California Democratic Party v. Jones

984 F. Supp. 1288, 1997 WL 725980
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedNovember 24, 1997
DocketCIV. S-96-2038 DFL
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 984 F. Supp. 1288 (California Democratic Party v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Democratic Party v. Jones, 984 F. Supp. 1288, 1997 WL 725980 (E.D. Cal. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AND FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

LEVI, District Judge.

In March of 1996, the people of the State of California, by a wide margin, adopted Proposition 198, an initiative statute known as the Open Primary Act. Proposition 198 converts the State’s primary election from a closed to an open or blanket primary in which voters may vote for any candidate regardless of the candidate’s or the voter’s party affiliation. In a blanket primary under Proposition 198, one ballot will be prepared at the primary election for all voters just as in the general election. Because a blanket primary permits voters to vote in the primary election of a party without being registered in that party, the political parties and party officials who bring this action contend that Proposition 198 violates their right of association guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Constitution.

The court concludes that Proposition 198 withstands this constitutional challenge.

I.

Under Proposition 198 “All persons entitled to vote, including those not affiliated with any political party, shall have the right to vote ... at any election in which they are qualified to vote, for any candidate regardless of the candidate’s political affiliation.” 1 *1290 By this language and the conforming amendments to the State Election Code, Proposition 198 changed the California primary from a closed to an open or blanket system. 2 As the Legislative Analyst explained in the ballot pamphlet distributed to voters before the election, under the closed system “[i]n order to vote in primary elections for partisan offices, a voter must have identified a political party affiliation when registering to vote and can vote only for candidates of that party.” Defs.’ Ex. A at 5. Thus, for example, in the closed primary a registered Democratic Party voter receives a ballot that includes only candidates competing for the Democratic Party nomination. Only registered Democrats could vote for these candidates, and the winner of the primary would be the Democratic Party’s candidate at the general election. 3 By contrast, the Legislative Analyst explained, in the blanket primary instituted by Proposition 198:

[A]U persons who are entitled to vote in primary elections, including those not affiliated with a political party [are allowed to] vote for any candidate regardless of the candidate’s political party affiliation. Thus, voters in primary elections would be allowed to vote for candidates across political party lines. Furthermore, the initiative provides that county elections officials prepare only one ballot for all voters. The candidates for an office would be listed randomly on the ballot and not grouped by political party affiliation. The candidate of each political party who receives the most votes for a state elective office becomes the nominee of that party at the next general election.

Defs.’ Ex. A at 5. Therefore, in the blanket primary after Proposition 198, a registered Democratic Party voter, for example, could vote for a Republican Party candidate for Governor and a Democratic Party candidate for Assembly, and so on down the ballot. An independent voter could do the same. 4 Through such cross-over voting, it is possible under the blanket primary for independent voters and voters registered in one party to participate in the primary election of another party.

In the statement of support included in the ballot pamphlet, proponents of Proposition 198 argued that the closed primary “favors the election of party hard-liners, contributes to legislative gridlock, and stacks the deck against more moderate problem-solvers.” The open primary would permit voters to vote “for the best candidate for each office, regardless of party affiliation” thereby giving voters greater choice. In addition, according to proponents, the blanket primary would increase voter participation in the primary election, restore healthy competition particularly in “safe” legislative districts in which one party clearly dominates, make elected officials more responsive to voters as opposed to party officials, reduce the power of special interest groups, and strengthen the political parties by assuring the nomination of candidates with broader bases of support. Opponents of Proposition 198 contended that it would'work an unconstitutional interference with the right of the parties to choose their nominees: “Allowing members of one party a large voice in choosing another party’s nominee—which Proposition 198 would do—is like letting UCLA’s football team choose USC’s head coach!” 5 According to the opponents, the existing closed primary provided a “real choice” among candidates of different parties while a blanket primary would be “an invitation to political mischief’ *1291 by special interests and political consultants. Defs.’ Ex. A at 6-7. 6

At the election, Proposition 198 was adopted by a convincing margin of those voting—59.51 percent (3,340,642 votes) to 40.49 percent (2,273,064 votes). According to reliable exit polls, Proposition 198 was supported by 61 percent of Democrats, 57 per•cent of Republicans, and 69 percent of Independents. The measure was supported by a majority of every demographic subgroup, including groupings by sex, age, race, education, political ideology, income, religion and party identification. Defs.’ Exs. B & D. Proposition 198 commanded majorities in every county in California and in 75 of the 80 Assembly districts. Defs.’ Ex. I. Although the turnout by California’s six minor parties was too small to sample, given the broad public support for Proposition 198 among all groups of every sort, it is likely that a majority of the members of these parties also favored the initiative. R.T. at 847 (Testimony of Thomas Quinn). Moreover, the vote on Proposition 198 reflects the long-standing support for an open primary among California voters. According to Mervin Field, an eminent California political polling expert, Californians have favored an open primary by wide margins since at least 1983. See Defs.’ Exs. L-2 & L-5. 7

By passing Proposition 198, California joined a small group of states, consisting of Alaska, Louisiana, and Washington, who also have blanket or nonpartisan primary elections. The other states have either a closed or an open primary, or some variant of the closed or open primary. 8 In the classic closed primary, such as California had prior to Proposition 198, participation in a party’s primary election is limited to voters who have registered as members of that party a specified period of time prior to the primary election. Fifteen states have closed primaries of this kind. See Defs.’ Ex. E, Gerber Report, at 2-4. Eight additional states have a “semi-closed” primary: participation in a party’s primary is limited to those who have registered as party members and independents. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
984 F. Supp. 1288, 1997 WL 725980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-democratic-party-v-jones-caed-1997.