O'CALLAGHAN v. State, Director of Elections

6 P.3d 728, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 81, 2000 WL 1154978
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 2000
DocketS-9768
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 P.3d 728 (O'CALLAGHAN v. State, Director 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
O'CALLAGHAN v. State, Director of Elections, 6 P.3d 728, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 81, 2000 WL 1154978 (Ala. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

11 Mike O'Callaghan appeals the superi- or court's order denying his challenge to emergency regulations 1 promulgated by the Alaska Division of Elections that temporarily adopt a partially closed ballot primary election to replace the blanket primary election prescribed in AS 15.25.060.

12 In O'Callaghan v. Coghill, (O'Callo-ghom I), we concluded that the blanket primary election prescribed in AS 15.25.060 did not clearly deprive political parties of their right of free association, as guaranteed by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. 2 In O'Callaghan v. State, (O'Callaghan II), after considering supplemental briefing requested in O'Callaghan I, we found AS 15.25.060 to be constitutional. 3 We therefore invalidated regulations promulgated by the Division of Elections implementing a partially closed ballot primary. 4

T3 On June 26, 2000, the United States Supreme Court decided in California Democratic Party v. Jones that California's blanket primary statute violates the First Amendment's guarantee of associational freedom. 5

14 Having reviewed Jones, we find no constitutionally significant differences between Alaska's primary election law and the California law declared unconstitutional in Jones. Nor do we find any principled basis for concluding that Alaska's blanket primary election statute remains constitutional in light of Jones. Because the United States Constitution's Supremacy Clause requires states to adhere to the Supreme Court's constitutional interpretation in Jones, 6 we hold that O'Callaghan II's ruling that AS 15.25.060 is constitutional is no longer tenable.

15 In O'Callaghan I we determined that the Division of Elections, as an executive branch agency, would have authority to "abrogate a statute which is clearly unconstitutional under a United States Supreme Court decision dealing with a similar law, without having to wait for another court decision specifically declaring the statute un-constitutional." 7 We conclude that AS 15.25.060 is clearly unconstitutional and that, given Jones, the division had authority to abrogate the statute.

16 By acknowledging in O'Calla-gham I and O'Callaghan II that the validity of the challenged regulations turned on the unconstitutionality of AS 15.25.060, we implicitly determined that the division's power to abrogate a clearly unconstitutional statute triggered its authority to regulate on a temporary basis in an emergent situation like the situation we face here. 8 The Supreme Court issued Jones less than two months before the Alaska primary's scheduled date. The Alaska Legislature is out of session and will not reconvene until January 2001. (Given these cireumstances, we conclude that the division has authority to promulgate emergency regulations to implement a primary election that complies with the constitutional mandate of Jones. We find that the division's power to take the temporary action needed to ensure a timely and constitutional primary is solidly rooted in the principle of necessity and in the division's statutory powers of supervision *731 over elections. 9 Accordingly, we reject O'Callaghan's contention that the division lacked authority to adopt curative emergency regulations in response to the decision in Jones.

17 We also reject O'Callaghan's argument that the division's emergency regulations prescribe an unlawful form of ballot, "the same ballot type declared unlawful by' this Court" in O'Callaghan II. In that case we declared the partially closed ballot unlawful only because it was inconsistent with AS 15.25.060; in no other context did we even consider the validity of that form of ballot. Because we found AS 15.25.060 to be constitutional, we simply ruled that the division lacked authority to adopt or implement any other form of primary ballot-including the partially closed ballot. 10 Now that Jones overturns O'Callaghan II's constitutional ruling, our decision in that case provides no basis for questioning the division's new emergency regulations; nor did it ever support the conclusion that a partially closed ballot primary is inherently an unlawful form of election.

T8 We are similarly unpersuaded by O'Callaghan's reliance on O'Callaghan II for the proposition that a partially closed ballot primary extinguishes his right to vote for candidates of his choice, regardless of party affiliation. O'Callaghan quotes language from O'Callaghan II supporting this proposition; but the language he quotes simply paraphrased provisions of the Alaska Statutes establishing Alaska's "blanket primary" system 11 -a system that Jones has now declared unconstitutional. As the state correctly notes, the United States Supreme Court, in Jones, expressly considered and rejected the notion of a fundamental right to vote in a primary election for all candidates, regardless of party affiliation. 12

19 O'Callaghan raises a closer question in contending that the partially closed primary violates the Alaska Constitution's guarantee that "[slecrecey of voting shall be preserved." 13 By requiring voters who opt for the Republican ballot to disclose their party affiliation as a condition of receiving their ballots, the partially closed ballot system implicates legitimate privacy concerns. But party affiliation has traditionally been a matter of public record. 14 While the partially closed ballot system requires voters to disclose their ballot preference in addition to their party affiliation, case law in other jurisdictions addressing the secrecy issue firmly establishes that, in the context of primary elections-elections whose central purpose is to select parties' nominees 15 -this marginally greater demand for disclosure falls well outside the Constitution's core concern for preserving the secrecy of voting, as opposed to the secrecy of party preference. 16 On *732 balance, then, we conclude that, as long as the division takes necessary steps to prevent individual voters' ballot preferences from becoming a matter of public record, 17 the partially closed ballot does not impermissibly infringe the Constitution's voting secrecy clause.

110 We reject as meritless 0'Cal-laghan's contention that inclusion of a "statutory ballot" in the partially closed ballot system is impermissible because Jones declared AS 15.25.060-the statute at issue-uneonsti-tutional.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 P.3d 728, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 81, 2000 WL 1154978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocallaghan-v-state-director-of-elections-alaska-2000.