Matt LeMieux

18 January 2009

The Government's Lawyer in THE Court

While students in my Debating Controversial Supreme Court Cases course are tackling the social and cultural issues underpinning many of these controversial cases, I am afraid that I have been lax in explaining what happens when these cases actually reach the Supreme Court for argument. In this post I want to address the role of the federal government in cases that reach the Court, or more specifically the role of the Solicitor General.

The United States Solicitor General is the person chosen by the President to argue cases on behalf of the government in the Supreme Court. In addition to actually arguing cases, the Solicitor General may also file amicus briefs in support of a party whose position is favoured by the government.

So why write about this now? Simple. President-elect Barack Obama has appointed the Dean of Harvard Law School, Elena Kagan, to be the next U.S. Solicitor General. This is significant because she will be the first female to hold this post (it should be noted that a woman held this post for six months on a temporary basis during the transition between the Clinton and Bush administrations). The fact that the media has not highlighted this landmark achievement for women may say much about how the presence of women in high powered positions is changing in the United States.

More importantly, Kagan's selection and the people with whom she is surrounding herself illustrates the dramitic shift that is taking place in Washington. For instance, Kagan has chosen a lawyer who argued before the Court on behalf of the rights of detainees at Guantanamo as one of her deputies. Put another way, people who spent the last eight years arguing against positions taken by the Bush Administration will now be representing the government before the Court!

UPDATE - the New York Times has more on Ms. Kagan, including the fact that she will be the first woman to fill the post.