The Appointments Committee of the Cabinet has reappointed Tushar Mehta as the Solicitor General of India for a further three-year term starting July 1. The ACC also approved the reappointment of five Additional Solicitors General for the Supreme Court.
One of the government's most prominent legal faces, Mehta has represented the Union of India in several landmark cases involving constitutional interpretation, national security, electoral reforms, citizenship issues, taxation, digital regulation and Centre-State disputes. He has regularly appeared before Constitution Benches of the Supreme Court and in matters carrying significant policy implications for the government.

Reappointment of Additional Solicitors General
Along with Mehta, the ACC has approved the reappointment of five Additional Solicitors General (ASGs) for the Supreme Court for another three-year term. Vikramjit Banerjee and K.M. Nataraj have been reappointed with effect from July 1, 2026, while Suryaprakash V. Raju, N. Venkataraman and Aishwarya Bhati have been reappointed from June 30, 2026.
In a separate decision, the government has reappointed Chetan Sharma as Additional Solicitor General for the Delhi High Court for a further period of six months with effect from July 1, 2026, or until further orders.
The reappointments come at a time when the Union Government is engaged in litigation involving a range of constitutional, regulatory and public policy issues before the Supreme Court and various High Courts. The move reflects the government's confidence in its existing legal team and ensures stability in its representation before the courts.
Profile of the Solicitor General
Mehta, a senior advocate from Gujarat, first joined the Centre's legal team as Additional Solicitor General in 2014. He was elevated as Solicitor General of India in October 2018 and has since emerged as one of the longest-serving holders of the office in recent years. Prior to his appointment at the Centre, he served as Additional Advocate General for Gujarat and built an extensive practice in constitutional and public law.
The reappointed ASGs have likewise played key roles in representing the Union Government across a broad spectrum of cases involving constitutional law, taxation, criminal justice, economic regulation and governance-related issues before the Supreme Court. (ANI)
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