Candidacy of Independence Party Candidates Moore v. Kiffmeyer

688 N.W.2d 854, 2004 Minn. LEXIS 719, 2004 WL 2534899
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 10, 2004
DocketA04-1775
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 688 N.W.2d 854 (Candidacy of Independence Party Candidates Moore v. Kiffmeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Candidacy of Independence Party Candidates Moore v. Kiffmeyer, 688 N.W.2d 854, 2004 Minn. LEXIS 719, 2004 WL 2534899 (Mich. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

BLATZ, Chief Justice.

On September 21, 2004, James Moore, David Allen, and Maureen Peterson 1 filed a petition under MinmStat. § 204B.44 (2002) requesting an order directing the respondent Mary Kiffmeyer, as Secretary of State of the State of Minnesota, to place the names of Independence Party nominees for the Minnesota House of Representatives and the United States House of Representatives on the November 2, 2004 general election ballot. The secretary of state had previously notified the Independence Party that its candidates would not appear on the general election ballot because none of the candidates had received the minimum number of votes required by Minn.Stat. § 204D.10, subd. 2 (Supp. 2003), in the September 14, 2004 primary election. After the parties and amicus curiae American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota (ACLU-Minnesota) filed legal memoranda on an expedited basis, oral argument was heard on September 27, 2004. This opinion follows the order filed on September 27 granting relief to petitioners.

I.

The dispute in this case centers on interpretation and application of MinmStat. § 204D.10, subd. 2, 2 which creates a threshold minimum percentage of votes that must be received in the partisan primary election for a major political party’s 3 candidates to appear as the party’s nominees on the general election ballot. 4 The *856 primary threshold law provides that if any one of the candidates of a major political party receives the required number of votes in the partisan primary, then all of that party’s candidates who received the highest number of votes for an office at the primary are the party’s nominees on the general election ballot. However, if none of the party’s candidates receive the threshold number of votes, then none of the party’s candidates are nominated. The threshold number of votes is defined in the primary threshold law as ten percent of the average number of votes received by that party’s candidates for state constitutional offices in the previous general election. The primary threshold law also provides that if none of the party’s candidates meet the threshold, then the individual candidates of that party may be nominated “by nominating petition as provided in sections 204B.07 to 204B.09.” Minn.Stat. § 204D.10, subd. 2. If the party’s candidates do not qualify as the party’s nominees under section 204D.10, they cannot appear on the general election ballot.

The secretary of state determined that none of the 24 candidates of the Independence Party for the Minnesota or United States House of Representatives satisfied the ten percent threshold of the primary threshold law in the September 14, 2004 partisan primary election. After consultation with, and based on advice from, the Minnesota Attorney General, the 'secretary of state notified the Independence Party on September 17 that all of the Independence Party candidates for the state legislature and for congress would be excluded from the general election ballot based on the primary threshold law. Each of the three other major political parties 5 satisfied the statutory threshold, because at least one of their candidates reached the ten percent mark. 6

II.

Petitioners make two arguments in support of their request that the Independence Party candidates be placed on the general election ballot despite their failure to satisfy the primary vote threshold of Minn-Stat. § 204D.10, subd. 2. 7 First, petitioners argue that the primary threshold law was repealed in 1996 and therefore cannot be applied in this election. Second, petitioners argue if the primary threshold law was not repealed, its application to prevent Independence Party candidates from appearing on the general election ballot is unconstitutional as a violation of their rights under the United States and Minnesota Constitutions to associate for political purposes and to vote, as well as their rights to equal protection and due process. Although petitioners do not make the argument, the amicus curiae *857 ACLU-Minnesota contends that the post-primary nominating petition process mentioned in the primary threshold law should be available to the Independence Party candidates. 8 The secretary of state disagrees that the primary threshold law was permanently repealed and that the nominating petition process is available after the primary election, but does not dispute petitioners’ constitutional argument.

A. Repeal of the Primary Threshold Law

Petitioners first argue that the primary threshold law is no longer in effect because it was repealed by the 1996 Legislature in Act of Apr. 2, 1996, ch. 419, § 9, 1996 Minn. Laws 982. 9 Section 9 provides: “Minnesota Statutes 1994, section 204D.10, subdivision 2, is repealed.” That section clearly espouses the legislature’s intent to repeal the primary threshold law.

The secretary of state contends that this repeal “expired” by the operation of section 10 of the 1996 Act, so that the primary threshold law remains applicable today. Section 10 of the 1996 Act provided that the “amendments” made by the act would expire if a particular decision of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals were reversed. Section 10 provided:

This act is effective for the state primary election in 1996 and thereafter.
The amendments made by this act are suspended during any time that the decision of the eighth circuit court of appeals in Twin Cities Area New Party v. McKenna, No. 94-3417MN, is stayed or the mandate of the court is recalled. If the McKenna decision is reversed, the amendments made by this act expire and the prior law is revived. The purpose of this paragraph is to provide an orderly procedure for complying with the McKenna decision while retaining the prior law prohibiting simultaneous nominations to the extent permitted by the United States Constitution.

1996 Act, § 10, 1996 Minn. Laws at 982 (emphasis added). The Eighth Circuit McKenna decision referenced in section 10 had struck down the Minnesota statute that prohibited candidates from appearing on the ballot as the nominee of more than one party. Sections 2 through 8 of the 1996 Act amended Minnesota election laws to comply with the mandate of the Eighth Circuit decision to allow multi-party candidacies. Id., §§ 2-8, 1996 Minn. Laws at 979-82. At the time the 1996 Act was enacted, the McKenna case was still pending in the United States Supreme Court under the name of Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party. In April 1997, the Supreme Court reversed the Eighth Circuit decision, Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party,

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Bluebook (online)
688 N.W.2d 854, 2004 Minn. LEXIS 719, 2004 WL 2534899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/candidacy-of-independence-party-candidates-moore-v-kiffmeyer-minn-2004.