State v. Green Party of Alaska

118 P.3d 1054, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 124, 2005 WL 1926313
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 2005
DocketS-11272
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 118 P.3d 1054 (State v. Green Party of Alaska) 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. Green Party of Alaska, 118 P.3d 1054, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 124, 2005 WL 1926313 (Ala. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Alaska election statutes governing primary elections require each political party to have its own primary ballot on which only candidates of that political party appear. The Green Party of Alaska and the Republican Moderate Party challenge those statutes, arguing that, by making it unlawful for them to present their candidates together on a combined ballot, the statutes unconstitutionally burden their associational rights. We hold that the statutes substantially burden a political party’s right to determine who may participate in its primary and that the state’s justification for imposing this burden is insufficient. We therefore hold that the contested provisions violate the Alaska Constitution.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Before 2000 Alaska had a blanket primary system. A blanket primary features a single ballot that “lists every candidate regardless of party affiliation and allows the voter to choose freely among them.” 1 In a blanket primary all voters may vote for any candidate from any political party, and “the candidate of each party who wins the greatest number of votes is the nominee of that party at the ensuing general election.” 2 Under the blanket primary system as it existed in Alaska, “a registered Republican might vote for an Alaskan Independence Party candidate for Governor, a Republican for United States House of Representatives, and a Democrat for State Senate.” 3

In California Democratic Party v. Jones, the United States Supreme Court held that California’s blanket primary violated political parties’ associational rights because it required them to allow non-members to vote in the political parties’ primaries even where a political party wished to exclude non-members. 4 Because California’s blanket primary was in all relevant respects identical to Alaska’s, the effect of Jones was to render Alaska’s primary system unconstitutional.

In 2001 the Alaska legislature revised Alaska’s election statutes to comply with Jones. 5 The legislature considered a number of primary systems, including closed and open primaries. In a closed primary, each political party has its own ballot and only members of a party may vote that party’s ballot. 6 In an open primary, each political party likewise has its own ballot, but the ballot is not limited to party members: any voter may select a ballot of any political party. The main difference between a blanket primary and an open primary is that in a blanket primary, the voter may “vote for candidates for the nomination of different political parties for various offices,” 7 whereas in an open primary “any voter may vote for candidates for any political party’s nomination, but the voter may only vote for candidates running for one political party’s nomination.” 8

The Alaska legislature ultimately decided to allow each political party to determine for *1058 itself whether to have a closed, an open, or a partially closed primary. Under the new primary system, codified at AS 15.25.010, .014, and .060, each political party has its own ballot “that contains all of the candidates of that party for elective state executive and state and national legislative offices.” 9 The default provisions of the election code create a partially closed primary. Under those provisions only members of a political party and unaffiliated voters may vote in the party’s primary. 10 But a political party may opt out of the default provisions. Alaska Statute 15.25.014 allows a political party to choose to exclude unaffiliated voters on the one hand or to open its primary to registered members of other parties on the other. Under AS 15.25.014, provided that a political party complies with certain procedural requirements,

the director [of elections] shall permit a voter registered as affiliated with another party to vote the party’s ballot if the voter is permitted by the party’s bylaws to participate in the selection of the party’s candidates and may not permit a voter registered as nonpartisan or undeclared to vote a party’s ballot if the party’s bylaws restrict participation by nonpartisan or undeclared voters in the party’s primary.[ 11 ]

Thus, under the new system, a political party can choose to have a closed primary — in which only members of that party may vote — an open primary — in which all registered voters may vote — nr something in between. Indeed, nothing in the current statutory scheme prohibits a political party from opening its ballot to registered members of some parties while excluding members of other parties.

Although political parties have great leeway under the current system and may open their ballots to a broad spectrum of voters, each political party is nonetheless required to have its own ballot on which only its candidates may appear. 12 As a result, a voter must choose one ballot out of all those potentially available and may therefore participate in only one political party’s primary.

A voter may vote only one primary election ballot. A voter may vote a political party ballot only if the voter is registered as affiliated with that party, is allowed to participate in the party primary under the party’s bylaws, or is registered as nonpartisan or undeclared rather than as affiliated with a particular political party and the party’s bylaws do not restrict participation by nonpartisan or undeclared voters in the party’s primary.[ 13 ]

Unlike the blanket system, under the current primary system a voter cannot participate in different political parties’ primaries for different political offices. Whereas under the old system a voter could vote for a Green Party candidate for governor and a Republican Moderate candidate for senator, the current system does not allow a voter to split a primary ticket.

For the August 2002 primary election the Green Party and the Republican Moderate Party wished to share a ballot on which both political parties’ candidates would appear. The state refused to allow the combined ballot and the Green and Republican Moderate parties instead ran their candidates on separate ballots. 14

Shortly after the 2002 election both the Green and Republican Moderate parties filed *1059 suit against the state, challenging the requirement that each political party have a separate ballot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 P.3d 1054, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 124, 2005 WL 1926313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-green-party-of-alaska-alaska-2005.