STARCHER, Justice.
This is a case where the Attorney General of the State of West Virginia claims that executive branch agencies and officials are violating our State’s Constitution by using lawyers who are not employed or approved by the Attorney General. Through his petition, the Attorney General asserts that the respondents have a clear legal duty to cease authorizing the “unlawful” employment of lawyers by executive branch and related agencies of the State of West Virginia without the consent of the Attorney General, and to cease the “unlawful” expenditure of public funds for legal services that are performed by lawyers other than those who are employed or approved by the Attorney General. We hold that the employment and use of such lawyers is not barred in all cases; however, we also hold that the Office of the Attorney General may not be stripped of its inherent core functions.
I.
Facts & Background
The petitioner, the Honorable Darrell V. McGraw, Jr., is the Attorney General of the State of West Virginia (“the Attorney General”), an elected constitutional officer of this State.1 The Attorney General has filed a petition for a writ of mandamus in this Court, naming as respondents the Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Administration and the Director of the Division of Personnel of the Department of Administration, two officials within the executive branch.
The Attorney General asks this Court to hold unconstitutional any statute that purports to authorize any executive agency, body, or similar instrumentality of the State to employ and use lawyers who are not em[28]*28ployed or approved by the Attorney General; to prohibit payment of public funds for the sendees of such lawyers; to require the payment of money for all such lawyers to be directed to the budget of the Attorney General; and to deem all such lawyers who are State employees to be employees of the Attorney General.
The Attorney General specifically identifies as “unlawful” 216 State-employed lawyers (in 37 State agencies) who are not employed by the Attorney General;2 the petition contains averments that state that the Attorney General currently employs only 65 lawyers. The Attorney General contends generally that as a result of legislation enacted over the past several decades, there has been a “creeping encroachment” and usurpation of the constitutional role of the Attorney General as the State’s chief legal officer “to such an extent that the constitutionally-mandated and elected Office of the Attorney General is quickly becoming de facto non-existent.”3
This Court accepted the Attorney General’s petition, granted interv'enor status to several State officials and entities, and authorized the submission of amici curiae responses to the petition from other interested persons and entities.’4 We will, in the follow[29]*29ing discussion, use the term “respondents” to include all of the State entities and officials— whether or not they have been formally granted intervenor status — that have filed briefs opposing the relief sought by the Attorney General’s petition; and we will include in the generic term “State entity” both “public” bodies (see note 17 infra) and the individuals (usually public officials and employees) who do the work of these public bodies, unless a different meaning is indicated in the text.5
II.
Standard of Review
As we stated in State ex rel. West Virginia Deputy Sheriffs Ass’n, Inc. v. Sims, 204 W.Va. 442, 444, 513 S.E.2d 669, 671 (1998):
This is an original jurisdiction proceeding. Consequently, we are not directly reviewing a ruling or determination by a lower tribunal. Our standard for original mandamus jurisdiction has been recently stated as:
“A writ of mandamus will not issue unless three elements coexist — (1) a clear legal right in the petitioner to the relief sought; (2) a legal duty on the part of respondent to do the thing which the petitioner seeks to compel; and (3) the absence of another adequate remedy.”
Syllabus Point 1, State ex rel. Billy Ray C. v. Skaff, 190 W.Va. 504, 438 S.E.2d 847 (1993). [citations omitted].
The Attorney General’s petition raises important issues of State-wide and constitutional significance. Our discretionary exercise of original jurisdiction in mandamus to address these issues is appropriate. Cf. Manchin v. Browning, 170 W.Va. 779, 296 S.E.2d 909 (1982).
III.
Discussion
A.
The Office of Attorney General of the State of West Virginia is established by Arti-de VII, Section 1 of the West Virginia Constitution:
The executive department shall consist of a governor, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, commissioner of agriculture and attorney general, who shall be, ex officio, reporter of the court of appeals.... They shall reside at the seat of government during them terms of office, keep there the public records, books and papers pertaining to their respective offices and shall perform such duties as may he prescribed by lane.
(Emphasis added.)
No other constitutional language more specifically defines or delineates the Attorney General’s constitutional role as a member of the executive department. Based on this lack of other specific constitutional language — -and based on the “as may be prescribed by law” language quoted above — the respondents argue that the Legislature has essentially plenary and unfettered discretion to, through statutory action, delineate, limit, or even effectively eliminate the Attorney General’s role in providing legal counsel and representation to State entities. Lawson v. Kanawha County Court, 80 W.Va. 612, 618, 92 S.E. 786, 789 (1917) (“The phrases ‘prescribed by law’ and ‘provided by law,’ when used in constitutions, generally mean prescribed or provided by statutes.”)
For example, the brief on behalf of the Cabinet Secretaries of the Departments of Environmental Protection, Tax and Revenue, Education and the Arts, Health & Human Resources, Military Affairs & Public Safety, and Transportation states:
According to the scheme of the Constitution, for example, the Legislature might have decided (or might decide in the future) that, as far as other officers in agencies in State government are concerned, the Attorney General should have purely [30]*30advisory duties and no representational duties. The Legislature could have created or could create the office of “solicitor general,” wholly independent of the office of Attorney General, which would be available to represent the State in courts and perform other representational functions, while the Attorney General tends to analyzing questions presented to him and to issuing advisory opinions. Since the Constitution has not mandated a representational function for the Attorney General, the Legislature is free to prescribe that duty for him, or for some other office altogether. •
At oral argument in the instant case, counsel for these Secretaries stated that the constitutional propriety of the above-quoted hypothetical elimination of the Attorney General’s representational role was counsel’s personal view, and not his clients’ position in the instant case. However, the respondents’ briefs uniformly assert as a premise of their arguments the theoretical ability of the Legislature (or other officials in the executive branch, if authorized by the Legislature) to reduce the practical role of the Office of the Attorney General in the State’s day-to-day legal affairs to a nullity. This overweening assertion of Legislative “discretion” is the “flip side” of the Attorney General’s assertion of exclusive “jurisdiction” with respect to all legal matters of any sort in which the State is involved. We conclude that both sides are overreaching in them assertions.
This is not the first time this Court has had to wrestle with the question of the essential or inherent powers and duties of the Office of the Attorney General. In Syllabus Point 2 of State v. Ehrlich, 65 W.Va. 700, 64 5.E. 935 (1909), this Court concluded that the Office of Attorney General held such powers as did attorneys general under the common law, subject to redefinition from time to time by the Legislature. We addressed this issue again in Manchin v. Browning, 170 W.Va. 779, 296 S.E.2d 909 (1982). We concluded there that the Attorney General did not possess powers arising under the common law. 170 W.Va. at 785, 296 S.E.2d at 915.
We concluded in Manchin that the phrase “shall perform such duties as may be prescribed by law” operated to defeat the ássertion that the Attorney General of West Virginia possesses common-law powers. We held in Syllabus Point 1 of Manchin that “the powers and duties of the Attorney General are specified by the constitution and by rules of law prescribed pursuant thereto.” (Emphasis added.) We observed that: “The plain effect of the provision is to limit the powers of the Attorney General to those conferred by law laid down pursuant to the constitution” 6 170 W.Va. at 785, 296 S.E.2d at 915. (Emphasis added.)
Notwithstanding this “plain effect,” we concluded in Manchin that the Attorney General is the “chief legal officer” of the State, 170 W.Va. at 787, 296 S.E.2d at 917, charged with representing the interests of the State in actions wherein the State is a party and charged with representing the State’s officers in actions wherein the officer was a party by reason of being the State’s representative.7 We required there that when the Attorney General represents a State officer, rather than the State itself, the Attorney General was required to advocate the policy position of the State officer in that litigation, even when the officer’s policy position differed from that preferred by the Attorney General.
Most importantly, we said in Manchin:
[31]*31The Attorney General is more properly designated as the chief legal officer of the State, with the law as his area of special expertise. *** By the nature of his office he is the general lawyer for the State. *** [E]xplicit in the title Attorney General is the proposition that the holder of the title is the general lawyer for the State ...
170 W.Va. at 787-788, 296 S.E.2d at 917-18. (Emphasis added.)
In State ex rel. Caryl v. MacQueen, 182 W.Va. 50, 54, 385 S.E.2d 646, 650 (1989), we again addressed the nature of the office, stating: “[E]xplicit in the title attorney general is the proposition that the holder of the title is the general counsel for the State.”
From the time West Virginia’s Constitution was first adopted, there has been consistent legislative recognition of the Attorney General’s role as that of the State’s chief legal officer, having a central responsibility for providing legal counsel and services to the State and State entities.
The West Virginia Legislature of 1872-73 prescribed the role of the Attorney General as follows:
The Attorney General shall give his opinion and advice in writing whenever required to do so by the governor, or other officers at the seat of government, or by the board of public works.
He shall appear as counsel for the State in all cases in which the state is interested, depending [pending] in the supreme court of appeals or in the circuit court of the county in which the seat of government may be.
1872-73 W.Va.Acts, chapter 54, pp. 141-142.
In 1909, the federal courts wei’e added to the named forums in which the Attorney General “shall appear as counsel for the state,” and the Attorney General was further required to “defend all actions and proceedings against any state officer in his official capacity ..., but should the state be interested against such officer, he shall appear for the state; .... ” Chapter 120, Section 2, Barnes’ W.Va.Code 1923, p. 2127 [1909].8
Long-standing principles of constitutional construction provide that:
A contemporaneous and long-standing legislative construction of a constitutional provision is entitled to significant weight_[W]here there has been a practical construction which has been acquiesced in for a considerable period, considerations in favor of adhering to this [constitutional] construction sometimes present ... a plausibility and force which is not easy to resist.
State ex rel. Board of University v. City of Sherwood, 489 N.W.2d 584, 587-588 (N.D. 1992). (Citations omitted.)9
We believe it is clear from these authorities that there are certain core functions of the Office of Attorney General that are inherent in the office, of which the Office of Attorney General may not be deprived, and which may not be transferred to or set up in conflict with other offices. The suggestion by some of the respondents that the Legislature possesses unfettered discretion to define, delineate, and limit the duties of the Attorney General is wholly at odds with the historical and well-settled understanding of the constitutional role of the Attorney General. Accordingly, we hold that pursuant to Article VII, Section 1 of the West Virginia Constitution, the Attorney General of the State of West Virginia is the State’s chief legal officer, which status necessarily implies [32]*32having the constitutional responsibility for providing legal counsel to State officials and State entities. The nature and extent of that “constitutional responsibility” remains to be hereinafter analyzed.
B.
Pursuant to Article IV, Section 8 of the West Virginia Constitution, the Legislature has broad powers with respect to delineating the role, powers, and duties of non-constitutional public officers:
The legislature, in cases [of offices] not provided for in this Constitution, shall prescribe, by general laws, the terms of office, powers, duties and compensation of all public officers and agents, and the manner in which they shall be elected, appointed and removed. [M]
However, it has been long recognized that this power of the Legislature to create offices in addition to those created in the Constitution is necessarily constrained by proper respect for the offices created by and enumerated in the Constitution. “The legislature, of course, cannot create offices which will conflict with, or curtail the constitutional powers of, any of the offices provided for by the Constitution.” Blue v. Smith, 69 W.Va. 761, 762, 72 S.E. 1038, 1039 (1911). Additionally, “[t]o transfer the duties of one office to another is to abolish the former and a legislative act attempting to do so, in the case of a constitutional office, is void for that reason.” Hatfield v. County Court of Mingo County, 80 W.Va. 165, 168, 92 S.E. 245, 246 (1917).10
Other jurisdictions have taken a similar approach. In State ex rel. Mattson, Treasurer v. Kiedrowski, 391 N.W.2d 777, 782 (Minn. 1986), the Minnesota court stated:
The mandate in Section 1 of Article V, that the executive department consist of a governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer and attorney general, implicitly places a limitation on the power of the legislature, under Section 4 of Article V, to prescribe the duties of such offices. The limitation is implicit in the specific titles the drafters gave to the individual offices.
In Love v. Baehr, 47 Cal. 364, 368 (1874), the California Supreme Court held that the legislative power to assign duties to constitutional offices was limited to “such duties as in then* nature have heretofore appertained to similar offices elsewhere.” Similarly, the Supreme Court of North Dakota stated in Ex Parte Corliss, 16 N.D. 470, 476-477, 114 N.W. 962, 965 (1907):
We do not deny the power of the Legislature to prescribe duties for these officers, which power cames with it by implication the right to change such duties from time-to-time as the public welfare may demand; but we deny its power to strip such offices, even temporarily, of a portion of them inherent functions and transfer them to officers appointed by central authority.
In American Legion Post No. 279 v. Barrett, 371 Ill. 78, 91, 20 N.E.2d 45, 51 (1939), the Supreme Court of Illinois stated:
The constitution ... provides that public officers, including the State Treasurer, shall perform such duties as may be required by law. Nothing in the constitution further defines the duties of the State Treasurer. This Court has held that those duties are such as are to be implied from the nature of the office and of them he may not be deprived or relieved, [citations omitted].
And in Wright v. Callahan, 61 Idaho 167, 181, 99 P.2d 961, 966 (1940) the Supreme Court of Idaho held:
[T]o permit the legislature to create an office and invest in the appointee the powers and duties conferred upon a constitutional officer, would be to permit the legislature to nullify the Constitution and reduce it to a mere scrap of paper.11
[33]*33The executive branch, as well as the Legislature, is similarly constrained with respect to the inherent or core functions of constitutional offices. In a case holding that the Governor may not by veto reduce to zero the appropriations necessary to the operation of certain constitutional offices, this Court stated:
Clearly, the framers of the Constitution and the people intended that these [constitutional] officers function as a viable part of the governmental process. How then can it be x’easoned that the Governor, also no more than a constitutional officer, can eliminate and prohibit the function of these offices?
State ex rel. Brotherton v. Blankenship, 157 W.Va. 100, 118, 207 S.E.2d 421, 432 (1973).
The fundamental principle involved in all of these eases is the doctrine of separation of powers. In the case before us, the doctrine has two aspects. One aspect is the constitutional inability of the Legislature to define the powers and duties of the Office of Attorney General and the other constitutional offices so as to deprive the Office of Attorney General, or any of the other constitutional offices, of the inherent functions and purposes thereof. The second aspect is the maintenance of the concept of an executive branch that is itself divided among the several constitutional offices provided for in the Constitution, each with a separate, distinct, and vital contribution to be made to the operation of the executive branch.
Unlike the federal government, where essentially the entire executive power is vested in one elected officer, the President of the United States, our State Constitution apportions executive power among several elected officers. These offices, each operating in some respects independently, must combine and cooperate (even if they have differing policy views and perspectives) to provide an efficient and effective executive branch of government.12
The doctrine of separation of powers is expressed in Section 1, Article V of our Constitution:
The legislative, executive and judicial departments shall be separate and distinct, so that neither shall exercise the power properly belonging to either of the others; nor shall any person exercise the powers of more than one of them at the same time....
This Court has repeatedly and steadfastly required adherence to the separation of powers doctrine.
Thus, we have recognized the need for some flexibility in interpreting the separation of powers doctrine in order to meet the realities of modern day government and particularly the proliferation of administrative agencies. We have not however hesitated to utilize the doctrine where we felt there was a direct and fundamental encroachment by one branch of government into the traditional powers of another branch of government.
Appalachian Power Co. v. PSC, 170 W.Va. 757, 759, 296 S.E.2d 887, 889 (1982).13
[34]*34In State ex rel Meadows v. Hechler, 195 W.Va. 11, 14, 462 S.E.2d 586, 589 (1995), we stated:
The separation of powers doctrine expressly stated in our constitution is a core principle of our system of government, whose roots can be traced back to the founding of this country. See Hodges v. Public Serv. Com/m’n, 110 W.Va. 649, 652-54, 159 S.E. 834, 835-36 (1931) (discussing the origin of the separation of powers principle and noting “that the very first resolution passed in the convention which framed our national Constitution called for a separation of governmental powers [.]”) ... In State ex rel. State Building Commission v. Bailey, 151 W.Va. 79, 150 S.E.2d 449 (1966), we discussed this fundamental precept of government:
The Constitution, in distributing the powers of government, creates three distinct and separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial. This separation is not merely a matter of convenience or of governmental mechanism. Its object is basic and vital, namely, to preclude a commingling of these essentially different powers of government in the same hands. ***.
If it be important thus to separate the several departments of government and restrict them to the exercise of their appointed powers, it follows, as a logical corollary, equally important, that each department should be kept completely independent of the others — independent not in the sense that they shall not cooperate to the common end of carrying into effect the purposes of the Constitution, but in the sense that the acts of each shall never be controlled by, or subjected, directly or indirectly, to, the coercive influence of either of the other departments.... [emphasis in original].
❖ íJí
We crystallized the significance of the separation of powers doctrine in Syllabus Point 1 of State ex rel. Barker v. Manchin, 167 W.Va. 155, 279 S.E.2d 622 (1981):
Article V, section 1 of the Constitution of West Virginia which prohibits any one department of our state government from exercising the powers of the others, is not merely a suggestion; it is part of the fundamental law of our State and, as such, it must be strictly construed and closely followed.
(Citations and footnotes omitted.)
With the principles underlying these cases in mind, we therefore hold, pursuant to the separation of powers doctrine set forth in Article V, Section 1, of the West Virginia Constitution, that the Legislature cannot create offices that will conflict with or curtail the constitutional powers of the offices provided for by the Constitution; and to transfer the inherent functions of a constitutional office to another office is to curtail the former. Therefore, a legislative act that attempts to accomplish such a transfer is unconstitutional.
C.
The Attorney General argues that whenever the Legislature authorizes the provision of legal services to a State entity by a lawyer who is not employed by or with the consent of the Attorney General, the constitutional scheme that creates the Office of Attorney General as that of the State’s chief legal officer is violated, because that office is being stripped of its inherent functions in violation of the separation of powers doctrine.
The Attorney General urges us to treat the Office of Attorney General as possessing exclusive constitutional authority with regal'd to legal representation of the various entities of State government, because the office is an elective one, and because, as we discuss herein, the Office of Attorney General historically functioned for some time as essentially the sole source of legal counsel and legal representation for all of the entities of State government.
This Court recognized in Manchin, supra, that the Legislature had authorized some executive department agencies to “hire them own counsel using agency funds.” 170 W.Va. at 788, n. 4, 296 S.E.2d at 917-918, n. 4. And we held in Syllabus Point 2 of State ex rel. Caryl v. MacQueen, 182 W.Va. 50, 385 S.E.2d 646 (1989) that: “The Attorney General is the legal representative of the State [35]*35and its agencies unless specifically exempted from his duty by statute.” (Emphasis added).14 In neither of those cases did we intimate that the Legislature may not under any circumstances authorize the use of legal counsel other than the Attorney General— nor did we in either case intimate that the Legislature had carte blanche to eviscerate the role of the Attorney General as the State’s chief legal officer.
As the Supreme Court of Kentucky stated in Johnson v. Commonwealth ex rel. Meredith, 291 Ky. 829, 844, 165 S.W.2d 820, 829 (1942):
[T]he General Assembly may ... authorize the employment of other counsel for the departments.... [However, the Johnson court went on to say] as the legislature cannot abolish the office directly, it cannot do so indirectly by depriving the incumbent of all of his substantial prerogatives or by practically preventing him from discharging the substantial things appertaining to the office.
(Emphasis added).15
The decision of West Virginia’s founders to have a chief legal officer for the State cannot be treated as merely a relic from the past that has no practical force and vital importance in modern times. To the contrary, the Attorney General’s constitutionally established role of chief legal officer for the State must be given as full an expression today as it was in the past.
The fundamental reason that all three branches of our State government must accord the Office of Attorney General and all constitutional offices appropriate respect and dignity rests on the fact that the people, by their Constitution, have spoken clearly and decisively in creating these offices. As we stated in State ex rel. Brotherton v. Blankenship, 157 W.Va. 100, 119-120, 207 S.E.2d 421, 433 (1973):
On many occasions it has been suggested to the people that the election of Secretary of State, Auditor, Treasurer, Commissioner of Agriculture and Attorney General be eliminated and that the appointment to such offices be left to the discretion of the Governor. As of this date such concept has not been approved by the electorate and the Governor cannot achieve that end without such approval.... It would defy reality and reason to say that [these] officers could conduct the business of such offices, as intended by the people, without any funds with which to operate and personnel to assist them, [emphasis added]16
[36]*36It is axiomatic that our Constitution is a living document that must be viewed in light of modern realities. “Reasonable construction of our Constitution ... permits evolution and adjustment to changing conditions as well as to a varied set of facts.... The solution [to problems of constitutional interpretation] must be found in a study of the specific provision of the Constitution and the best method [under current conditions] to further advance the goals of the framers in adopting such a provision.” Randolph County Bd. of Educ. v. Adams, 467 S.E.2d 150, 163, 196 W.Va. 9, 22 (1995) (holding that free textbooks are today required by the West Virginia Constitution’s guarantee of a thorough and efficient education, even though they were not required when the Constitution was adopted).
Having carefully reviewed the specific provision of the Constitution at issue in the instant case, we must undertake an effort to identify “the best method to further advance the goals of the framers in adopting” that provision, if the State is to find a just and workable solution to the difficult constitutional quandary presented to us by the case sub judice. We shall look first at how those goals and purposes were expressed in the past, and then examine what must be done to give effective and practical expression to those goals and purposes in the present. We are striving to discern what, under modern conditions, fulfills the goal and purposes of the framers of the Constitution in creating the elective Office of Attorney General. In other words, we are striving to discern what are the inherent or “core” functions of the State’s chief legal officer under modern conditions, the elimination of which would deprive the office of its ability to serve the goal and purposes for which it was created.
In 1872-73, when our Constitution was established, the self-evident “purpose” of having a constitutionally-established Attorney General was to give to one accountable, elected public official the responsibility for coordinating, understanding, and conducting the large majority of the State’s legal business — including research, advice, and representation. As we have noted, the statutory expression of that purpose appears clearly from the first enactment of law on the subject by the Legislature after the Constitution was adopted and is likewise evident from virtually every subsequent enactment thereafter.
At the time of our Constitution’s adoption, West Virginia had a small central government of limited responsibilities; a government that in almost every instance would hold and maintain a single perspective or position on legal issues. Under modern conditions, however, our State government is a behemoth organization, comprised of scores of agencies, officials, bureaus, authorities, commissions, councils, divisions, departments, agents, associations, and public corporations. Many of these entities are in numerous respects independent, but nevertheless have sufficient State authority, direction, assistance, or funding so as to make them “State” entities in some or all circumstances.17
In 1932, the Legislature amended and reenacted what is today W.Va.Code, 5-3-1 [1994], reiterating the responsibility of the Attorney General to provide legal counsel to and represent virtually ail State entities in litigation — and, significantly, expressly prohibiting the expenditure of public funds for the pi’ovision of legal services to the State by any person other than the Attorney General,18 a statute that remains on the books [37]*37today. This statute vests in the Attorney General a wide-ranging responsibility to advise and represent virtually every State entity in litigation. It is notable that W.Va.Code, 5-3-1 [1994] couches the Attorney General’s duties in terms of the Attorney General being “required” or “requested” to render legal services to the officers named therein. A companion statute, W.Va.Code, 5-3-2 [1987], expressly requires that the Attorney General “shall appear” for the State in all litigation in this Court or any federal court “in which the State is interested.” Additional provisions of that statute require the Attorney General also to “defend” State officers, etc.19
[38]*38Had these two statutes been scrupulously observed over the years, it is unlikely that the petition presently before this Court would ever have been filed. However, as the Attorney General’s brief clearly demonstrates, the Legislature has chosen to indirectly amend these statutes by providing, in other enactments, express authority for various State entities to hire additional legal counsel not under the direction of the Attorney General.20 As noted in this opinion, see n. 14, supra, at least a few of the statutory authorizations to State entities to hire and use lawyers other than those employed or approved by the Attorney General have a fairly long history to them.
One reason for the accumulation of statutes permitting the hiring and use of non-Attorney General lawyers is almost certainly the development of the large State government composed of diverse State entities, to which we earlier alluded. These State entities engage in a wide variety of activities and enterprises, often with little or no contact or coordination with one another. Complex and specialized legal issues are involved in nearly every entity’s activity; many entities require intensive, day-to-day, professional legal expertise, judgment, advice, and representation. Moreover, in a not insubstantial number of cases, these diverse State entities have contrasting perspectives and interests, and may take different (even competing or conflicting) legal positions before tribunals— sometimes on important issues involving State rights and powers generally, citizen or business rights, etc.
Under these circumstances, the perceived need for specialized “in-house” legal expertise in certain fields is understandable. And in a government necessarily containing diverse entities, with diverse perspectives, there is an inherent tendency to seek to bring a particular entity’s legal staff more under the direct employ and control of the State entity — to further the ends of loyalty and accountability to the State entity. This tendency, however, may not be permitted to undermine the basic constitutional scheme that establishes a chief State legal officer with central responsibility regarding the legal affairs of the State.
While providing legal counsel and services to a large and diverse range of State entities may be theoretically achievable under a system where the Attorney General’s direct employees are the sole and exclusive legal representatives and counselors for every State entity in every situation, it cannot be said that such a system is the only feasible way to achieve this end. Moreover, we are not cited to any authority, from the collective jurisprudence of a nation where there are more than forty voter-elected, constitutional, state attorneys general, where a claim of complete and exclusive jurisdiction over all state legal matters by an attorney general has been upheld. Nor do the authorities, it should be noted, yield up any ease that upholds a claim of unfettered Legislative discretion with respect to the role, powers, and duties of the constitutional Office of Attorney General.21
We do not doubt that the centralized provision of legal services to the State by a single elected public official was the intent of the establishment of the Office of the Attorney General in 1872-73 — when our State government was less complex and greatly reduced in size, as compared to modern-day state government. However, to say this is only to state a tautology that, for purposes of our constitutional analysis in the instant case, leads nowhere. As in the ease of the constitutional guarantee of education in Randolph County Bd. of Educ., supra, to make our constitutional analysis in the instant case meaningful, we must identify the inherent, “core” functions of such centralization that [39]*39are both vital and viable under modern conditions.
As we have discussed, one distinctive aspect of modern governmental conditions is the presence of multiple State entities with varying perspectives and interests. Under these conditions, if no central legal office is substantially involved with the legal affairs of a State entity, especially in litigation, legal-decisions may be made by the entity (or by a tribunal) that may well have broad effects on the State and on other State entities generally — without any awareness or input from potentially affected State entities that have no knowledge of the decisions, litigation, or issues involved. Members of this Court have on more than one occasion expressed concern that non-involvement of the Attorney General in litigation involving State entities can lead to “harm and damage to the State.” State ex rel. Affiliated Construction Trades Council v. Vieweg, 205 W.Va. 687, 700 n. 6, 520 S.E.2d 854, 867 n. 6 (1999) (Workman, J., concurring); see also W.Va. Division of Environmental Protection v. Kingwood Coal Co., 200 W.Va. 734, 755 n. 1, 490 S.E.2d 823, 843 n. 1 (Starcher, J., dissenting).22
We believe that under modern conditions a necessary and vital function of the State’s chief legal officer, the Attorney General, is to assure that a State entity’s legal policy (and particularly its assertion of legal positions before tribunals) is formulated in consultation and coordination with the legal policy and positions of other State entities.
Of course (and this point cannot be overemphasized), each State entity is entitled to fully loyal, confidential, conscientious, and zealous legal counsel in developing, asserting, and defending its particular legal perspective.23 But just as importantly, each State entity — and the State and her citizens generally — are, pursuant to the constitutional structure established by the framers, entitled to a governmental structure wherein a central legal office, along with providing day-today legal services to a wide range of State entities, can consider the issues in a given ease in light of the broader interests of the State and in view of the impact on the full range of State entities. In our view, this is a core function of an Attorney General’s office that is essential in modern times to achieve the constitutional purpose of the framers in 1872-73 when they established a single, elected chief legal officer for the State.
D.
Based on all of the foregoing, we hold that the inherent constitutional functions of the Office of the Attorney General of the State of West Virginia include: (1) to play a central role in the provision of day-to-day professional legal services to State officials and entities in and associated with the executive branch of government;24 (2) to play a central role in ensuring that the adoption and assertion of legal policy and positions by the State of West Virginia and State entities, [40]*40particularly before tribunals, is made only after meaningful consideration of the potential effects of such legal policy and positions on the full range of State entities and interests; (3) to assure that a constitutional officer who is directly elected by and accountable to the people may express his legal view on matters of State legal policy generally and particularly before tribunals where the State is a party.
Additionally, in light of long-established statutes, practice, and precedent recognizing that State executive branch and related entities may in some circumstances employ and use lawyers who are not employees of the Attorney General, we hold that such employment and use — and statutes, rules, and policies authorizing such employment and use — are not per se or facially unconstitutional.
This Court invites the executive branch entities involved in the instant case, the Legislature, and the Attorney General to commence a full review of the practices that have emerged over the years with regard to the use of in-house lawyers by various State entities (and the hiring of private counsel to represent the State interest in litigation, see footnote 25.) The policy enunciated by the Legislature in W.Va.Code, 5-3-1 and 2, addresses the public interest in (1) assuring a consistent “legal policy” for the State; (2) avoiding the undue expenditure of public funds for legal counsel outside the Office of the Attorney General; and (3) recognizing the decision of the people of this State to have, in theory and in fact, an elected chief legal officer of the State, answerable to them at the polls. It is appropriate for the Legislature to undertake a review of its various enactments that may present unresolved conflict with the long-standing expressions of constitutional purpose and public policy that are reflected in W.Va.Code, 5-3-1, et seq., in order to, in the words of the Preamble to our Constitution, “seek diligently to promote, preserve and perpetuate good government” for our State.
More often than not, the various occupants 'of the Office of Attorney General have been, upon request, most cooperative with various executive agencies who have advanced the need for in-house counsel or, on a particular occasion, for representation in litigation by a lawyer or lawyers outside the Office of the Attorney General, either by the usual or occasional use of “in-house” counsel or, on special occasions, private counsel.25 Moreover, we have recognized that, on occasion, the Attorney General may be unable to appear in litigation because of a conflict, or may be required to allow representation of a State agency by private counsel or by assistants between whom a wall of client confidentiality must be erected. Nevertheless, we also recognize that Attorneys General have historically performed their clear constitutional duty to respond fully and adequately when requested by State entities to provide legal advice and representation, and have the clear responsibility to continue doing so.
The principles of comity and mutual respect should govern the day-to-day operation of these relationships. It is inherent in the principles of a constitutionally divided executive and in the separation of powers that respectful cooperation and coordination are expected within the divided executive and between the executive and legislative branches, in the absence of the absolute necessity for confrontation. In that vein, this Court should not be asked to serve as — and conse[41]*41quently we seek to avoid being — a referee of the relations among constitutional equals.26
Having said that, we are nevertheless of the opinion that care must be taken to accord to the Attorney General the full opportunity to perform his constitutional and statutory duties. We therefore hold that to ensure that the Office of the Attorney General can perform its inherent constitutional functions, the Legislature has the implicit obligation to provide sufficient funding to the office. Additionally, no statute, policy, rule, or practice may constitutionally operate, alone or cumulatively, to limit, reduce, transfer, or reassign the duties and powers of the Office of the Attorney General in such a fashion as to prevent that office from performing its inherent constitutional functions.
To implement the foregoing, we further hold that in all instances when an executive branch or related State entity is represented by counsel before a tribunal, the Attorney General shall appear upon the pleadings as an attorney of record; however, this requirement does not bar other counsel from also appearing and acting in a legal capacity for the State entity. The Attorney General additionally has the right to appear as an intervenor as Attorney General on behalf of the State in all proceedings where the interest of the State or a State entity is at issue, to assert the Attorney General’s view of the law on behalf of the State.27 To maintain a proper constitutional balance, however, this right must always be exercised with restraint and due respect by the State entity and the Attorney General.
IV.
Conclusion
We have a limited record28 before us, and for that reason, we decline to give any consideration to the specific attorney positions and statutes that are identified in the Attorney General’s petition — with regard to their effects, separately or cumulatively, on the ability of the Office of the Attorney General to perform its constitutional role.
Moreover, we are firmly convinced that with the foregoing principles having been articulated, the parties in the instant case now have both the tools and the duty to work together to address and resolve specific issues, using principles of accommodation, respect, and comity. We therefore deny the specific relief requested by the Attorney General, but we grant the writ as moulded by requiring the petitioner and the party respondents to be guided by the holdings set forth in this opinion.29 If non-judicial resolution of any specific issues that arise cannot [42]*42be achieved using the principles of aceommo-dation, respect, and comity, the parties may seek further resolution again in court.
Writ Granted as Moulded,
APPENDIX
Executive Agencies Who Directly Employ Staff Attorneys Without the Consent of the Attorney General (Amended)1 (Exhibit 1 to Petition for Mandamus)
Agency Number of Attorneys Total Annual Salary Purported Statutory Authorization
Administration 128,008 W.Va.Code 5A-1-3
Auditor 117,756 12-4-8a
Banking 114,852 31A-2-5(b) (2002)
Child Support Enforcement 28 1,224,099 48A-2-14
Concord College $ 61,000 18B-1-8, 18B-2A-4
Consolidated Public $ 74,880 5-10D-2(d)
Retirement System (retained by contract) (Maximum annual compensation.)
Corrections 49,836
Dentists and Hygienists, Board of $ 60,000
Development Office $ 72,000 31-15-5, 31-15-6
Education. Department of 161,250
Employment Programs (29 Employed as ALJs, 24 as 2,662,113 21A-2-6, 21A-2-18, 21A-7-20, 23-1-1
Staff Lawyers)
Environmental Protection, Division of 13 723,344 22-1-6
Environmental Quality Boards (Employed as Advisor/Adminis-trator] 44,723
Ethics Commission 66,256 6B-2-2
Health and Human Resources (excluding Child Support Enforcement) 13 621,280 9-7-1, 16-5C-14, 16-5D-14, 16-5H-14, 16-5N-14
Health Care Authority 138,132 16-29B-7
Higher Ed $ 100,092 18B-1B-4
Highways 17 926,120 17-2A-7
Housing Development Fund $ 75,504
Insurance Commissioner 223,461 -2-3, 33-2-17
Labor, Division of 57,732
License Practical Nurses, Board of (Employed as Advisor/Admin-istrator) 53,911
Lottery Commission $ 75,940
Marshall University $ 110,000 18B-1-8,18B-2A-4
[43]*43Medicine, Board of_2_$ 85,544 30-3-7_
Military Affairs and Public 1 $ 56,512 Safety, Department of_
Motor Vehicles_2_$ 113,616_
Pharmacy, Board of (Employed • 1 $ 57,543 as Advisor/Administrator)_
Public Employees Insurance 1 $ 61,092 Agency_
Public Service Commission 30 $ 1,779,708 24-1-8 (8 employed as ALJs, 22 as staff attorneys)_
Regional Jail and Correctional 1 $ 60,756 Facility Authority_
Shepherd College_1_$ 71,602 18B-1-8,18B-2A-4
State Tax Division_12_$ 568,800_11-1-la (2002)
Tax and Revenue, Department of_1_$ 80,004_
Treasurer_2_$ 120,084_12-4-8a_
WV Northern Community 1 $ 61,920 18B-1-8,18-2A-A
College_
WV School of Osteopathic 1 $ 64,896 18B-1-8,18B-2A-4 Medicine_
WV State Police_1_$ 45,720_
WVU_,_5_$ 364,260 18B-1-8,18B-2A-4
TOTAL:_217_$11,534,347_
TOTAL WITHOUT ALJs_180$ 9,439,918
ATTORNEYS EMPLOYED BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Attorney General’s Office 65 $ 3,507,879 W.Va.Code 5-3-1 and
5-3-2, etc.