OPINION
Nevada permits direct legislation through ballot initiatives. To qualify an initiative for the ballot, proponents must obtain signatures from a number of registered voters equal to 10 percent of the votes cast in the previous general election in each of the state’s congressional districts. The district court held that this geographic distribution requirement, which requires proponents to collect signatures from each of the state’s congressional districts, violates neither the Equal Protection Clause nor the First Amendment. We affirm.
I. Background
The Nevada Constitution authorizes the citizens of Nevada to enact statutes and amend the Nevada Constitution through the initiative process. See Nev. Const, art. 19, § 2. To place an initiative on the ballot, proponents must obtain signatures from a number of registered voters equal to 10 percent of the votes cast in the previous general election. See id.
This signature requirement is also subject to a geographic distribution requirement known as the All Districts Rule. 1 Adopted in 2009, the All Districts Rule requires initiative proponents to meet the 10 percent signature threshold in each of *1127 the state’s congressional districts. See Act of June 17, 2011, ch. 501, 2011 Nev. Laws, § 64(to be codified at Nev.Rev.Stat. § 295.012) (“A petition for initiative or referendum that proposes a constitutional amendment or statewide measure must be proposed by a number of registered voters from each petition-district in the State that is at least equal to 10 percent of the voters who voted in that petition district at the last preceding general election.”); Act of June 13, 2011, ch. 320, 2011 Nev. Laws, § 1 (to be codified at Nev.Rev.Stat. § 293.069) (“ ‘Petition district’ means a district ... for the election of Representatives in Congress.”).
Nevada had three congressional districts at the time the state adopted the All Districts Rule and at the time the plaintiffs filed this lawsuit. The First and Third Districts were located within Clark County, which is situated in the southeast corner of the state and includes Las Vegas. The Second District included each of the state’s other 16 counties, including all of northern Nevada, as well as portions of Clark County not included in the First and Third Districts. Nevada will have four congressional districts once the 2Ó10 reapportionment and redistricting processes are completed. The state’s congressional districts have equal populations, as the federal Constitution requires.
See Karcher v. Daggett,
This action presents a facial challenge to the All Districts Rule. The plaintiffs are five individuals and two organizations, each of which opposes the All Districts Rule. Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 17-26. The defendant is Ross Miller, Nevada’s Secretary of State, who is sued solely in his official capacity. Id. at 1. We refer to the plaintiffs collectively as “plaintiffs” and to the defendant as “the state.”
The' plaintiffs seek an order declaring the All Districts Rule unconstitutional and enjoining the state from enforcing it. As relevant here, they raise two claims. First, they contend that the All Districts Rule violates the Equal Protection Clause by allowing a minority of the state’s population to veto the wishes of the-majority with regard to ballot initiatives, making the votes of some citizens more influential than those of others. Second, they contend that the All Districts Rule violates the First Amendment by significantly increasing the burdens and expenses placed upon individuals seeking to quality initiatives for the ballot.
The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment and the district court rejected the plaintiffs’ claims in a published opinion.
See Angle v. Miller,
II. Equal Protection
‘Voting is a fundamental right subject to equal protection guarantees under the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Idaho Coal. United for Bears v. Cenarrusa,
Here, the plaintiffs argue that the All Districts Rule violates equal protection for three reasons: (1) that it results in vote dilution under the principle of
Moore v. Ogilvie,
A.
“[T]he right of suffrage can be denied by a debasement or dilution of the weight of a citizen’s vote just as effectively as by wholly prohibiting the free exercise of the franchise.”
Reynolds v. Sims,
In
Moore,
We extended
Moore
to ballot initiatives in
Idaho Coalition,
which invalidated an Idaho law requiring initiative proponents to obtain signatures from 6 percent of qualified voters in each of at least half of Idaho’s 44 counties to qualify an initiative for the ballot.
See
We relied on both
Moore
and
Idaho Coalition
in
ACLU of Nevada v. Lomax,
In sum, our case law establishes that geographic distribution requirements assigning equal political power to districts of unequal population violate equal protection. The All Districts Rule, however, avoids that defect. Whereas the rules in Moore, Idaho Coalition and Lomax afforded equal political power to counties having unequal populations, the All Districts Rule grants equal political power to congressional districts having equal populations. It thus does not trigger strict scrutiny under the principle announced in Moore, and it survives rational basis review because it serves the state’s legitimate interest in ensuring a minimum of statewide support for an initiative as a prerequisite to placement on the ballot.
B.
The plaintiffs argue that this is not the end of the inquiry because “there is more than one way for a state’s election district scheme to create vote dilution.” Reply Brief of Appellants 5. They rely on another set of Supreme Court eases suggesting that, with respect to a statewide election, equal protection requires votes to be counted on a statewide, rather than a district-by-district, basis.
This line of authorities begins with
Gray v. Sanders,
The Court expanded on this principle in
Gordon v. Lance,
[I]n Gray, we held that the county-unit system would have been defective even if unit votes were allocated strictly in proportion to population. We noted that if a candidate received 60% of the votes cast in a particular county he would *1130 receive that county’s entire unit vote, the 40% cast for the other candidates being discarded. The defect, however, continued to be geographic discrimination. Votes for the losing candidates were discarded solely because of the county where the votes were cast. Indeed, votes for the winning candidate in a county were likewise devalued, because all marginal votes for him would be discarded and would have no impact on the statewide total.
Thus, were a state to decide an election for governor by determining which candidate received a majority of the votes cast in a majority of districts, rather than determining which candidate received a majority of the votes cast statewide, it might impermissibly devalue votes according to Gray and Gordon. The result presumably would be the same if a state were to decide an election on a statewide ballot measure by determining whether the initiative received majority support in a majority of districts, rather than whether the initiative received a majority of votes statewide. We must decide whether this principle disfavoring geographic counting also extends to the signature phase of a ballot initiative.
Similar to the two examples above, the All Districts Rule counts petition signatures on a geographic rather than a statewide basis. As a result, a ballot initiative may obtain the total number of signatures required statewide, but fail to qualify for the ballot solely based on where signers live. The All Districts Rule thus implicates the concerns raised in Gray, Gordon and Reynolds that “voters cannot be classified ... on the basis of where they live, at least with respect to voting in statewide elections.” Id.
We do not believe, however, that the All Districts Rule violates equal protection
on
this basis. Although language in
Gray, Gordon
and
Reynolds
suggests that á district-by-district system of counting
votes
in a statewide election would violate equal protection, none of the decisions suggests that district-by-district counting of
signatures
obtained to qualify an initiative for the ballot presents the same problem. Votes and petition signatures are similar in some respects,
see Idaho Coalition,
This inference is supported by experience. Although geographic distribution requirements are commonplace at the
*1131
ballot access stage, we are not aware of any judicial decision invalidating them for this reason.
4
Our own cases, in fact, have presumed that geographic distribution requirements are permissible for signature collection, so long as they involve districts with equal populations.
See Idaho Coalition,
C.
The plaintiffs also argue that the All Districts Rule denies equal protection because it violates the principle of majority rule, allowing “a small minority of the population of the state to veto the overwhelming wishes of the majority with regard to a particular ballot initiative.” Brief of Appellants 13.
“Majority rule” is one of the “ideals” that drives our democracy.
Reynolds,
*1132
Here, we can discern no identifiable class that is discriminated against by the All Districts Rule. It “singles out no ‘discrete or insular minority’ for special treatment.”
Gordon,
The plaintiffs suggest that the All Districts Rule discriminates against urban voters because it gives voters in the relatively rural Second District the ability to veto initiatives supported by voters in the more urban First and Third Districts. Brief of Appellants 19; Badillo Aff. ¶¶ 12, 17. The plaintiffs offer no evidence in support of this assertion, however. In any event, voters in the First and Third districts are not a discrete or insular minority. Nor do voters in the Second District have a “strangle hold on the State Legislature,”
Reynolds,
III. First Amendment
Under the First Amendment, election “Regulations imposing
severe burdens
on plaintiffs’ rights must be narrowly tailored and advance a compelling state interest.”
Prete v. Bradbury,
A. Severe Burden
The Supreme Court has identified at least two ways in which restrictions on the initiative process can severely burden “core political speech.”
Meyer v. Grant,
1. One-on-one Communication Between Circulators and Voters
Unlike the restrictions on petition circulators at issue in
Meyer
and
ACLF,
the All Districts Rule does not restrict one-on-one communication between petition circulators and voters. It neither
*1133
“limit[s] the number of voices who will convey the initiative proponents’ message,”
ACLF, 525
U.S. at 194-95,
2. Limiting the Ability to Make an Initiative a Matter of Statewide Discussion
The plaintiffs nonetheless contend that the All Districts Rule imposes a severe burden on core political speech because it makes it more difficult and expensive to qualify an initiative for the ballot. There is no First Amendment right to place an initiative on the ballot.
See Meyer,
Such regulations, however, may indirectly impact core political speech. As
Meyer
recognized, when an initiative fails to qualify for the ballot, it does not become “the focus of statewide discussion.”
Meyer,
This is similar to the standard we apply to ballot access restrictions regulating candidates. In that setting, we have held that “the burden on plaintiffs’ rights should be measured by whether, in light of the entire statutory scheme regulating ballot access, ‘reasonably diligent’ candidates can normally gain a place on the ballot, or whether they will rarely succeed in doing so.”
Nader v. Brewer,
To establish that the All Districts Rule significantly inhibits the ability of proponents to place initiatives on the Nevada ballot, the plaintiffs rely on affidavits submitted by Tony Badillo, a plaintiff, and Janine Hansen. Badillo is a supporter of a proposed initiative that would prevent the Las Vegas casinos from taking tips received by dealers. His affidavit declares:
With all of our volunteers living in the two congressional districts of Southern Nevada and with all of our volunteers unable to travel in their spare time to *1134 the Northern part of the state, we are injured by the requirement of being forced to collect signatures in all of the districts of the state. As the abuses by the casinos are only taking part in Las Vegas, it is impossible to recruit volunteers in the northern part of Nevada.
Badillo Aff. ¶ 16. Hansen’s affidavit says that she has been involved in several efforts to gather petition signatures in northern Nevada over the past decade. She asserts that it would be difficult to satisfy the All Districts Rule:
The bureaucratic public officials in Northern Nevada are hostile to initiative petitions and they are hostile to allowing citizens to attempt to gather signatures in a public forum. As the Northern Nevada leader for several efforts to gather signatures, I have gathered signatures in every county of Nevada. Congressional District Two is very hostile to initiative petitions and it is much more expensive to gather signatures in these rural counties. Volunteers are more afraid to travel to these small counties....
Based upon my experience in Congressional District Two this past decade in gathering signatures, I believe that the public officials who should be in charge of protecting our right to petition the government will make it very difficult for signature gatherers to gather signatures at any public venue....
My volunteers and I are afraid and chilled to exercise our First Amendment rights to gather signatures for initiative petitions.
Hansen Aff. ¶¶ 13, 19, 27.
Badillo’s and Hansen’s assertions are too vague, conclusory and speculative to create a triable issue that the All Districts Rule significantly reduces the chances that proponents will be able to gather enough signatures to place initiatives on the ballot. 6 Badillo’s affidavit does not explain, for example, why volunteers would be unable to travel in their spare time to the northern part of Nevada, what efforts have been made to recruit volunteers in the northern part of the state, why the use of volunteer, rather than paid, petition circulators is the only alternative or why signatures cannot be obtained from voters residing in the portion of the second congressional district located within Clark County. The plaintiffs have presented only speculation, without supporting evidence, that the All Districts Rule imposes a severe burden on the First Amendment rights of initiative proponents. They have not presented any evidence that, despite reasonably diligent efforts, they and other initiative proponents have been unable to qualify initiatives for the ballot as a result of the geographic distribution requirement imposed by the All Districts Rule. On this record, no severe burden has been shown. Strict scrutiny therefore does not apply.
B. Important Regulatory Interest
Because the plaintiffs have not shown that the All Districts Rule imposes severe burdens, the state need show only
*1135
that the rule furthers “an important regulatory interest.”
Prete,
Nevada undeniably has an important regulatory interest “in making sure that an initiative has sufficient grass roots support to be placed on the ballot.”
Meyer,
We are persuaded that the state has shown an important regulatory interest. The First Amendment permits states “considerable leeway” in regulating the electoral process, provided their choices do not produce “undue hindrances to political conversations and the exchange of ideas.”
ACLF,
IV. Conclusion
The plaintiffs have not demonstrated the existence of a genuine issue on their claims that the All Districts Rule violates either the Equal Protection Clause or the First Amendment. The judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The state adopted the All Districts Rule after courts invalidated the state’s previous geographic distribution requirements.
See ACLU of Nev. v. Lomax,
. The district court granted summary judgment to the plaintiffs on one issue — their challenge to the circulator affidavit requirements of Nevada Administrative Code section 295.020.
See Angle,
. Although Gray, Gordon and Reynolds all suggest that counting votes on a district basis for a statewide election would violate equal protection, none of those cases was decided on that basis.
. In
Moore,
the constitutional defect was the allocation of equal political power to counties with unequal population.
See
. The state’s power to ban initiatives thus does not include the lesser power to restrict them in ways that unduly hinder political speech. See
Meyer,
. "Conclusory, speculative testimony in affidavits and moving papers is insufficient to raise genuine issues of fact and defeat summary judgment.”
Soremekun v. Thrifty Payless, Inc.,
. Ensuring a modicum of statewide support for an initiative is not a
compelling
state interest.
See Moore,
