Larry Schack (“Schack”) and the American Civil Liberties Union (“ACLU”) appeal the decision of the district court dismissing their case against the Florida Bar (“Bar”) and the Judicial Qualifications Commission (“JQC”) on the ground that the claim is moot. In addition, on appeal, both the Bar and the JQC argue that this court does not have jurisdiction to hear the case as no ease or controversy exists between the parties. We disagree with both the district court’s ruling and defendants’ justiciability arguments. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
I.
At the time this suit was filed, Larry Schack was a Florida lawyer seeking election *1488 to the Florida Circuit Court. ' Today, Larry Schack is a sitting state circuit judge and expects to run for re-election in 1996. 1 Schack, along with the ACLU, is challenging a provision of the Florida Code of Judicial Conduct that requires candidates, for judicial office to “maintain the dignity appropriate to judicial office.” Florida Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 7(B)(1)(a) (1992).
The JQC is charged with enforcing the Code of Judicial Conduct by investigating and recommending to the Supreme Court of Florida any judge who should be removed from office or otherwise sanctioned for a breach of the Code’s mandates. See Fla. Const, art. V, § 12. The Bar organizes, licenses and disciplines all persons admitted to practice law in Florida. The Bar was established by the Supreme Court of Florida pursuant to the Court’s state constitutional powers and is empowered to enforce the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar. See Fla. Const, art. V, § 15. As a member of the Florida Bar seеking judicial election at the time this suit was filed, Schack was subject to Rule 4-8.2(b) which provides, “A lawyer who is a candidate for judicial office shall comply with the applicable provisions of Florida’s Code of Judicial Conduct.” Sup.Ct.Fla., Rules Regulating the Florida Bar, Rule 4-8.2(b) (1992).
As a candidate- for judicial office, Schack wanted to speak publicly about truthful information regarding his opponent, the incumbent circuit judge. This information included that the opponent had been convicted of leaving the scene of an accident, that he had been the subject of three FBI investigations, and that he had appointed, in his former capacity as state attorney, a chief investigator who was later convicted of assisting a drug smuggler. Schack was сoncerned, however, that his proposed speech might violate Canon 7(B)(1)(a), as it had been interpreted and enforced by the JQC and the Supreme Court of Florida. He was aware that other candidates for judicial office had run afoul of the JQC by engaging in conduct that, in the opinion of the JQC and the Supreme Court of Florida, did not “maintain the dignity appropriate to judicial office.”
See In re Inquiry Concerning a Judge, Re: Kay,
In order to avoid any action by the JQC, Schack sought an advisory opinion from the Committee on Standards of Conduct Governing Judges (“Committee on Standards”) as to
whether his
proposed speech would violate Canon 7(B)(1)(a). The Committee on Standards was established by the Supreme Court of Florida pursuant to the Court’s constitutional powers,
see
Fla. Const. art. V, §§ 2(b)
&
15, for the sole purpose of rendering “written advisory opinions to inquiring judges concerning the propriety of contemplated judicial or non-judicial conduct.”
Petition of Comm, on Standards of Conduct for Judges,
At approximately the same time that Schack was inquiring of the propriety of his proposed campaign conduct, another candidate for judicial office, Charles Horn, had filed suit against the Bar and the JQC to enjoin the operation and enforcement of Canon 7(B)(1)(c). This provision of the Code of Judicial Conduct provides in part:
A candidate, inсluding an incumbent judge, for a judicial office ... should not ... announce his views on disputed legal or political issues____
*1489
Finding that Horn had established the prerequisites for preliminary injunctive relief, the district court in that case enjoined the operation of Canon 7(B)(1)(c) as against Horn, holding that the canon- violated Horn’s rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
See American Civil Liberties Union, Inc. v. The Florida Bar,
After the Committee on Standards informed Schack that his proposed campaign speech would violate Canon 7(B)(1)(a), and after the district court in the Horn case had enjoined the Bar and the JQC from enforcing Canon 7(B)(1)(c), Schack asked the JQC whether it would enforce Canon 7(B)(1)(a) against him. The JQC refused to render an advisory opinion. 5 Thus, with two weeks remaining until the election, Schack was faced with the choice of risking possible disciplinary action by the Bar and the JQC, or self-censoring his proposed campaign speech, despite his belief that this speech was protected under the First Amendment. Instead, Schack, along with the ACLU, sued the Bar and the JQC, seeking a declaratory judgment that Canon 7(B)(1)(a) is unconstitutional on its face and as applied to Schack, and asking that'the Bar and the JQC be enjoined from enforcing it.'
n.
In response to Schack’s and the-ACLU’s complaint and motion for declaratory and injunctive relief, the- Bar argued that its reading of Canon 7(B)(1)(a) would not prohibit Schack from making his proposed campaign speech and stated that it had no intention to enforcе Canon 7(B)(1)(a) (through Rule 4 — 8.2(b) of the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar) against Schack: Thus, the Bar argued¡ no preliminary injunction was necessary. The Bar did admit, however, that because the Committee on Standards had issued an adverse advisory opinion, a declaratory judgment would be appropriate. 6 On that issue, the Bar maintained that Canon 7(B)(1)(a) is constitutional. In its answer, the JQC also asserted that Canon 7(B)(1)(a) could not be used to prevent Schack from following through on his proposed campaign speech. 7
After hearing argument, the district court denied the motion for a preliminary injunction, noting that neither the Bar nor the JQC had any intention of enforcing Canon 7(B)(1)(a) against Schack. The court also asked that Schack and the ACLU brief the court as to whethеr any case or controversy remained to be decided. 8 While the motions on case or controversy were pending, Schack was elected Circuit Judge for Martin County, Florida. Without formally ruling on whether a case or controversy existed between' the parties, the district court then asked the parties to address the issue of' whether Schack’s election had rendered the controversy moot. In its final order, the district court concluded that the case had become moot and did not involve the type of harm that was capable of repetition yet evading review.
On appeal, the Bar and the JQC, in addition to arguing that the district court’s decision on mootness grounds should be upheld, continue to assert that this court does not hаve jurisdiction over the appeal as no case or controversy exists between'-them and appellants as required by Article III of the United States Constitution. Therefore, we will address first whether an actual dispute exists between the parties before turning our attention to whether or not appellants’ claim is moot.
III.
Questions concerning the justiciability of a ease traditionally take a number of forms: *1490 Does this party have standing? Is the cause of action ripe? Is it moot? Is there a real dispute between the parties constituting a case or controversy? Although each of these inquiries has spawned its own jurisprudence, the questions often are interconnected, particularly when, as here, the nature of the controversy is an anticipatory challenge through an action for a declaratory judgment.
The case or controversy requirement must be met throughout the entirety of the proceedings. In this case, there are three critical points at which the case or controversy requirement is called into question: (1) Before Schack and the ACL.U filed suit, had they suffered an injury as a result of defendants’ actions? (2) After the suit was filed, and after the Bar and the JQC acquiesced in Schack’s position, was there still a concrete dispute between the parties? (3) If so, was that real and substantive controversy mooted by the election of Schack to the circuit court bench? Although questions (2) and (3) both appear to ask whether the controversy is moot, they demand different analyses. To answer question (2), we must determine whether the defendants’ in-court statements ameliorated plaintiffs’ injury. Question (3), on the other hand, .involves an intervening event, beyond the control of both parties, and the effects that event has on the nature of the ease or controversy. Thus, despite the fact that the election is long over, we must analyze question (2) from a point in time before the election to determine whether Schack and the ACLU continued to suffer an injury during the pendency of the lawsuit. Only if they did sustain an injury before the election do we concern ourselves with whether the election mooted the controversy.
A.
The Bar contends that it is not a properly named defendant in this action because it has no enforcement authority under the Code of Judicial Conduct. This argument fails. The propriety of the Bar as a defendant in this action derives from the provisions of the Florida State Constitution granting the Supreme Court of Florida exclusive jurisdiction over the regulation of judges and lawyers.
See
Fla. Const. art. V, § 15. The Court subsequently delegated that authority over lawyers to the State Bar of Florida.
See Rules Regulating the Flor
i
da Bar,
Under United States Supreme Court precedent, when a plaintiff challengеs the constitutionality of a rule of law, it is the state official designated to enforce that rule who is the proper defendant, even when that party has made no attempt to enforce the rule.
Diamond v. Charles,
*1491 Given its enforcement authority, the Bar is the proper defendant in an action seeking to limit the reach of Rule 4-8.2(b). Schack, at the time the suit was filed, was a lawyer who fell within the Bar’s disciplinary jurisdiction. Because Schack is now a judge, and is subject to the disciplinary jurisdiction of the JQC, it appears as if the Bar has no place in the remaining dispute. However, the ACLU is also a plaintiff in this action, сhallenging Canon 7(B)(1)(a) as facially unconstitutional and seeking to enjoin its enforcement against all judicial candidates, be they lawyers or judges. 10 As the Bar would still have the authority to seek sanctions against a lawyer running for judicial office for violating Canon 7(B)(1)(a) — by using Rule 4-8.2(b) — it is a proper party in an action by the ACLU. 11
This holding finds support in two recent cases, one from the Seventh Circuit and one from the Third Circuit, in which various provisions of a state’s judicial conduct code were challenged on constitutional grounds.
Buckley v. Illinois Judicial Inquiry Bd.,
[bjoth entities were sued because the campaign of a lawyer who is a candidate for judicial office is regulated by the Code of Judicial Conduct. See Rule 8.2 of Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct. If the candidate is elécted, violations of the Code of Judicial Conduct committed during the campaign come within the jurisdiction of the Judicial Inquiry and Review Board. If the candidate is not elected, the Disciplinary Board would consider infractions occurring during the campaign.
Stretton,
B.
The next question is whether an actual and live controversy exists over the constitutionality of Canon 7(B)(1)(a). When a party brings a pre-enforcement challenge to a statute, regulation or ordinance, the federal court must ask whether “the conflicting parties present a real, substantial controversy which is definite and concrete rather than hypothetical and abstract.”
Hallandale Prof. Fire Fighters Local 2238 v. City of
*1492
Hallandale,
To evaluate the nature of the plaintiffs claimed injury, courts “have asked whether the plaintiff is seriously interested in disobeying, and the defendant seriоusly intent on enforcing the challenged measure.”
International Soc’y for Krishna Consciousness v. Eaves,
1.
Schack alleges that the combination of (1) the advisory opinion by the Committee on Standards stating that Schack’s proposed campaign speech would violate Canon 7(B)(1)(a)’s proscription against engaging in conduct that does not “maintain the dignity appropriate to judicial office” and (2) the JQC’s refusal to tell Schack before the suit was filed whether or not it would seek disciplinary charges forced him to self-censor constitutionally protected speech. Schack also knew that two sitting circuit court judges had been reprimanded publicly for violating Canon 7(B)(1)(a), and the JQC had asked the Supreme Court of Florida to issue a stern warning to future candidates in nonpartisan judicial elections to avoid any appearance of non-judicial conduct. See supra note 2.
These events placed Schack in the position of having to refrain from potentially protected political speech in order to avoid possible disciplinary action. Moreover, even the hint of impropriety could have had a disastrous effect on his close judicial race.
14
This is precisely the sort of situation the Supreme Court sought to avoid in
Steffel v. Thompson,
Crucial to the reasoning in
Steffel
is the effect of
Younger v. Harris,
We are not troubled by the pre-enforcement nature of this suit. The State has not suggested that the newly enacted law will not be enforced, and we see no reason to assume otherwise. We conclude that plaintiffs have alleged an actual and well-founded fear that the law will be enforced against them. Further, the alleged danger of this statute is, in large measure one of self-censorship; a harm that can be realized without an actual prosecution.
Id.
at 393,
The Bar and the JQC argue that because they were enjoined from enforcing Canon 7(B)(1)(c) in the Horn case, it was not reasonable for Schack to believe that he would be disciplined if he engaged in his proposed campaign speech, and thus, he suffered no cognizable injury. This argument fails. Despite the fact that the ACLU is a common party in the two cases, and both canons were being challenged under the First Amendment, an injunction against one did not bar the enforcement of the other. In addition, although two arms of the Florida Supreme Court’s disciplinary system were enjoined from enforcing Canon 7(B)(1)(c), Schack had an advisory opinion from the other arm stating that if he made his proposed speech, he would be violating Canon 7(B)(1)(a). As this court stated in Fire Fighters:
The : injury requirement is most loosely applied — particularly in terms of how directly the injury must result from the challenged governmental action — where [Fjirst [Ajmendment rights are involved, because of the fear that free speech will be chilled *1494 even before the law, regulation, or policy is enforced.
2.
The more difficult question is whether a live controversy remained after the Bar and the JQC stated in court papers that Cаnon 7(B)(1)(a) could not be applied constitutionally to Schack’s proposed campaign speech. Under
Babbitt,
there must be some possibility that the defendants will seek to enforce the challenged regulation.
The JQC is not the final arbiter of the interpretation of the Code of Judicial Conduct; the Florida Supreme Court is.
In re Kelley,
In addition, because the members of the JQC serve staggered six-year terms,
see
Fla. Const., art. V, § 12(b), a change in membership could result in a change in JQC policy regarding the interpretation and enforcement of Canon 7(B)(1)(a). Although this may seеm far fetched, consider that the membership of the JQC — two judges of the district courts of appeal, two circuit judges, two county judges, two members of the Florida Bar, and five Florida residents not members of the Bar — is strikingly similar to the membership of the Committee on Standards on Conduct of Judges, the committee that issued the advisory opinion to Schack that his proposed campaign speech
would
violate Canon 7(B)(1)(a). The Committee’s membership is made up of three judges of the district courts of appeal, four circuit judges, two county judges and one member of the Florida Bar.
See In re Committee on Standards of Conduct for Judges,
Specifically as to Schack, the Bar and the JQC would not be bound by their court statements in this case if the same parties were to meet in future litigation on these issues in federаl court or in judicial disciplinary proceedings. Even admissions made pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 36 — which these statements certainly were not — are binding for purposes of the pending action only. “It is not an admission for any other purpose nor may it be used against the party who made it in any other proceeding.” 8 Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 2264, at 747 (1970);
see also Matter of Cassidy,
Insofar as the
JQC
has the discretion to change its policy regarding the interpretation and enforcement of Canon' 7(B)(1)(a), this case is analogous to other Eleventh Circuit cases allowing .pre-enforcement challenges. As the court noted in
Fire Fighters,
plaintiffs in both
Solomon
and
Eaves
were able to show that a live dispute existed because (1) plaintiffs “wanted to pursue a specific course of action which they knew was at least arguably forbidden by the pertinent law”; and (2) “[a]ll that remained between the plaintiff and
*1495
impending harm was the defendant’s discretionary decision — which could be changed— to withhold [enforcement].”
Moreover, it would be an anomalous result if the Bar and the JQC were permitted to (1) maintain that Canon 7(B)(1)(a) is constitutional and enforceable and yet, if Schack or another judicial candidate in Schack’s position were to seek pre-enforcement review, to (2) again come into court saying, “Canon 7(B)(1)(a) does not apply to that proposed speech.” This process itself, aside from the canons and the rules, is enough to chill speech.
In a related context, the Supreme Court has held that a case or controversy remains after a defendant voluntarily ceases allegedly improper behavior but is free to resume it at any time. This situation often arises when the parties enter into a voluntary dismissal of the action to which the defendant is not bound. If and when the defendant resumes the harmful activity, and plaintiff goes back into court, the defendant can again cease to engage in the harmful conduct and argue that the case is moot.
United States v. W.T. Grant Co.,
3.
In addition to the non-binding nature of the Bar’s and the JQC’s statements as to Schack, other judicial candidates, who may not be privy to this litigation, but are aware of the Committee on Standard’s advisory opinion issued to Schack, still do not know where they stand under Canon 7(B)(1)(a). Notwithstanding his own injuries,-under the Supreme Court’s overbreadth doctrine,
see Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413
U.S. 601,
This is precisely the approach taken by the Third Circuit in
Stretton,
The Boards take the position here as they did in the district court that the topics plaintiff proposes to discuss in the course of his campaign do not violate the Code. The Bоards, however, do not have the final word on interpretation of the Code. Moreover, plaintiff has also challenged the Canon on overbreadth grounds and may maintain the action on that basis. See Board of Trustees of the State Univ. of New York v. Fox,492 U.S. 469 , 484,109 S.Ct. 3028 , 3037,106 L.Ed.2d 388 (1989).
Id. at 140. In that one paragraph, the Third Circuit summed up the essence of this ease. Following their lead, we hold that, after the suit was filed but before the judicial election was held, there was an actual dispute between the parties. 18
*1496 IV.
The final hurdle to a hearing on the merits of plaintiffs’ challenge is to determine whether the judicial election held in November 1990 rendered the case- moot. The Supreme Court has recognized that in cases challenging rules governing elections, there often is not sufficient time between the filing of the complaint and the election to resolve the issues. Thus, the Court has allowed such challenges to go forward under the “capable of repetition yet evading review” exception to the mootness doctrine.
See generally First Nat’l Bank of Boston v. Bellotti,
Murphy v. Hunt,
The first part of this test can be satisfied “ ‘based on expеctations that, while reasonable, [a]re hardly demonstrably probable ....’ ”
News-Journal Corp.,
Because Schack and the ACLU asserted a facial challenge to Canon 7(B)(1)(a) in addition to Schack’s as-applied challenge, we view the gravamen of the complaint as a challenge to the Bar’s and the JQC’s ability to constitutionally prohibit a judicial candidate from publicly discussing legally obtained truthful information about her opponent. Given that Schack,' who is now a state circuit court judge, must run for re-election, it is reasonable to believe that he will want to engage in such speech but the existence of Canon 7(B)(1)(a) will force him to self-censor again. It is also safe to assume that ACLU members will continue to be interested in receiving this information. The second prong of the test is met because this action was not fully adjudicated before the state judicial elections, in November, 1990.
The Seventh Circuit agrees. In Buckley, an action challenging various provisions of Illinois’ Code of Judicial Conduct, the court addressed this same question. The court wrote:
A further consideration in support of the conclusion that we have a live controversy is the brevity of judicial campaigns in relation tо the leisureliness of litigation, which prevented the appeal[ ] ... from being decided before ... [the election]. Should [the judge] decide to run for the next open position ..., by the time he decides it will probably already be too late for him to file a suit that we would be able to decide before the election; and during such a campaign the Illinois Courts Commission’s finding. that he violated the rule would undoubtedly be used against him, as it was, we are told, in his retention campaign. This brings our case within the orbit of Moore v. Ogilvie,394 U.S. 814 , 816 [89 S.Ct. 1493 , 1494,23 L.Ed.2d 1 ] (1969), *1497 which allowed a challenge to a state election law to be maintained after the election in which the plaintiffs had run for office because the law would affect future elections. See also Renne v. Geary, [— U.S. -, -,]111 S.Ct. 2331 , 2338 [115 L.Ed.2d 288 ] (1991).
Buckley,
The Buckley court also emphasized that the Illinois Judges Association had standing to challenge the Code provision on its face because it was highly likely that “many judges ... will be running either for retention or for higher judicial office, and Rule 67(B)(1)(c) will inhibit their campaign statements.” Id. Similarly, the ACLU’s facial challenge should go forward because it is highly likely that its members will want to receive uninhibited campaign information in the future.
Golden v. Zwickler,
The Court ruled that Zwickler’s action was moot because the congressman who had been the target of the handbills had resigned from Congress to take a place on the New York Supreme Court.
Id.
at 109,
The case at bar differs from
Zwickler
in two important respects. First, as to the as-applied nature of Schack’s challenge, his desire to disclose publicly certain information about a campaign opponent is likely to recur. Second, this case involves a facial attack on Canon 7(B)(1)(a), broader in its scope than the plaintiffs challenge to the New York law at issue in
Zwickler.
Such facial attacks on election related laws have been upheld time and again by the Supreme Court, in one case as recently as the 1991-92 term.
See Norman v. Reed,
— U.S. --,
Under this analysis, the district court’s decision to dismiss the case on mootness grounds is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED to the court to proceed to the merits of the case.
Notes
. Circuit judges are electеd for terms of six years. Fla. Const. art. V, § 10(b).
. The Court cited at length from the recommendations of the JQC which stated in part:
[Tjhe Commission does bring to this Court’s attention the fact that it is increasingly receiving major complaints in non-partisan judicial elections, and recommends that in the Court’s opinion herein, candidates for future non-partisan elections be warned as to the drastic consequences which might be imposed by reason of such violations.
In re Kay,
.Although Schack was not a judge at the time he sought the advisory opinion, he was bound by Rule 4-8,2(b) of the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar, which required him, as a judicial candidate, to comply with the Code of Judicial Conduct.
. The district court entered a permanent injunction of the provision of Canon 7(B)(1)(c) prohibiting the discussiоn of disputed legal and political issues. American Civil Liberties Union, Inc. et al. v. The Florida Bar et al., No. 90-40122-WS (N.D.Fla. May 21, 1991).
. Schack never sought an opinion from the Bar as to whether it would enforce Rule 4-8.2(b) against him for his proposed campaign speech.
. See R.l-14 at 2.
. See R.l-15 at 2.
. The court also denied Schack’s motion to consolidate his action with Horn’s action challenging Canon 7(B)(1)(c).
. Both the Bar and the JQC have been the named defendants in a number of actions challenging various portions of the Code of Judicial Conduct and the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar.
See Doe v. State of Florida Judicial Qualifications Comm’n,
. The substance of the ACLU’s cause of actiqn is that the challenged rule violates its members’ First Amendment right to receive truthful and legally obtained information about judicial candidates.
See Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court,
. The absence of the Committee on Standards and the Supreme Court of Florida from the suit does not affect the propriety of the Bar and the JQC as proper party defendants. The Committee on Standards, despite issuing the advisory opinion warning Schack not to engage in his proposed campaign speech, has no power to enforce that opinion. In addition, the Supreme Court .of Florida, in promulgating the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar and the Code of Judicial Conduсt, was acting in its legislative capacity.
. Cases decided by the former Fifth Circuit before October 1, 1981, are binding precedent on this court.
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. We use the term "reasonably” to denote an objective standard and thus avoid the sort of problems that arose in
Laird v. Tatum,
.In fact, after the September 1990 primary, nеither Schack nor his main opponent, the incumbent judge, gained a majority of the votes. Schack beat his opponent in a November run-off election.
.
Younger
applies to state disciplinary proceedings because they are "judicial in nature.”
Middlesex County Ethics Comm.
v.
Garden State Bar Ass'n,
. In a similar context, the Ninth Circuit, in
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Comm. v. Thornburgh,
Describing the procedural posture' of the aliens’ injury, the court wrote:
Nor is this a case in which the individual appellees’ claimed threat of' injury is merely "hypothetical” or "conjectural.” Already they have once been charged with the challenged provisions, which charges were dropped, not because they were considered inapplicable, but for tactical reasons. Presumably, then, the individual appellees need not run the risk of the consequences of another violation of the challenged provisiоns in order to find protection.
Id. (citations omitted).
. The Supreme Court recently reaffirmed this principle in
Northeastern Florida Contractors v.
Jacksonville, -U.S.-,-,
. Admittedly, the canon at issue in Stretton was aimed specifically at censoring political speech while the canon at issue in this case is aimed not specifically at speech but at "unbecoming conduct.” Nevertheless, because the Committee on Standards has interpreted Canon 7(B)(1)(a) to apply to campaign speech, it is subject to an overbreadth challenge.
. "The 'capable of repetition yet evading review’ doctrine is [particularly] appropriate when there are 'as applied' challenges as well as in the more typical case involving only facial attacks. The construction of the statute, an understanding of its operation, and possible constitutional limits on its application, will have the effect of simplifying future challenges,, thus increasing the likelihood that timely filed cases can be adjudicated before an election is held.”
Storer,
. R.l-35 at 9.
