But the reality of what’s going on in the AG’s office is far different from the picture Mr. Wolf paints. Yes, Mr. Frosh has gotten involved in a variety of litigation against the federal government on issues ranging from health care to the environment to constitutional questions about President Donald Trump’s business interests. But in most cases, that entails working with other state attorneys general who are leading those suits to provide additional filings related to Maryland’s particular interests in a case. Occasionally, Mr. Frosh has taken a leading role in such suits, but those are cases when Maryland’s interests are pre-eminent or the state has standing to sue that others may lack. That’s the case, for example, with the suit alleging that President Trump’s continued profits from his Washington, D.C., hotel violate the Constitution’s emoluments clause: Maryland can make an argument that foreign officials’ desire to patronize that hotel hurts Marylanders’ economic interests in a way that California, for example, cannot. Typically, Mr. Frosh’s office works with outside counsel on these cases to avoid diverting resources from other duties.