State v. Alaska Democratic Party

426 P.3d 901
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2018
Docket7279 S-16875
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 426 P.3d 901 (State v. Alaska Democratic Party) 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
State v. Alaska Democratic Party, 426 P.3d 901 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Alaska Democratic Party amended its bylaws to allow registered independent voters to run as candidates in its primary elections without having to become Democratic Party members, seeking to expand its field of candidates and thereby nominate general election candidates more acceptable to Alaska voters. But the Division of Elections refused to allow independent voter candidates on the Democratic Party primary election ballot, taking the position that Alaska election law - specifically the "party affiliation rule" - prevented anyone not registered as a Democrat from being a candidate in the Democratic Party's primary elections. The Democratic Party sued for declaratory and injunctive relief preventing enforcement of the party affiliation rule, and the superior court ruled in its favor. The State appealed. Because the Alaska Constitution's free association guarantee protects a political party's choice to open its primary elections to independent voter candidates, and because in this specific context the State has no countervailing need to enforce the party affiliation rule, we affirm the superior court's decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Alaska's Election System

Alaska uses a mandatory primary election or petition process to decide who may appear as a candidate for statewide office on the general election ballot. 1 A candidate affiliated with a recognized state political party 2 may appear on the general election ballot by winning a primary election against other party candidates. 3 A candidate *905 not representing a political party may appear on the general election ballot by submitting a petition with a sufficient number of qualified voters' signatures. 4 Aside from provisions for replacing candidates who withdraw, 5 the only other way a candidate may be on the general election ballot is by filing as a write-in candidate. 6

Political party status is measured by each party's support statewide. "[A]n organized group of voters that represents a political program" qualifies as a political party if it nominated a candidate for governor who received at least three percent of the total votes cast for governor in the preceding general election or if it has registered voters in the state equal to at least three percent of the votes cast for governor in that election. 7 Party status has several benefits: political parties may make and receive larger political contributions, nominate members of election boards, appoint poll watchers, obtain seats on the Alaska Public Offices Commission, and, most importantly, gain automatic access to the general election ballot for its candidates through primary elections. 8

Under Alaska Statutes any political party member may run in a party primary by filing a declaration of candidacy, statement of income sources and business interests, and filing fee. 9 The declaration of candidacy includes a statement under oath that the person meets Alaska's candidate eligibility requirements, 10 and eligibility is subject to verification by the director of elections. 11 The candidate eligibility requirements include restrictions on residency, citizenship, voter qualification, age, multiple candidacies, cross-filing, and party affiliation. 12 Under this last requirement - the party affiliation rule - primary election candidates must be "registered to vote as a member of the political party whose nomination is being sought." 13 A political party may not waive the party affiliation rule, but it may opt to have a single primary election ballot or a combined primary election ballot with one or more other parties. 14 Political parties also may choose whether to allow independent voters or other parties' voters to participate in their primary elections. 15 By default, primary election ballots are designed to allow independent voters to participate in a political party's primary election but to exclude other political parties' voters from participating in that primary *906 election. 16

Alaskans may change their voting registration status at any time. 17

B. The Democratic Party's Challenge

The Democratic Party is a recognized Alaska political party with over 75,000 members. The Democratic Party historically allowed only Democratic Party members to run as primary election candidates, but it recently became interested in allowing independents to run as candidates in its primary election. The Democratic Party first sought judicial approval for this course of action in 2016, but the superior court dismissed that case as unripe because the Democratic Party's bylaws did not then allow independent candidacies.

The Democratic Party later amended its bylaws to allow independent voters to participate as candidates in its primary elections. The Democratic Party petitioned the Division of Elections to allow these candidacies, but the Division denied the request because it conflicted with the party affiliation rule. The Democratic Party then brought the current lawsuit, once more challenging the party affiliation rule's constitutionality.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the superior court granted the Democratic Party's and denied the State's. The court concluded that the Democratic Party had an associational right under the Alaska Constitution to allow independent candidates to run in its primary election and that the party affiliation rule severely burdened this right by infringing on the Democratic Party's internal decision-making. The court also concluded that the State's interest in requiring candidates and political parties to have demonstrable public support was not advanced by the party affiliation rule, that the fit between the State's interest in preventing voter confusion and the party affiliation rule was not close enough to justify the burden on the Democratic Party's associational right, and that the State had not demonstrated how its interest in political stability was advanced by the party affiliation rule.

The State appealed. We expedited consideration of the appeal and issued a brief order affirming the superior court's judgment. 18 We now explain our decision. 19

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Bluebook (online)
426 P.3d 901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-alaska-democratic-party-alaska-2018.