which repealed the Department of the Solicitor General Act and established the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness.[76] This merger aimed to streamline responses to evolving threats by combining law enforcement, corrections, intelligence, border security, and emergency management under a single minister, addressing fragmented post-9/11 coordination needs. In the modern era, no distinct Solicitor General role persists federally; equivalent functions are executed by the Minister of Public Safety, who directs Public Safety Canada in coordinating national threats, cyber security, organized crime prevention, and disaster resilience, with policy integration across agencies like the RCMP and CSIS.[84] Provincial solicitor generals maintain separate mandates focused on local policing and corrections, distinct from the former federal scope.Australia
Commonwealth Solicitor-General Duties
The Commonwealth Solicitor-General is the second Law Officer of the Commonwealth, appointed under the Law Officers Act 1964 to support the Attorney-General in fulfilling the government's legal responsibilities.[13][85] This role emphasizes independence in legal judgment while operating under the direction of the Attorney-General, focusing on high-level advocacy and advice rather than routine government legal services handled by the Australian Government Solicitor.[13] Statutory functions are outlined in section 12 of the Law Officers Act 1964, which mandates the Solicitor-General to act as counsel for the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, the Commonwealth itself, persons suing or being sued on behalf of the Commonwealth, and the Attorney-General.[86] Additional duties include furnishing opinions to the Attorney-General on referred questions of law and performing other counsel-related tasks as directed.[86][13] These functions position the office as a non-partisan legal authority, distinct from politically appointed roles, with an emphasis on constitutional and public interest litigation.[13] In litigation, the Solicitor-General ordinarily appears as senior counsel in most High Court of Australia proceedings involving the Commonwealth, as well as select cases in intermediate appellate courts.[13] Representation extends to matters of constitutional law, extradition, migration, native title, trade practices, taxation, corporations, customs, international arbitration, and criminal law, often intervening to defend federal interests or the rule of law.[13] The role also encompasses advocacy before international judicial and arbitral tribunals on behalf of the Commonwealth.[13][85] Collaboration occurs with departmental counsel, the Australian Government Solicitor, and external barristers to prepare and argue these cases.[13] Advisory responsibilities involve delivering written and oral opinions on significant legal issues referred by the Attorney-General or government entities, with dozens of formal opinions issued annually on complex matters affecting federal policy and operations.[13][85] This advisory function prioritizes first-principles analysis of law over political considerations, ensuring recommendations align with statutory interpretation and precedent, though the Solicitor-General's views are not binding on the government.[13] In practice, the office maintains a low public profile, focusing on behind-the-scenes influence in shaping legal strategy for executive decisions.[85]State and Territory Equivalents
Each Australian state and the Northern Territory maintain a Solicitor-General office that functions as the second law officer to their respective Attorneys-General, mirroring the Commonwealth position by providing authoritative legal advice on complex matters and representing the government in superior courts, including the High Court of Australia.[87] These roles emphasize independence in legal counsel while supporting executive policy through litigation and advisory services, with appointments typically made by the Governor or Governor-in-Council on the recommendation of the Attorney-General.[88] In New South Wales, the Solicitor-General, established under the Solicitor General Act 1969, assists the Attorney-General in governmental legal matters, conducts significant litigation, and may exercise certain powers of the Attorney-General when delegated.[89] The position handles constitutional and appellate advocacy, ensuring the state's interests are defended in federal jurisdictions.[20] Victoria's Solicitor-General serves as the state's primary advocate in high-stakes cases and adviser on legal policy, appointed to uphold the rule of law in proceedings involving public interest.[90] The role includes appearing in constitutional disputes and providing counsel to Cabinet on novel legal issues, distinct from routine departmental advice.[91] Queensland's Solicitor-General advises the Attorney-General and senior government levels on judicial proceedings, acting as counsel in appeals and representing the state in interstate or federal litigation.[88] This office prioritizes matters of constitutional significance, maintaining a focus on precedent-setting cases. In South Australia, governed by the Solicitor-General Act 1972, the incumbent receives direct instructions from the Attorney-General for court appearances and delivers specialized advice on public law, including human rights and administrative matters.[92] The role underscores prosecutorial independence in complex trials. Western Australia's Solicitor-General, integrated within the State Solicitor's Office, delivers high-quality legal services to government agencies, with emphasis on litigation strategy and policy advice in resource and environmental disputes common to the jurisdiction.[93] Tasmania's Solicitor-General furnishes legal opinions to ministers and Crown instrumentalities, often focusing on appellate work and ensuring compliance with federal constitutional constraints.[94] The Northern Territory's Solicitor-General manages advocacy in territorial and federal courts, advising on indigenous land rights and resource governance issues.[95] In the Australian Capital Territory, the Solicitor-General doubles as Chief Solicitor, combining advisory functions with oversight of government legal services in a compact administrative framework.[96] These subnational equivalents collectively ensure coordinated yet jurisdiction-specific legal representation, adapting Commonwealth precedents to local statutes and priorities.[87]Advisory and Litigation Functions
The Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia serves as the second Law Officer under section 12 of the Law Officers Act 1964 (Cth), which outlines core functions including acting as counsel for the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, assisting the Attorney-General in relevant proceedings, and performing other duties assigned by the Attorney-General.[86] In the advisory capacity, the Solicitor-General furnishes legal opinions on questions of law referred by the Attorney-General, addressing matters of significance such as constitutional interpretation, international obligations, and policy implications for the executive.[13] This role involves delivering both written and oral advice, with the office typically providing a substantial number of formal opinions annually to guide government decision-making across federal agencies.[13][85] The advisory function emphasizes independent analysis, drawing on expertise in public law to evaluate legal risks and viability of proposed actions, often in areas like human rights, administrative law, and treaty compliance.[13] For instance, opinions may assess the constitutionality of legislation or executive powers, ensuring alignment with judicial precedents from the High Court of Australia.[85] This advisory work supports the Attorney-General as the primary Law Officer while maintaining the Solicitor-General's position as a key internal check on legal strategy. In litigation, the Solicitor-General acts as senior counsel for the Commonwealth, representing its interests in high-stakes proceedings.[86] This includes appearing in most cases before the High Court of Australia involving the federal government, particularly those concerning constitutional questions, as well as select appeals in intermediate courts.[13] Key areas encompass extradition, migration, native title claims, taxation disputes, and criminal matters of national import.[13] Additionally, the Solicitor-General represents the Commonwealth in international judicial and arbitral bodies, such as the International Court of Justice or investor-state dispute settlements, where Australian sovereignty or treaty rights are at issue.[13][85] Litigation efforts are supported by a small team of in-house counsel and collaboration with the Australian Government Solicitor and external barristers, ensuring preparation for complex arguments.[13] The Solicitor-General's courtroom advocacy often shapes enduring legal precedents, as seen in interventions defending federal powers under section 51 of the Constitution or challenging state assertions of authority.[85] This dual advisory-litigation mandate underscores the office's role in bridging governmental policy with judicial accountability.Other Jurisdictions
New Zealand and Other Commonwealth Countries
In New Zealand, the Solicitor-General serves as the junior Law Officer of the Crown, assisting the Attorney-General in providing legal advice to the government and representing the Crown in litigation.[97] The position also entails serving as Chief Executive of the Crown Law Office, overseeing prosecutions and the administration of criminal law, with practical authority delegated from the Attorney-General.[23] Appointed at the pleasure of the executive but expected to maintain independence, the Solicitor-General's role emphasizes upholding the rule of law, including issuing guidelines on Crown conduct in court and advising on constitutional matters.[98] The office traces its origins to British colonial structures, with formal establishment in New Zealand by the late 19th century, and has evolved to include five key functions: executive leadership of Crown Law, litigation representation, policy advice, prosecutorial oversight, and international legal engagements.[22] As of October 2025, Una Jagose held the position, having served since 2016 before announcing her departure after nearly a decade.[99] In the United Kingdom, the Solicitor-General for England and Wales acts as deputy to the Attorney-General, exercising delegated powers to advise the Crown, Cabinet, and government on legal matters of national importance.[62] The role includes superintending prosecutorial authorities, participating in high-profile litigation such as appeals to the Supreme Court, and handling delegated responsibilities like consents for certain prosecutions under statutes like the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.[100] Unlike New Zealand's more administratively integrated model, the UK Solicitor-General is a political appointment, typically a Member of Parliament, serving at the government's discretion while maintaining professional independence in advice.[14] This structure reflects broader Commonwealth variations, where the Solicitor-General often functions as the government's chief courtroom advocate and second legal advisor, though specifics differ by jurisdiction—such as in Scotland or Northern Ireland, where analogous roles report to devolved law officers.[8] Across other Commonwealth realms, such as Papua New Guinea and Fiji, the Solicitor-General similarly operates as the principal government litigator and advisor, often heading the attorney-general's department or equivalent, with duties encompassing civil and criminal representation before superior courts.[22] These positions emphasize non-partisan legal counsel amid political pressures, drawing from shared Westminster traditions, but face challenges like resource constraints in smaller nations, leading to occasional reliance on private counsel for complex cases.[88] In jurisdictions like South Africa—a Commonwealth member until 1961 but retaining similar legal heritage—the role aligns closely, focusing on state litigation and advisory functions independent of the executive's political arm.[101] Overall, the Solicitor-General's independence is safeguarded by convention rather than statute in most cases, prioritizing empirical fidelity to law over policy alignment.[102]Non-Commonwealth Examples (e.g., India, Philippines)
In India, the Solicitor General is appointed by the President on the recommendation of the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet, typically for a renewable term of three years, and serves as the second-ranking law officer after the Attorney General.[103][104] The role, established under statutory conventions rather than explicit constitutional provision, involves representing the Union government in the Supreme Court of India, high courts, and tribunals on civil, criminal, and constitutional matters; assisting the Attorney General in discharging duties under Article 76 of the Constitution; and tendering legal advice to the government on references from the President or ministries.[105] Unlike the Attorney General, who is not a full-time government servant and receives no salary beyond fees, the Solicitor General is a full-time appointee drawing a fixed salary and is often selected from senior advocates with at least 10 years of high court practice.[106][103] The Solicitor General also coordinates with additional and deputy solicitors general—there are typically four additional solicitors general appointed similarly—to manage the government's litigation load, including defending central laws and policies in over 10,000 pending Supreme Court cases as of recent reports.[104] In practice, the office has evolved to include proactive roles, such as filing petitions under Article 32 for enforcement of fundamental rights on behalf of the state or intervening in public interest litigation to protect government interests, though it lacks the Attorney General's exclusive right to audience in certain presidential references under Article 143. This structure reflects India's post-independence adaptation of British legal traditions, emphasizing judicial advocacy over prosecutorial functions, which are handled separately by the Director of Prosecution. In the Philippines, the Solicitor General heads the independent Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), established as an autonomous entity attached to the Department of Justice by Presidential Decree No. 478, signed on June 2, 1974, to centralize government legal defense amid growing caseloads.[107][108] Appointed by the President with the consent of the Commission on Appointments for a term coterminous with the appointing authority, the Solicitor General acts as the principal law officer, representing the Republic, its agencies, officials, and instrumentalities in all Supreme Court and Court of Appeals proceedings, including criminal appeals where the government is the offended party.[109][110] Key functions include conducting suits in the Supreme Court (as mandated since the office's precursor under Act No. 136 in 1901), supervising a staff of over 100 lawyers divided into divisions for civil actions, special laws, and public interest cases, and providing legal opinions to government entities on interpretive matters.[108][111] The OSG under the Solicitor General also handles specialized mandates, such as instituting reversion proceedings for illegally disposed public lands (managing thousands of hectares annually), representing the government in expropriation and land registration cases under the Property Registration Decree, and initiating quo warranto petitions against public officials usurping office without title.[112][107] This role underscores a defender-oriented function influenced by American legal models, distinct from prosecutorial duties vested in the National Prosecution Service, with the Solicitor General empowered to contract private counsel for complex litigation and to appeal adverse lower court decisions on behalf of the state.[113] In fiscal year 2023, the OSG resolved over 5,000 cases, highlighting its operational scale in safeguarding public interests amid challenges like territorial disputes and administrative law suits.[114]Comparative Analysis of Roles
In New Zealand, the Solicitor-General functions as the junior Law Officer to the Attorney-General, providing independent legal advice to the government, leading Crown litigation in appellate and superior courts, and overseeing the Crown Law Office as its chief executive, including general responsibility for public prosecutions.[22] This role emphasizes constitutional duties that often require detachment from short-term political pressures, such as issuing prosecution guidelines and advising on the public interest in criminal matters.[115] In contrast, the Solicitor General of India operates as the second-ranking law officer, assisting the Attorney-General by representing the Union government in Supreme Court proceedings, including under Article 143 references from the President, and offering opinions on complex legal issues, but with a term appointment typically lasting three years and subject to renewal by the executive.[103] [116] The Philippine Solicitor General, appointed by the President with Commission on Appointments confirmation, heads the Office of the Solicitor General and serves as the government's principal defender in all courts, encompassing not only appellate advocacy but also initiating actions for public land reversion and providing legal services across administrative agencies, reflecting a broader mandate tied to executive enforcement of rule of law.[109] [107] A key distinction lies in independence and tenure: New Zealand's Solicitor-General benefits from statutory protections fostering apolitical continuity, akin to patterns in other Westminster-influenced systems where the role prioritizes candid advice over partisan alignment, whereas India's and the Philippines' positions exhibit greater susceptibility to executive discretion in appointments and renewals, potentially aligning legal strategy more closely with ruling administrations.[87] [117] Functions also diverge in scope; New Zealand's incorporates prosecutorial oversight and executive legal management, expanding beyond pure litigation, while India's remains narrowly focused on high-court representation without independent prosecutorial authority, and the Philippines' extends to defensive litigation in diverse domains like property disputes, underscoring a hybrid civil law-common law framework influenced by American models.[23] [112] These variations highlight how colonial legacies shape roles—Westminster traditions in New Zealand and India favoring advisory primacy with tempered independence, versus the Philippines' emphasis on robust governmental defense amid post-colonial judicial evolution.[87]| Jurisdiction | Appointment Process | Primary Functions | Independence Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Zealand | Appointed by Governor-General on Attorney-General's advice; fixed term with tenure protections | Legal advice, appellate litigation, prosecution oversight, Crown Law executive | High; statutory independence for Law Officer duties[22] [87] |
| India | Appointed by President (qualified as Supreme Court judge); typical 3-year term, renewable | Supreme Court representation, advisory on presidential references | Moderate; executive influence via renewal[103] [116] |
| Philippines | Appointed by President, confirmed by Commission on Appointments; at-will removal possible | Government defense in all courts, land reversion actions, agency legal support | Lower; direct executive accountability[109] [107] |