Libertarian Party of Arkansas v. John Thurston

962 F.3d 390
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 2020
Docket19-2503
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 962 F.3d 390 (Libertarian Party of Arkansas v. John Thurston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Libertarian Party of Arkansas v. John Thurston, 962 F.3d 390 (8th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 19-2503 ___________________________

Libertarian Party of Arkansas; Sandra Chaney Richter; Michael Pakko; Ricky Harrington, Jr.; Christopher Olson; Michael Kalagias

lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiffs - Appellees

v.

John Thurston, in his official capacity as Secretary of State for the State of Arkansas

lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas - Little Rock ____________

Submitted: December 11, 2019 Filed: June 18, 2020 ____________

Before ERICKSON, MELLOY, and KOBES, Circuit Judges. ____________

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

In Arkansas, new political parties may petition to appear on the next general- election ballot on a whole-ballot basis—with candidates listed for each elected office but without meeting individual office-by-office petitioning requirements. Arkansas recently amended its laws to make the petition requirements for whole-ballot access more demanding. See 2019 Ark. Acts 164, § 1. The recent amendments moved the petition deadline farther from the general election and increased the number of signatures required. The Libertarian Party of Arkansas (“Libertarian Party” or “Party”) and several of its members brought suit challenging the petition requirements and seeking preliminary and permanent injunctive relief.

The district court1 found the current petition requirements likely to be unconstitutional and otherwise found the Libertarian Party entitled to preliminary relief. Although the district court found a deadline far from the election to be the most problematic aspect of the current petition requirements, the grant of preliminary injunctive relief did not amend deadlines. Rather, the district court stated that any court-imposed changes to the deadlines would be too great an exercise in judicial legislation and would likely carry unintended consequences. As a result, the district court ordered the Secretary of State to accept a timely petition with a number of signatures equal to or greater than required under prior law. The Arkansas Secretary of State appeals, arguing the district court (1) erred in concluding the Libertarian Party was likely to prevail on the merits, (2) abused its discretion in otherwise determining preliminary injunctive relief was appropriate, and (3) abused its discretion in tailoring relief to the signature requirement when the court’s primary concern had been the statutory deadline. We affirm.

I.

The current Arkansas statutes governing political parties’ petitions to register for whole-ballot access impose three requirements that the Libertarian Party challenges as a collectively unconstitutional burden: (1) a numerosity or “modicum-

1 The Honorable Kristine G. Baker, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.

-2- of-support” signature requirement; (2) a limited, rolling window for collecting signatures; and (3) a deadline for submission.

First, for the 2020 election ballot, Arkansas requires signatures from approximately 27,000 registered Arkansas voters. See Ark. Code Ann. § 7-7- 205(a)(2). Arkansas phrases the current requirement as a percentage of the total votes cast in the last gubernatorial election—3%. The parties agree that, based on votes cast in the last election, this 3% figure amounts to roughly 27,000 signatures. Because only about half of registered voters actually voted in that last election, the current 3% figure translates to about 1.5% of the total number of registered voters in Arkansas. In contrast to the current statute, the prior signature requirement was a fixed number (10,000) rather than a percentage of voters in a reference election. 2007 Ark. Acts 821, § 1. Neither the current nor the prior versions of the statute restrict the number of petitions an individual voter may sign nor place geographic limits as to where in the state the petition-signing voters must reside.

Second, signatures older than ninety days may not be counted. Accordingly, the petitioning party must strategically time its canvassing efforts to obtain a viable, rolling 90-day window, submitting its petition at the end of that window. See Ark. Code Ann. § 7-7-205(a)(4)(B).

Third, signatures must be submitted approximately 425 days prior to the general election. See Ark. Code Ann. § 7-7-205(a)(6). The statute defines this due date through references to statutory dates material to the primary process for existing, recognized major parties. For example, Arkansas Code Section 7-7-205(a)(6) sets the petition due date as 60 days before the “party filing period.” Section 7-7-203(c)(1), in turn, sets the “party filing period” as a seven day window beginning at noon on the first Monday in November of the year preceding the general election. Prior to the February 2019 statutory amendments, the “party filing period” was in March of the election year rather than in November prior to the election year. See Ark. Code Ann.

-3- § 7-7-203(c)(1) (2018). As such, the recent amendment effectively moved the petition deadline more than 120 days farther away from the general election.

The “party filing period” is a window for established parties to file for access to state funding for their party primaries held in March and June of the election year. See id. § 7-7-201(a) (state funding). Importantly, parties seeking whole-ballot access via petition do not participate in primaries. Rather, if a new political party is recognized by successful petitioning, that new party nominates its candidates by convention and is required to submit its convention-selected nominees, id. § 7-7- 205(c)(2)(A), to the Secretary of State on the day of the established parties’ preferential primary elections, i.e., “on the first Tuesday after the First Monday in March,” id. § 7-7-203(b)(2). In this way, the deadlines for minor parties to petition for access and select candidates are tethered to and defined by deadlines for major- party primaries, even though the petitioning minor parties are not involved in such primaries. Arkansas asserts that the recent changes to the Arkansas primary schedule and filing requirements were based at least in part on a desire for Arkansas to hold its partisan primaries on the national Super Tuesday primary date along with several other states.

Several additional Arkansas statutory provisions are relevant to the present case. First, a political party may be recognized without the need for a new petition if that party successfully petitions for an election and then earns 3% of the vote in the actual election for governor or president. Id. §§ 7-1-101(27)(A), 7-7-205(c)(4). A party that succeeds at the alternative path of obtaining 3% of the vote does not select its candidates through a convention. Rather, such a party may receive state funds for conducting a primary. Id. Second, independent candidates may petition to be placed on the ballot for a particular local office with the lesser of 2,000 signatures or 3% of the “qualified electors in the county, township, or district” for which office is sought. Id. § 7-7-103(b)(1)(A). For state office or the United States Senate, independent candidates need the lesser of 10,000 signatures or “3% of the qualified electors of the

-4- state.” Id. § 7-7-103(b)(1)(B). Finally, political parties who do not seek whole-ballot access, but only seek to place a candidate on the ballot for president or vice president, may petition for such access with the signatures of 1,000 registered Arkansas voters. Id. § 7-8-302(5)(B).

Turning to the facts at hand, the chair of the Libertarian Party in Arkansas lobbied the legislature in Arkansas arguing against the recent statutory changes.

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Bluebook (online)
962 F.3d 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/libertarian-party-of-arkansas-v-john-thurston-ca8-2020.