Bob GEARY, Robert Silvestri; Dennis Mark; Melissa Gundrun;
Wayne Johnson; David Soule; Max Woods; Peter Johnson;
Robert Gebert; Election Action; Terence Faulkner; Sudi
Trippet, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Louise RENNE, San Francisco City Attorney; Diane Feinstein;
Jay Patterson; San Francisco Board of Supervisors; City
and County of San Francisco; San Francisco Registrar of
Voters, Defendants-Appellants.
Dennis MARK; Bob Geary; Robert Silvestri; Terence
Faulkner; Max Woods; Alexa Smith, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Michelle CORWIN, Acting Registrar of Voters; Louise Renne,
San Francisco City Attorney; City and County of
San Francisco, Defendants-Appellants.
Dennis MARK; Bob Geary; Robert Silvestri; Terence
Faulkner; Max Woods; Alexa Smith, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Michelle CORWIN; Louise Renne, San Francisco City Attorney;
City and County of San Francisco, Defendants-Appellees.
Bob GEARY, Robert Silvestri; Dennis Mark; Melissa Gundrun;
Wayne Johnson; David Soule; Max Woods; Peter Johnson;
Robert Gebert; Election Action; Terence Faulkner; Sudi
Trippet, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Louise RENNE, San Francisco City Attorney; Diane Feinstein,
Mayor; Jay Patterson; San Francisco Board of Supervisors;
City and County of San Francisco; San Francisco Registrar
of Voters, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 89-15601, 89-15603, 89-15719 and 89-15720.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted June 4, 1990.
Decided Sept. 14, 1990.
Arlo Hale Smith, San Francisco, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellees-cross-appellants.
Randy Riddle, Deputy City Atty., San Francisco, Cal., for defendants-appellees.
Pebbles Trippet, San Francisco, Cal., in pro. per., for plaintiff-appellee-cross-appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
Before SNEED, FARRIS and FERNANDEZ, Circuit Judges.
FARRIS, Circuit Judge:
This case involves a facial challenge to the constitutionality of four sections of California election law. Cal.Elec.Code Secs. 3795, 5025, 10012 & 10013.5. Three sections (3795, 5025, and 10013.5) allow the state to remove "false, misleading, or inconsistent" material 1) from candidate statements and 2) from statements made by persons or groups supporting or opposing a question on the ballot, when the statements are submissions made to a voters' information pamphlet. The fourth section (10012) prohibits candidate statements in the pamphlet from making reference to the candidate's party affiliation or any partisan activities when the office sought is a nonpartisan position. The government assembles, publishes, and distributes the pamphlet.
The district court struck down the first three sections, except it upheld the removal of "inconsistent" statements, and it struck down all of the fourth section. We find all sections to be constitutional.
ISSUES
1) Does the government violate the first amendment by excluding statements submitted for a voter information pamphlet, when a judge finds those statements, by clear and convincing evidence, to be false, misleading or inconsistent with the requirements of the statute?
2) Does the government violate the first amendment by prohibiting candidates for nonpartisan offices from making reference to their party affiliation or partisan activities in the candidate's statement?
FACTS
The City and County of San Francisco, pursuant to local and state law, prepares, publishes, and distributes a voters' information pamphlet. The pamphlet contains statements from individuals and groups, arguing for or against the initiatives, ordinances, propositions, or measures appearing on the ballot. It also contains personal statements from candidates for nonpartisan office. The pamphlets, along with a sample ballot, are mailed to all voters at least ten days prior to the election. Some ballot statements are recognized as being from "official" supporters or opponents and are included free of charge. San Francisco Admin.Code Sec. 5.74.4. All other ballot statements may be included free of charge if the person or group submitting the statement collects a sufficient number of signatures or if it pays a fee to defray the cost of publication. San Francisco Admin.Code Secs. 5.74.8, 5.74.9. The candidate may be charged for his pro rata share of the expense of publishing his personal candidate statement. Cal.Elec.Code Sec. 10012. The statements can range in length from 250 to 400 words, depending on which specific statute section authorizes the statement. See, e.g., Cal.Elec.Code Sec. 10012.
Ballot statements are subject to editing pursuant to three virtually identical sections of the California Elections Code: sections 3795 (county ordinances, initiatives, or measures, and rebuttals), 5025 (municipal proposals, ordinances, or measures, and rebuttals), and 10013.5 (candidate statements). Each provides for a ten-day period before the pamphlet is submitted for printing during which voters or the clerk may review the statements and
may seek a writ of mandate or an injunction requiring any or all of the material in voter's pamphlet to be amended or deleted. A peremptory writ or an injunction shall issue only upon clear and convincing proof that the material in question is false, misleading, or inconsistent with the requirements of this chapter, and the issuance of the writ or injunction will not substantially interfere with the printing or distribution of official election materials as provided by law.... [T]he candidate [or author] shall be named as the real party in interest.
See, e.g., Cal.Elec.Code Sec. 10013.5. At issue is whether the power to strike statements as "false, misleading, or inconsistent with the requirements of this chapter" constitutes an infringement of the first amendment. The "requirements of this chapter" are simple with reference to section 3795 and 5025: the arguments must be "for or against" the measure. See, e.g., Cal.Elec.Code Sec. 3783. Section 10013.5's "requirements" are a bit more specific: it "may include the name, age and occupation of the candidate and a brief description ... of the candidate's education and qualifications...." * (Emphasis added.) See Cal.Elec.Code Sec. 10012.
The section controlling reference to candidate party affiliation provides
[t]he statement shall not include the party affiliation of the candidate, nor the membership or activity in partisan political organizations.
Cal.Elec.Code Sec. 10012.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review first amendment issues de novo. See Acorn v. City of Phoenix,
DISCUSSION
I. Ballot Statements: Sections 3795, 5025 and 10013.5
a. Statutes Not Unduly Burdensome on First Amendment Interests
This case involves control of political speech in the setting of a political campaign. Several cases have invalidated statutes attempting to regulate campaign speech. See, e.g., Brown v. Hartlage,
This case is different. The government makes no attempt to keep the material it deletes from the voters' pamphlet from generally reaching the public. The regulations would merely preclude the material from reaching the public through the government's voters' pamphlet, a single narrow forum. There is no criminal or civil penalty involved. The challenged statutes place no restriction upon political speech by any candidate or person except as it is submitted for inclusion in the voters' pamphlet. Plaintiffs make no showing that more traditional avenues for political expression are inadequate to disseminate their ideas.
Geary argues that the possibility of litigation may "chill" expression, see New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
Although the government does not author the statements, it has an interest in the messages that it assembles, publishes, and distributes and may therefore appear to approve. It is comparable to the situation of a private publisher. See Estiverne v. Louisiana State Bar Ass'n,
It is significant that the pamphlet is prepared and distributed by the government. We have previously held that the voters' pamphlet "constitutes a limited public forum but ... that a lower level of scrutiny attaches to this classification...." Kaplan v. County of Los Angeles,
In analyzing these statutes it is helpful to remember the core values and concerns of first amendment protection, embodied and recognized in a passage from New York Times v. Sullivan:Thus we consider this case against the background of a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.
The voters pamphlet does not suppress protected expression or in any serious way limit the debate of public issues. The statute does not prohibit the deleted statements generally, but only in the pamphlet. The authors do not have an independent constitutional interest in publishing false, misleading, or inconsistent statements in the pamphlet. See Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
The present restrictions are a least restrictive alternative to achieve the state's significant interests. See United States v. O'Brien,
Moreover, there can hardly be a proper purpose in conveying demonstrably false, misleading or inconsistent1 information to the voters by means of the pamphlet. See Gertz v. Welch,
The challenged statutes are a reasonable manner of regulation, narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest, while leaving open more than ample alternative channels of communication.
b. Immediate Appellate Review Is Not Necessary
Geary argues that the lack of immediate appellate review of the decision to delete material renders the statutes unconstitutional. We disagree. The statutes satisfy the procedural safeguards required by Freedman v. Maryland,
II. Candidate Statements: Section 10012
Section 10012 prohibits candidates from making reference in their candidate statements, published in the voters' information pamphlet, to "party affiliation" or to "membership or activity in partisan political organization." Enforcement is through section 10013.5. Our analysis of this section parallels that of the ballot sections above.
While the restriction implicates first amendment interests it does so to preserve the scope of a limited subject forum created by the government to aid in the establishment of a nonpartisan government structure. The government may regulate speech in a limited public forum to preserve the usefulness of the forum in accomplishing the purpose for which it was created. See City of Madison v. Wisconsin Employment Relations Comm'n,
The recent en banc decision, in the related case of Geary v. Renne,
The en banc decision invalidated section 6(b) of Article II of the California Constitution. Section 6(b) prohibits political parties from supporting, endorsing, or opposing a candidate for nonpartisan office. The section 6(b) prohibition is significantly different from that in section 10012, in that section 6(b) was a blanket prohibition: it prohibited all support, endorsement or opposition. In this way it is very much like the statutes in the cases we distinguished in our discussion regarding the ballot statements. See, e.g., Brown v. Hartlage,
Noting that the ban is total, the en banc panel reported with approval that
[a]ccordingly, the district court below specifically found that the State could adequately safeguard the interests Sec. 6(b) was designed to protect by less drastic means, including provision for nonpartisan methods of nominating candidates for local and judicial offices and controls on partisan activities of the candidates.
Geary,
In fact, the California Elections Code features several provisions designed to preserve the nonpartisan character of local and judicial elections. To begin with, we note that Section 37 of the Code explicitly forbids party participation in the nomination of candidates for nonpartisan office.... In addition, the Code contains provisions stating that declarations of candidacy and other nomination papers may not refer to party affiliation (Sec. 6401.5); the name of the party to which a candidate for nonpartisan office belongs may not appear on the ballot (Sec. 10200.5); a voter may cast his ballot for a candidate for nonpartisan office without regard to party affiliation (Sec. 10214); and partisan and nonpartisan offices are to be listed in separate columns on the ballot form (Sec. 10207).
Id. at 285 n. 4. Section 10012's restriction, like these controls, is limited and aids in the establishment of the nonpartisan governmental structure chosen by California in a narrowly tailored manner.
Since the restriction serves the government's interest in retaining the limited subject matter purpose of its limited public forum in a least restrictive manner, we hold that section 10012 does not violate the first or fourteenth amendment.
CONCLUSION
We hold that sections 3795, 5025, 10012 and 10013.5 of the California Elections Code do not violate the first amendment. The district court is AFFIRMED IN PART and REVERSED IN PART.
Notes
We note that as to "inconsistent" there may be some concern, since the California Court of Appeals said this means material which is "not clearly germane...." Patterson v. Board of Supervisors,
