The Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously voted today to make Michelle Lee, formerly Google's patent chief, the director of the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). She still has to be confirmed by the full Senate, but that shouldn't be a problem after the smooth committee vote.

USPTO directors have come from the tech sector before—the last director, David Kappos, was a top lawyer at IBM. But Lee's appointment marks the first time someone with a background from an Internet-focused company will take the helm at USPTO. While she was at Google, Lee became one of the most outspoken corporate lawyers on the problem of "patent trolls" plaguing the system with their lawsuits.

In June of last year, rumors started to trickle out of Washington that the White House was set to nominate Philip Johnson, a Johnson & Johnson lawyer. That suggestion sparked a major backlash among tech reformers. Nominating Johnson seemed like pouring salt in the wound, since tech was still smarting from the failure to pass a patent reform bill. Big pharma companies were key opponents of reform, and Johnson personally spoke out about some of the changes tech reformers were seeking.

Lee's already been the boss at USPTO, unofficially, for two years. She was moved from being head of the Silicon Valley branch office to "interim director" after former director David Kappos stepped down in 2013. Lee was officially nominated in October.

“This position has been vacant for more than two years, which is far too long for an office that is so important to our nation’s innovators,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy, top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee. “Ms. Lee has strong bipartisan support and I hope her confirmation will be taken up swiftly on the Senate floor.”

Kappos, formerly chief of patents at IBM, is now in private practice. He's emerged as a vocal opponent of some of the patent reform measures being debated.

The patent reform bill, dubbed the Innovation Act, has been revived this year in substantially the same form as the bill that was killed off in the last Congress. With a new Republican leadership in the Senate eager to show they can pass something, it has a decent chance of passing.