This Article challenges Eric Holder’s and William Pryor’s views and explains the proper role of a state attorney general when a party challenges a state statute. In short, an attorney general owes the state and its citizens, as sovereign, a duty to defend its statutes against constitutional attack except when controlling precedent so overwhelmingly shows that the statute is unconstitutional that no good-faith argument can be made in its defense. To exercise discretion more broadly, and selectively to pick and choose which statutes to defend, only erodes the rule of law. (introduction
When should the executive decline to defend in court a federal law it has determined to be unconstit...
This Article explores the appropriate role of the executive branch in enforcing and defending feder...
An attorney’s advice for navigating and, when necessary, challenging the law is essential to America...
This Article challenges Eric Holder’s and William Pryor’s views and explains the proper role of a st...
In this Article, I focus on the duty of state attorneys general to defend laws with which they perso...
Whether a state attorney general has a duty to defend the validity of state law is a complicated que...
Modern Justice Department opinions insist that the executive branch must enforce and defend laws. In...
The Reference Re Genetic Non-Discrimination Act was unusual because the Attorney General for Canada ...
This Article argues that the Bowers principle is wrong. It examines the issues of doctrine and polic...
The author defends the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) decision to appeal the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” ...
When the Obama Administration announced it would cease defending the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) ...
This Comment seeks to help fill that gap by considering how a state attorney general’s duty to advis...
In understanding the willingness of government lawyers to defend the constitutionality of federal st...
When should the executive decline to defend in court a federal law it has determined to be unconstit...
The U.S. Constitution requires federal agencies to comply with separation-of-powers (or structural) ...
When should the executive decline to defend in court a federal law it has determined to be unconstit...
This Article explores the appropriate role of the executive branch in enforcing and defending feder...
An attorney’s advice for navigating and, when necessary, challenging the law is essential to America...
This Article challenges Eric Holder’s and William Pryor’s views and explains the proper role of a st...
In this Article, I focus on the duty of state attorneys general to defend laws with which they perso...
Whether a state attorney general has a duty to defend the validity of state law is a complicated que...
Modern Justice Department opinions insist that the executive branch must enforce and defend laws. In...
The Reference Re Genetic Non-Discrimination Act was unusual because the Attorney General for Canada ...
This Article argues that the Bowers principle is wrong. It examines the issues of doctrine and polic...
The author defends the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) decision to appeal the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” ...
When the Obama Administration announced it would cease defending the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) ...
This Comment seeks to help fill that gap by considering how a state attorney general’s duty to advis...
In understanding the willingness of government lawyers to defend the constitutionality of federal st...
When should the executive decline to defend in court a federal law it has determined to be unconstit...
The U.S. Constitution requires federal agencies to comply with separation-of-powers (or structural) ...
When should the executive decline to defend in court a federal law it has determined to be unconstit...
This Article explores the appropriate role of the executive branch in enforcing and defending feder...
An attorney’s advice for navigating and, when necessary, challenging the law is essential to America...