Kellyanne Conway’s husband is a wealthy New York lawyer who was involved in Paula Jones’ lawsuit against Bill Clinton and belongs to a conservative legal society.

George T. Conway III has participated in other prominent lawsuits, including tobacco industry cases. Donald Trump was considering George Conway to be U.S. solicitor general, but that job went to someone else. However, Politico reported March 17 that George Conway has “has emerged as the front-runner to lead the civil division of the Department of Justice.”

Politico reports that position will be key in overseeing “the defense of the Trump administration in the courts in many legal battles,” including the president’s travel ban.

Kellyanne, 49, the first woman to manage a major presidential campaign, helped engineer Trump’s electoral victory and, on December 22, was named counselor to the president. Kellyanne has been one of Trump’s highest-profile surrogates on TV and one of his most controversial. Her husband did not have any public role in Trump’s campaign.

Our own "Prince George" at 2 yrs old, with twin Claudia and Welsh Corgi (Queen's favorite dog) #royalbaby pic.twitter.com/AyLmvty0NQ — Kellyanne Conway (@KellyannePolls) July 25, 2013

Kellyanne is regarded as a conservative “gender expert,” who has been involved for years in Republican politics and polling, especially regarding trends involving women.

Who is her husband, George T. Conway III?

Here’s what you need to know:

1. George Conway, Who Has Four Children With Kellyanne, Has Only Argued One Case Before SCOTUS

Perfect #Yankees game. 6-run come from behind 9th inning, all 4 kids here & waitress asked for my ID #NewYork pic.twitter.com/LrFWQ2d4F5 — Kellyanne Conway (@KellyannePolls) June 30, 2016

According to CNN, Conway has only argued one case before the U.S. Supreme Court. CNN described Conway as a “corporate attorney out of New York.” National Review reports that “Conway has more relevant experience than did Obama’s initial SG pick. Any suggestion he’s unfit for the job is inaccurate and unfair.”

The Huffington Post reports that Attorney General Jeff Sessions has “interviewed” George Conway for the solicitor general job. However, Conway didn’t end up getting the job.

The successful case Conway argued? “Morrison v. Australia National Bank…one of the most significant securities law cases of the past ten years,” according to National Review.

George Conway, husband of @KellyannePolls is now the front runner for Soliciter General after withdrawal of Chuck Cooper. Make it stop! pic.twitter.com/KYYFZ9nXbO — Neal McHugh (@nealmchugh) February 10, 2017

The Conways have four children, said CNN. Kellyanne Conway has posted photos of George and their children on social media. Some photos show them at baseball games.

Kellyanne once asked her daughter, Claudia, 11, to change out of a turquoise shirt on Memorial Day and into a blue one because “it wasn’t a shade available to Betsy Ross when she stayed up through the night sewing the damn flag,” according to The Las Vegas Review Journal, which described her as trying to help Trump improve his image with women.

George Conway had a Twitter page, but he hadn’t posted on it since 2015, and it contained mostly retweets about random issues. He also posted about a Malaysian airlines crash and Jamie-Lynn Sigler’s ex-husband. His Twitter page has now been deleted.

CNN reported that George Conway is of Filipino heritage.

2. George Conway Was Part of a Secret Group of Lawyers Who Helped Paula Jones & Was Rumored to Be a Source for Matt Drudge

Bloomberg wrote of Kellyanne: “Her husband, George T. Conway III, a lawyer at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, was behind some of the most bitter lawsuits against Bill Clinton in the 1990s and stories that were promoted via the Drudge Report.”

One of those cases involved the sexual harassment case filed by Paula Jones against the president.

The New York Times said George Conway was “a New York lawyer educated at Yale” who shared a “low view of President Clinton. When the Jones case led to Ms. (Monica) Lewinsky, (another lawyer) and Mr. Conway searched for a new lawyer for Mrs. (Linda) Tripp.” The article was headlined, “Quietly, a Team of Lawyers Kept Paula Jones Case Alive.”

Justice Scalia inspiring 10-yr old Claudia last year after she asked should find a "happier" profession than the law pic.twitter.com/f0aEgAaYoN — Kellyanne Conway (@KellyannePolls) February 13, 2016

The Times added, “Mr. Conway wanted his role kept hidden as well, because his New York law firm, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, included influential Democrats like Bernard W. Nussbaum, a former White House counsel. Mr. Conway’s name does not appear on any billing records.”

The Observer claimed that Bill Clinton’s lawyer, Bob Bennett “was interested in evidence of possible collusion between the Jones lawyers and the Whitewater independent counsel, Kenneth Starr, stretching back well before the current White House crisis. After all, Mr. Starr and Mr. Conway have represented Philip Morris Companies in tobacco litigation at the same time, and both simultaneously worked on briefs for Ms. Jones arguing against Presidential immunity from a civil lawsuit such as hers.”

The Observer also claimed that George Conway was Matt Drudge’s source for a Jones’ claim about curvature in the president’s anatomy, but the site also quoted Drudge as denying he had ever met Conway. There is no evidence that Conway was in fact a Drudge source.

In an email to AmericanPolitics, Conway also denied any connections to Richard Mellon Scaife, the billionaire who financed some conservative efforts to expose Clinton’s problems, writing, “I have never met Mr. Scaife. I have never met any member of his family. I have never represented Mr. Scaife or his holdings. I have no connections whatsoever with Mr. Scaife, his holdings or his family.”

In an interview with reporters from the site, Conway said it was “ridiculous” to tie him to Drudge.

AmericanPolitics claimed Conway’s income from the law firm where he works in New York is at least $1 million a year. The Observer called Conway a “million-dollar-a-year partner.”

3. George Conway Has Worked for a Major Tobacco Company on a Lawsuit & Belongs to the Federalist Society

Conway’s New York law firm bio says he “has been a partner in the Litigation Department of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz since January 1994. He joined the firm in September 1988.”

The law firm describes his litigation experience as including “a variety of high-profile matters spanning many areas of law in federal and state courts throughout the country. He has extensive experience in securities litigation, mergers and acquisitions litigation, contract litigation, antitrust litigation, and other litigation, both at the trial and appellate levels.”

One of those high-profile suits involved representing tobacco company Philip Morris. “Mr. Conway played a substantial role in prosecuting one of the most prominent defamation cases in recent memory (Philip Morris v. American Broadcasting Cos.),” said the law firm.

The New York Times said of that suit’s result, “In an extraordinary act of contrition, ABC News publicly apologized last night for asserting in a news program that two giant tobacco companies add extra nicotine to their cigarettes.” That apology was criticized by anti-smoking advocates, with The Times quoting one professor as saying, “Philip Morris has bullied a major television network into apologizing for what was essentially a true story.”

George Conway’s law firm says he also “represented the National Football League in trademark and antitrust litigation against the Dallas Cowboys” and “won an important appeal under the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 on behalf of the Swiss installation artist Christoph Büchel in the artist’s highly publicized dispute with the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art.”

The Federalist Society, a group of conservative lawyers, has an experts bio page devoted to George Conway on its site.

In the interview with the AmericanPolitics site, George Conway said, “I’m a member of the Federalist Society, but I mean . . but what’s that got to do with anything?”

Kellyanne Conway is also a lawyer.

4. George Is a Graduate of Yale Law School Who Has Worked Against Felons Having a Right to Vote

Baby V turned "V" (roman numeral) today. Here she is showing off her talents. #lovethisgirl #bigapplecircus pic.twitter.com/SEun2ZTqVc — Kellyanne Conway (@KellyannePolls) November 3, 2014

George Conway “is a graduate of Harvard College, where in 1984 he received an A.B. magna cum laude in Biochemical Sciences,” says his bio. “He received his JD in 1987 from Yale Law School, where he was an editor of the Yale Law Journal.”

In 1987 and 1988, “he served as a law clerk to Circuit Judge Ralph K. Winter, Jr. of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.”

Winter, a former Yale Law School professor, was nominated to the federal bench by President Ronald Reagan.

In 2008, Conway co-authored a journal article making the case against felon voting. The Federalist Society site has posted audio of George Conway speaking on a panel about felon voting.

Bloomberg notes that George Conway’s “law firm biography lists only one Supreme Court case he has argued — a 2010 dispute involving the overseas reach of federal securities law.” It would be unusual for a Solicitor General to have such little Supreme Court experience.

5. Kellyanne Conway Is Known as an Expert on Conservative Gender Issues & George Conway Is a Republican Donor, Including to Ted Cruz

OpenSecrets.org says that George Conway is a frequent donor to Republican candidates, including Rudy Giuliani, Rick Santorum, Mitt Romney, and Newt Gingrich, and The New Jersey Republican State Committee. The Conways live in New Jersey. In 2015, George donated money to Ted Cruz in the Republican primary for president.

Kellyanne is the CEO and president of the polling company, inc./WomanTrend, which is “a privately-held, woman-owned corporation founded in 1995. The firm is headquartered in Washington, DC and maintains an office in New York,” said CNBC.

Kellyanne Conway’s company bio says “The RNC tasked Kellyanne with helping to defeat the so-called ‘War on Women.’” One division of her polling company, WomanTrend, tracks “the social, cultural, financial, professional and health trends influencing—and being influenced by—women,” the company website says. She has worked for many prominent Republican politicians over the years.