SAM Party of N.Y. v. Kosinski

987 F.3d 267
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 10, 2021
Docket20-3047-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 987 F.3d 267 (SAM Party of N.Y. v. Kosinski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SAM Party of N.Y. v. Kosinski, 987 F.3d 267 (2d Cir. 2021).

Opinion

20-3047-cv SAM Party of N.Y. v. Kosinski

2 United States Court of Appeals 3 for the Second Circuit 4 5 August Term, 2020 6 7 (Argued: December 15, 2020 Decided: February 10, 2021) 8 9 Docket No. 20-3047-cv 10 _____________________________________ 11 12 SAM PARTY OF NEW YORK, MICHAEL J. VOLPE, 13 Plaintiffs-Appellants, 14 v. 15 16 PETER S. KOSINSKI, as the Co-Chair of the New York State Board of Elections, 17 DOUGLAS A. KELLNER, as the Co-Chair of the New York State Board of 18 Elections, ANDREW J. SPANO, as a Commissioner of the New York State Board 19 of Elections, TODD D. VALENTINE, as Co-Executive Director of the New York 20 State Board of Elections, ROBERT A. BREHM, as Co-Executive Director of the 21 New York State Board of Elections, 22 Defendants-Appellees, 23 24 ANDREW CUOMO, as the Governor of the State of New York, ANDREA 25 STEWART-COUSINS, as the Temporary President and Majority Leader of the 26 New York State Senate, JOHN J. FLANAGAN, as the Minority Leader of the 27 New York State Senate, CARL E. HEASTIE, as the Speaker of the New York State 28 Assembly, BRIAN M. KOLB, as the Minority Leader of the New York State 29 Assembly, 30 Defendants. 31 _____________________________________ 1 Before: 2 3 SACK, PARK, and MENASHI, Circuit Judges. 4 5 The State of New York enacted new party-qualification requirements in the 6 spring of 2020. Political organizations must now earn the greater of 130,000 votes 7 or 2% of the vote in elections for President and for Governor to achieve party status 8 and the automatic place on the ballot it confers. Appellants SAM Party of New 9 York and its chairman Michael J. Volpe appeal an order of the United States 10 District Court for the Southern District of New York (Koeltl, J.) denying their 11 motion for a preliminary injunction against the party-qualification requirements. 12 We hold that Appellants are not likely to succeed on the merits of their First 13 Amendment claim because the burden imposed by the presidential-election 14 requirement is (1) not severe and (2) justified by the State’s interest in uncluttered 15 ballots, effective electoral competition, and the preservation of resources dedicated 16 to public financing of elections. AFFIRMED. 17 18 ERIC A. STONE (Kannon K. Shanmugam, 19 Robert A. Atkins, Brette Tannenbaum, on the 20 brief), Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & 21 Garrison LLP, New York, New York for 22 Plaintiffs-Appellants. 23 24 ELLIOT A. HALLAK (Daniel R. LeCours, 25 Thomas J. Garry, Kyle D. Gooch, on the brief), 26 Harris Beach PLLC, Albany, New York for 27 Defendants-Appellees. 28 29 PARK, Circuit Judge:

30 New York recently amended its election laws to condition status as a

31 “political party” on an organization’s performance in presidential elections. The

32 SAM Party of New York (“SAM Party”) is a political organization that, for a mix

33 of ideological and practical reasons, chose not to participate in the 2020

2 1 presidential election. It argues that the new presidential-election requirement

2 violates its members’ First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. But unless the

3 burden on such rights is severe or unjustified, “States may condition access to the

4 general election ballot by a minor-party or independent candidate upon a showing

5 of a modicum of support among the potential voters for the office.” Munro v.

6 Socialist Workers Party, 479 U.S. 189, 193 (1986). New York law provides reasonable

7 avenues for ballot access to organizations that do not participate in the presidential

8 election. The presidential-election requirement can also be justified by the State’s

9 interest in decluttering its ballots, preventing voter confusion, and preserving the

10 public fisc. The district court appropriately denied the SAM Party’s motion for a

11 preliminary injunction, and we affirm.

12 I. BACKGROUND

13 A. April 2020 Electoral Reforms

14 New York law distinguishes between political parties and independent

15 bodies. Compare N.Y. Elec. Law § 1-104(3), with id. § 1-104(12). Parties, which have

16 more popular support, enjoy certain privileges but are subject to structural and

17 filing requirements. One of the principal privileges of party status is a designated

18 ballot line or “berth.” Id. § 7-104(4). For several major offices, the winner of a

3 1 party’s nomination process is automatically included on the ballot. But

2 independent bodies seeking to place candidates on the ballot must gather the

3 requisite number of signatures for each candidate. Id. §§ 6-102, 6-104, 6-106, 6-114,

4 6-142. Parties also enjoy access to primaries administered by the government,

5 automatic membership enrollment from voter-registration forms, and permission

6 to maintain a financial account, exempt from ordinary contribution limits, to pay

7 for office space and staff. Id. §§ 5-300, 14-124(3).

8 For 85 years, New York conferred party status on a political organization if

9 it won at least 50,000 votes in the quadrennial gubernatorial election. As the

10 number of voters in New York increased, this threshold became relatively low, as

11 did the number of signatures required on an independent body’s nominating

12 petition. Apparently as a result, the State has seen its share of colorful-if-quixotic

13 runs for office. See, e.g., William F. Buckley, Jr., The Unmaking of a Mayor (1966);

14 Rent is Too Damn High Party, http://www.rentistoodamnhigh.org (last visited

15 Feb. 8, 2021). Eight organizations met the party-status threshold in the 2018

16 gubernatorial election.

17 The State amended its party-qualification requirements in April 2020. It

18 raised the threshold from 50,000 votes to the greater of 130,000 votes or 2% of the

4 1 total vote. See N.Y. Elec. Law § 1-104(3). And instead of requalifying every four

2 years, political organizations must now requalify by meeting the higher threshold

3 in the gubernatorial and presidential elections, one of which occurs every two

4 years. Id. The New York State Campaign Finance Review Commission proposed

5 these changes as part of a larger package of reforms that includes public financing

6 for qualifying candidates in state races. The New York State Legislature passed

7 and Governor Andrew Cuomo signed the package into law as part of the budget

8 for fiscal year 2021. See 2020 N.Y. Laws Ch. 58 (S. 7508-B). Public financing is

9 scheduled to begin after the 2022 general election. Id. pt. ZZZ, § 12.

10 B. The SAM Party’s Challenge

11 The SAM Party describes itself as a “new kind of candidate-focused,

12 process-driven political party, rather than one predicated on shared substantive

13 policy positions or ideologies.” App’x at 457 (Decl. of Michael J. Volpe in Supp. of

14 Pls.’ Mot. for Prelim. Inj. (May 18, 2020), ¶ 2). SAM stands for Serve America

15 Movement, and the SAM Party subjects candidates for village, town, county,

16 regional, and statewide office to a scorecard based on the four “pillars” of

17 “transparency, accountability, electoral reform, and problem solving.” Id. at 459

18 (¶ 8). Although the SAM Party has nominated several of its own candidates for

5 1 office, most of its candidates are shared with another political party. New York

2 has a “fusion voting” system, by which the same candidate for office can be listed

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
987 F.3d 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sam-party-of-ny-v-kosinski-ca2-2021.