Green Party of Alaska v. State, Division of Elections

147 P.3d 728, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 179, 2006 WL 3334228
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 2006
DocketS-11964
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 147 P.3d 728 (Green Party of Alaska v. State, Division of Elections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green Party of Alaska v. State, Division of Elections, 147 P.3d 728, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 179, 2006 WL 3334228 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Green Party of Alaska challenged the constitutionality of a statute that set out the threshold requirements for recognition of a group as a political party for election purposes. Former Alaska Statute 15.60.010(21) required a group to attain at least three percent of the votes polled in the last gubernatorial election, or to register the equivalent number of voters. In 2002 the Green Party failed to garner three percent of the vote in the governor's race but it did poll over six percent of the vote in two other statewide elections. The Division of Elections subsequently withdrew recognition of the Green Party as a political party. The Green Party alleged that, in so doing, the Division of Elections unconstitutionally infringed on its freedoms of speech and political association and its right to equal protection of the laws. The superior court granted summary judgment to the state. Because the state has a clear and legitimate interest in regulating ballot access, and because it did so in a way that did not unfairly burden the constitutional rights of Green Party voters or candidates, we affirm.

*730 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

The Green Party of Alaska is an organized group of voters which has regularly engaged in political and electoral activities in Alaska since its inception in 1990. The Green Party has consistently run statewide candidates in Alaska. In the 2002 general election, the Green Party ran candidates for four statewide offices: Governor and Lieutenant Governor, United States Senator, and United States Representative. In the race for United States Senator the Green Party garnered 7.24 percent of the total votes cast in that race (16,608 of 229,548). In the United States Representative race the Green Party received 6.34 percent of the total votes cast in that race (14,485 of 227,725). However, in the race for Governor and Lieutenant Governor the Green Party received only 1.26 percent of the votes cast (2,926 of 281,484).

The Division of Elections concluded that the Green Party failed to retain recognized political party status because it did not meet the statutory requirements for recognition. Alaska Statute 15.60.010(21)-the governing statute at the time-defined a "political party" as: .

[Aln organized group of voters that represents a political program and that either nominated a candidate for governor who received at least three percent of the total votes cast for governor at the preceding general election or has registered voters in the state equal to at least three percent of the total votes cast for governor at the preceding general election.[ 1 ]

It is uncontroverted that the Green Party's gubernatorial candidate received 2,926 votes, or 1.26 percent, of the total votes cast for governor in the 2002 general election. It is also uncontested that by February 2003 there were 4,768 registered voters in the Green Party of Alaska, representing approximately two percent of the total votes cast for governor in the 2002 general election. Because the Green Party did not poll three percent of the total vote in the 2002 election, nor did the Green Party register three percent of the vote for governor, the Division of Elections withdrew recognition of the Green Party as a political party.

As a result of this change in the Green Party's status, Green Party candidates would not be allowed to appear on the 2004 primary election ballot unless they first gathered sufficient signatures on a petition, pursuant to AS 15.25.140-.200. In addition, the Green Party's ability to collect and distribute campaign contributions would be impaired because contributions to political groups are more strictly limited than contributions to political parties. 2

*731 The Green Party acknowledges that it did not satisfy the statutory requirements for recognition as a political party. However, it challenges the statute as unconstitutional, claiming that the state, by limiting the qualifying contest to the governor's race while ignoring other statewide races, violated the Green Party's rights to equal protection, free speech, free political association, and ballot access. While the Green Party concedes that the state has a legitimate interest in ensuring that a political group be able to demonstrate a significant modicum of support before enjoying the benefits of political party status, 3 it argues that a group that garners at least three percent of the total vote for any statewide office has met that requirement.

B. Proceedings

The Green Party sought a declaratory judgment that the Division of Elections violated the Party's constitutional rights by depriving it of its status as a political party. In 2003 Superior Court Judge John Reese granted the Green Party a preliminary injunction enjoining the state from withdrawing recognition of the Party's political party status. Taking a balancing of hardships approach, Judge Reese found that withdrawing political party status would irreparably harm the Green Party because it would be precluded from participating in the 2004 primary election, and because its fund-raising ability would be significantly limited. Judge Reese also concluded that the state's interest in avoiding an overcrowded and confusing ballot would not be harmed by the preliminary injunction because the Green Party had appeared on ballots over the past decade, and it had obtained over six percent of the votes in the most recent statewide elections for federal office. Finally, Judge Reese found that the Green Party raised a serious and substantial question as to the constitutionality of AS 15.60.010(21).

In June 2004 the state requested that the preliminary injunction be dissolved because the legislature had amended AS 15.60.010(21) and enacted a new definition of "political party." 4 Judge Reese denied the state's request, and the preliminary injunction remained in force. As a result of the preliminary injunction, Green Party candidates were able to participate in the August 2004 primary election. These candidates also appeared on the general election ballot in November 2004. The Green Party's candidates for United States Senator and United States Representative polled 0.99 percent and 8.81 percent respectively in the 2004 general election. (There was no gubernatorial election that year.)

In August 2004 the Green Party moved for summary judgment in the form of a declaratory judgment against the state, 5 claiming that the state had "violated the fundamental constitutional rights of the Green Party of Alaska, and violated its right to equal protection of the laws" by withdrawing recognition of its status as a political party. The motion for summary judgment was presented to Superior Court Judge Craig F. Stowers.

At around the same time, another Anchorage superior court issued a preliminary injunction in a similar case, ordering the state to place Ray Metealfe's name on the ballot as a Republican Moderate Party candidate for United States Senate in the November 2004 election.

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Bluebook (online)
147 P.3d 728, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 179, 2006 WL 3334228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-party-of-alaska-v-state-division-of-elections-alaska-2006.