Attorney General of India Article 76 — The Highest Law Officer
Under Article 76, the Attorney General (AG) is the highest law officer of India and the chief legal adviser to the Union Government, representing it before the Supreme Court and High Courts. The current AG is R. Venkataramani.
Who is the Attorney General of India?
Under Article 76, the Constitution of India has provided for the office of the Attorney General (AG) for India.
- He is the highest law officer in the country.
- As the chief legal adviser to the Government of India, he advises the Union Government on all legal matters.
- He is also the primary lawyer representing the Union Government in the Supreme Court and High Courts of India.
Current AG: R. Venkataramani is the 16th Attorney General of India, appointed on 1 October 2022 (succeeding K.K. Venugopal). His term was extended for two more years and now runs until 30 September 2027. He has represented India before the UN Human Rights Committee (2024) and at the G20 Prosecutors' General Assembly (2024).
First AG: M.C. Setalvad was India's first and longest-serving Attorney General (1950–1963).
Think of the AG as the government's "chief lawyer on retainer" — the Union's top legal brain in court and its go-to adviser on any legal tangle. But unlike a minister, the AG is not a member of the Cabinet and not a full-time government servant, so he can still take private cases (just never against the government).
Constitutional Provisions Related to the Attorney General
| Article | Description |
|---|---|
| Article 76 | The President appoints a person qualified to be a Judge of the Supreme Court as Attorney General for India. It is his duty to advise the Government of India on legal matters, and he has the right of audience in all courts in India. He holds office during the pleasure of the President and receives such remuneration as the President determines. |
| Article 88 | Right to speak and take part in the proceedings of either House, any joint sitting, and any committee of Parliament (but without the right to vote). |
| Article 105 | Powers, privileges, and immunities of the Attorney General (same as a Member of Parliament). |
Appointment, Term & Removal of the Attorney General
- Appointment: By the President; the person must be qualified to be a Judge of the Supreme Court (a citizen of India, and either a High Court judge for 5 years, or an advocate of a High Court for 10 years, or an eminent jurist in the President's opinion).
- Term: The Constitution does not fix a term. He holds office during the pleasure of the President.
- Removal: The Constitution contains no procedure or grounds for removal. He holds office at the pleasure of the President and can be removed at any time.
- Remuneration: Not fixed by the Constitution; determined by the President. In practice, the AG is paid a retainer equivalent to that of a Supreme Court judge.
Duties and Functions of the Attorney General
As the chief law officer of the Government of India, the AG's duties include:
- To give advice to the Government of India on legal matters referred to him by the President.
- To perform other duties of a legal character assigned to him by the President.
- To discharge the functions conferred on him by the Constitution or any other law.
The President has assigned the AG the following duties:
- To appear on behalf of the Government of India in all cases in the Supreme Court in which the Government is concerned.
- To represent the Government in any reference made by the President to the Supreme Court under Article 143 (advisory jurisdiction).
- To appear (when required) in any High Court in any case in which the Government of India is concerned.
Rights & Limitations of the Attorney General
Rights
- Right of audience in all courts in the territory of India.
- Right to speak and take part in the proceedings of both Houses of Parliament, their joint sitting, and any committee of which he is named a member — but without the right to vote.
- Enjoys all the privileges and immunities available to a Member of Parliament.
Limitations
To avoid any conflict of duty, the following limitations are placed on the AG:
- He should not advise or hold a brief against the Government of India.
- He should not advise or hold a brief in cases in which he is called upon to advise or appear for the Government of India.
- He should not defend accused persons in criminal prosecutions without the Government's permission.
- He should not accept a directorship in any company or corporation without the Government's permission.
- He should not advise any ministry, department, statutory organisation, or PSU unless the reference comes through the Ministry of Law and Justice, Department of Legal Affairs.
Unlike the UK or the US, where the Attorney General is a political / ministerial appointee, India's AG is not a member of the Cabinet and not a whole-time counsel of the government. Because he is not a government servant, he is permitted private legal practice — which is precisely why the "conflict of interest" concern arises.
Issues Concerning the Office of the Attorney General
- Consent for criminal contempt: The AG's prior consent is required to initiate criminal contempt proceedings under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 — which may be misused by the party in power.
- Removal: No removal procedure is mentioned in the Constitution. The President can remove the AG at any time, which may affect the independence of the office.
- Pleasure doctrine: Since the AG holds office during the pleasure of the President, the term is not fixed.
- No bar on private practice: The AG is not debarred from private legal practice and is not a government servant — which may raise a conflict of interest.
Any private citizen wishing to file a criminal contempt petition must first obtain the written consent of the Attorney General (Section 15, Contempt of Courts Act, 1971). In recent years the AG has been asked to grant or refuse such consent in several high-profile matters involving comedians, activists, and commentators — illustrating both the gatekeeping value and the political sensitivity of this power.
Solicitor General of India
The Solicitor General of India (SG) is the second-highest law officer in the country, serving under the Attorney General.
- Besides the AG, the Government has other law officers — the Solicitor General and Additional Solicitors General — who assist the AG. However, only the AG's office is created by the Constitution; Article 76 does not mention the SG or ASG.
- The office of the SG and ASGs is governed by the Law Officers (Conditions of Service) Rules, 1987 — making them statutory (not constitutional) positions.
- The SG advises the government and is appointed for a three-year term by the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC), chaired by the Prime Minister.
- The AG can participate in parliamentary proceedings (without voting); the SG and ASGs cannot participate in parliamentary proceedings.
Tushar Mehta is the current Solicitor General of India. Serving since October 2018, he was reappointed for a further three-year term from 1 July 2026 to 30 June 2029, making him one of the longest-serving Solicitors General (after C.K. Daphtary).
Advocate General of the State (Article 165)
The Constitution provides for the office of the Advocate General for the states — the highest law officer in a state. The office of the Advocate General at the state level corresponds to the Attorney General at the Union level.
- Constitutional provision: Under Article 165, the Governor of each state appoints a person qualified to be a Judge of a High Court as Advocate General for the state.
- The Advocate General holds office during the pleasure of the Governor and receives such remuneration as the Governor determines.
- The duties, rights, privileges, and functions of an Advocate General are very similar to those of the Attorney General — but confined to the respective state.
AG vs Solicitor General vs Advocate General
| Feature | Attorney General | Solicitor General | Advocate General |
|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Constitutional (Art 76) | Statutory (1987 Rules) | Constitutional (Art 165) |
| Appointed by | President | ACC (PM-chaired) | Governor |
| Level | Union | Union | State |
| Parliament rights | Yes (no vote) | No | Yes, in State Legislature (no vote) |
The Attorney General sits at the meeting point of law and government — powerful enough to be the Union's voice in the highest court, yet holding office only at the pleasure of the President. — Legacy IAS Faculty
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Who is the current Attorney General of India?
Which article deals with the Attorney General of India?
Is the Attorney General a member of the Cabinet?
What is the difference between the Attorney General and the Solicitor General?
Who was the first Attorney General of India?
Key Takeaways
- The Attorney General (Article 76) is the highest law officer and chief legal adviser of the Union, appointed by the President.
- Qualification: must be qualified to be a Supreme Court judge. He holds office during the pleasure of the President — no fixed term, no removal procedure.
- He has a right of audience in all courts and may speak in Parliament (Art 88) without a vote; enjoys MP privileges (Art 105).
- He is not a Cabinet member and not a government servant, so he may do private practice — but never against the Government.
- Current AG: R. Venkataramani (16th, till Sept 2027); first AG: M.C. Setalvad; current SG: Tushar Mehta (till June 2029).
- The Solicitor General (statutory, 1987 Rules) and Advocate General (Article 165, state level) complete the hierarchy of law officers.
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