US Senate confirms Biden's solicitor-general pick Elizabeth Prelogar
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

The Senate voted 53-36 to approve Ms Elizabeth Prelogar, a former member of special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation team.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - The United States Senate on Thursday (Oct 28) confirmed Ms Elizabeth Prelogar to serve as US solicitor-general, approving US President Joe Biden's pick to be his chief advocate before the US Supreme Court just days before it hears two major abortion and gun rights cases.
The Senate voted 53-36 to approve Ms Prelogar, a former member of special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation team who then served as acting solicitor-general from the time of Mr Biden's inauguration in January until her nomination in August.
Due to a legal quirk, Ms Prelogar was required to step down from that acting position while her nomination was pending and has since been working in the US Justice Department's office of legal counsel.
Her confirmation comes ahead of the conservative-dominated Supreme Court on Monday hearing a challenge to a Texas law that imposes a near-total ban on abortions and a closely watched gun rights case on Wednesday.
During a September hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Republicans pressed Ms Prelogar on how the solicitor-general's office under Mr Biden had in several cases reversed the government's position from that of former President Donald Trump's era.
US Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, the panel's ranking Republican, cited those "flip flops" earlier this month in saying he opposed her nomination.
The Harvard Law School graduate clerked for liberal Supreme Court justices Elena Kagan and the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died last year, and Elena Kagan. She later served as an assistant to the solicitor-general from 2014 to 2019.
A former student of Russian who held a Fulbright fellowship in St Petersburg, Ms Prelogar also worked at the Justice Department as an assistant special counsel to Mr Mueller, who led the probe into Russia's role in the 2016 US presidential election.
She briefly returned to private practice and joined the law firm Cooley in January last year before returning to the Justice Department following Mr Biden's election.

