The attorney general is the federal government's chief legal officer, heading the Department of Justice, advising the president, and directing federal law enforcement. In AP Gov, the office is a prime example of how Cabinet members help the president implement a policy agenda (Topic 2.4).
The attorney general (AG) is the head of the Department of Justice and the chief legal officer of the United States. The office dates back to the Judiciary Act of 1789, which makes it one of the original Cabinet positions. Like all Cabinet secretaries, the AG is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, a textbook example of checks and balances built into executive appointments.
What does the AG actually do? Three big things. First, advise the president and executive agencies on legal questions. Second, set federal law-enforcement priorities by directing federal prosecutors (the U.S. attorneys). Third, oversee the government's side in major litigation, including cases that reach the Supreme Court. For AP Gov, think of the attorney general as the president's legal arm. When a president wants to crack down on antitrust violations, change immigration enforcement, or defend an executive order in court, the policy runs through the AG's office.
The attorney general lives in Topic 2.4 (Roles and Power of the President) within Unit 2: Interactions Among Branches of Government. It directly supports learning objective 2.4.A: explain how the president can implement a policy agenda. The CED's essential knowledge says presidents accomplish their agendas "with support from the Vice President, Cabinet, and Executive Office of the President," and the AG is one of the clearest illustrations of that idea. A president can't personally prosecute cases or argue before the Supreme Court, so law-and-order or civil rights agendas get carried out through the Justice Department. The office also showcases separation of powers in action, since the president picks the AG but the Senate must confirm, and the AG's litigation choices can end up in front of the judiciary (Unit 2's third branch).
Keep studying AP® Gov Unit 2
Cabinet (Unit 2)
The attorney general is the Cabinet member you should name when explaining how presidents execute domestic legal policy. The Cabinet isn't in the Constitution by name, but the CED lists it as a core support structure for the president's agenda, and the AG is its legal anchor.
Cabinet appointments (Unit 2)
AG nominations are often the most contested confirmation fights because the office controls federal prosecutions. The Senate's confirmation power over the AG is a direct check on the president's control of law enforcement.
Chief Executive (Unit 2)
Article II tells the president to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed," but the president delegates that job. The attorney general is the chief executive role made concrete, since enforcement priorities at the DOJ are how a president's agenda actually touches federal law.
Article II (Units 1-2)
Article II creates the appointment power (president nominates, Senate confirms) that puts the AG in office. The AG is a great example to cite when an FRQ asks how constitutional structure shapes interactions between the branches.
You won't see an FRQ that just asks "define attorney general." Instead, the AG shows up as a concrete example inside bigger questions about presidential power. Multiple-choice questions like to test whether you can match a policy goal to the right Cabinet position. For example, a stem might ask which Cabinet official a president would use for foreign policy (Secretary of State) versus domestic law enforcement (attorney general). On Concept Application or Argument Essay FRQs about how presidents implement their agendas, naming the AG and the Department of Justice gives you specific, CED-aligned evidence instead of vaguely saying "the president enforces laws." Also be ready to use the AG as an example of Senate confirmation as a check on executive power.
The attorney general runs the entire Department of Justice and sets law-enforcement policy. The solicitor general is a DOJ official below the AG whose specific job is arguing the federal government's cases before the Supreme Court. Shortcut: AG equals the boss of federal legal policy, solicitor general equals the government's Supreme Court lawyer. Also don't mix up the U.S. attorney general with state attorneys general, who are usually elected and enforce state law.
The attorney general is the chief legal officer of the federal government and heads the Department of Justice.
The office was created by the Judiciary Act of 1789, and the AG is appointed by the president with Senate confirmation.
For learning objective 2.4.A, the AG is a go-to example of how Cabinet members help the president implement a policy agenda.
The AG directs federal prosecutors and shapes litigation strategy, which is how a president's law-enforcement priorities become real action.
Senate confirmation of the AG is a built-in check on presidential power, making this office a useful example for Unit 2 questions about interactions among branches.
The attorney general is the head of the Department of Justice and the federal government's chief legal officer, advising the president and directing federal law enforcement. In AP Gov, the AG is a key Cabinet example for how presidents implement their policy agendas (Topic 2.4).
The U.S. attorney general is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, not elected. That's different from most state attorneys general, who are elected by voters.
No. Despite the legal job description, the attorney general is part of the executive branch and serves in the president's Cabinet. The AG represents the government in court but is not a judge and answers to the president, not the judiciary.
The attorney general runs the whole Department of Justice and sets federal law-enforcement policy. The solicitor general works under the AG and specifically argues the federal government's cases before the Supreme Court.
Not by name. The office was created by the Judiciary Act of 1789, a statute passed by the first Congress. The Constitution's Article II only provides the general appointment process (presidential nomination plus Senate confirmation) that fills the position.
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