Department of Justice
In the United States, the Attorney General is a cabinet level position. The Attorney General is in charge of the US Justice Department.
There in no term limit on this Cabinet-level post - they serve "at the pleasure of the President."
He is President Barack Obama's current (1/11) appointment to that Cabinet level position. - - - - - - - - The Attorney General is sometimes referred to as "The President's Lawyer", to define the position.
yes it is a cabinet level position! It is on the white-house website!
yes it is a cabinet level position! It is on the white-house website!
There is no fixed term length for the United States Attorney General. The Attorney General is nominated by the President of the United States and confirmed by the U.S. Senate.
Although Condoleezza Rice no longer holds a cabinet-level office, she was formerly a Secretary of State.
Some the departments include the Secretary of State, Attorney General, Secretary of the Treasury, and the Secretary of Defense. The Vice-President and the White House Chief of Staff are cabinet-level officers.
Washington's first cabinet wasSecretary of State (Thomas Jefferson),Secretary of Treasury (Alexander Hamilton),Secretary of War (Henry Knox),Attorney General (Edmund Jennings Randolph)Post Master General (Samuel Osgood) - Not a cabinet level position at this time.Second term cabinetSecretary of State (Edmund Jennings Randolph, Thomas Pickering (1795)Secretary of Treasury (Alexander Hamilton),Secretary of War (Thomas Pickering, James McHenry (1796)Attorney General (William Bradford, Charles Lee ( 1795))Post Master General (Timothy Pickering)
Answer 1: handle foreign affairsAnswer 2: The first answer, "handle foreign affairs," is absolutely incorrect. It is the Secretary of State who handles foreign affairs. The first answerer clearly got mixed-up, I'm guessing because both the Secretary of State, and the Attorney General, are Cabinet positions, appointed by the President of the United States.The Attorney General of the United States is its highest-ranking law enforcement official in the United States, and is its federal prosecutor. S/he also runs the US Department of Justice. The US Attorney General is a cabinet-level position, appointed by the President of the United States.S/he oversees the federal US Attorney's office; and the US Attorney's office (usually several of which are located in each state) prosecutes federal crimes across the nation. The US Attorney is also considered the United State's lawyer, so to speak; and so it handles cases both criminal and civil at the federal level. It also reviews laws for constitutionality, maybe even helps draft laws. It does pretty much everything that any lawyer would do for his/her client, except that the US Attorney General's client is the entire United States federal government!In addition to the US Attorney General, though, each US state has its own Attornney General.The Attorney General of a state is said state's highest-ranking law enforcement official, or statewide prosecuting attorney. In some states, the "Attorney General" is elected, and in some it's an appointment by the Governor.State Attorney Generals prosecute statewide criminal and civil cases. There is usually an entire staff of "deputy" or "assistant" attorney general lawyers who work for the either gubernatorially-appointed or elected-by-the-people state Attorney General. His/her office may also review laws that either have been passed, or are about to be passed, to determine if they're constitutional. S/he may also help with law enforcement issues, or appeals of rulings against the state. Basically, the Attorney General's office is the state's lawyer... for almost all things, both civil and criminal.Each county in a state usually has its own -- usually elected -- county prosecutor (sometimes called the "district attorney"); and said county prosecutor is the highest-ranking law enforcement official in said county. The local county prosecutor (or "district attorney") is never called the county's "Attorney General."
There is no term limit to cabinet level positions. Attorney General Janet Reno served as the only attorney general in President Clinton's administration, making her the longest-serving attorney general.
The Postmaster General was a Cabinet-level position from 1829 to 1971, but the Postmaster General is no longer a Cabinet member since the United States Postal Service is now a special agency outside of the executive branch rather than an executive department.