Balancing responsibility between federal and state governments in a republic that assigns interlocking sovereignty to each often requires federal courts to walk an unsteady tightrope. From a federal court’s perspective, this special sort of judicial funambulism always must proceed in the spirit of cooperative federalism tempered, however, by the need to avoid the pitfalls inherent in blind deference to state autonomy.
The case at hand implicates the division of responsibilities between federal and state judicial systems but does not require us to walk a very high wire. We need only tread on solid ground, previously paved by the United States Supreme Court, and apply the Court’s teachings to the peculiar factual and legal terrain that underlies this appeal. Because that exercise persuades us that the district court performed its task in step with the principles enunciated by the Court, we affirm the order from which the plaintiff appeals.
I. BACKGROUND
We supply a thumbnail sketch of the relevant facts. In 1992, plaintiff-appellant Troy E. Brooks and Erica Bodwell, a member of the New Hampshire bar, engaged in an intimate relationship during a period when Bodwell was separated from her husband. Bodwell became pregnant. She obtained a divorce in late 1992, but the final decree made no provision for her unborn child.
Bodwell gave birth to a son in February of 1993 and subsequently initiated a paternity suit against Brooks in which she maintained that he was the boy’s biological father. Brooks acknowledged paternity and the court entered a provisional order covering matters such as support, custody, and visitation.
Shortly thereafter, Bodwell reconciled with her ex-husband, moved to discontinue the paternity action, and, relying on the fact that the child was conceived while she was still married, sought refuge in the presumption of legitimacy. Brooks objected to the proposed dismissal of the paternity suit and set out to confirm his legal status as the boy’s father. After numerous skirmishes concerning paternity (not relevant here), Brooks filed complaints with the New Hampshire Supreme Court Professional Conduct Committee (the *636 Committee) against three attorneys, including Erica Bodwell, accusing them of flouting various ethical canons in their handling of the paternity suit. The Committee dismissed the complaints after conducting an investigation.
Brooks then sought to put to use in the paternity suit both the fact that a disciplinary complaint had been instituted against Erica Bodwell and certain evidence to which he became privy during the course of the Committee’s investigation. His efforts were thwarted by a rule prohibiting the disclosure of knowledge obtained during the course of attorney disciplinary proceedings. See N.H.Sup.Ct.R. 37(17)(a) (1984). 1 Brooks retorted by filing a pro se petition in the New Hampshire Supreme Court (the NHSC) in which he contended that Rule 37(17)(a) abridged his First Amendment right to free speech and asked that the rule be invalidated.
On March 23, 1995, the NHSC agreed to entertain Brooks’ petition. The court scheduled briefing and oral argument (with the proviso that all matters connected with the proceeding remain confidential). Brooks then retained counsel, Philip Cobbin, who filed a brief on his behalf. The court accepted the case on a paper record once Brooks and his attorney refused to participate in oral arguments behind closed doors. The case has yet to be decided.
After the matter had been taken under advisement, Brooks, acting as his own attorney, sued the members of the NHSC and of the Committee (and others, for good measure, including the state bar association) in New Hampshire’s federal district court. His complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief aimed at halting the enforcement of Rule 37(17)(a). In what amounted to anticipatory disregard of that rule, he attached a copy of the NHSC’s order (agreeing to entertain his petition, but only in camera) to his federal court complaint. Attorney Cobbin subsequently entered an appearance for Brooks in the federal court and moved for a preliminary injunction designed (a) to freezé the paternity suit until the federal court had ruled oh Brooks’ constitutional claim, (b) to force the NHSC to dismiss Brooks’ petition without prejudice, and (c) to prevent that court from exercising its contempt powers under Rule 37(17)(g) against Brooks. Without requesting the district court to seal the record, Attorney Cobbin included in the motion a copy of a brief filed in the confidential proceeding. Not surprisingly, the NHSC promptly directed the Committee to determine whether the lawyer had violated Rule 37(17)(a).
The district court refused to issue a preliminary injunction. The court reasoned that the proceeding pending in the NHSC called into play the doctrine of
Younger v. Harris,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Technically, this is an appeal from the denial of a preliminary injunction,
3
and
*637
therefore the lower court’s decision — assuming that it applied the appropriate legal standard — ordinarily must stand unless the appellant demonstrates an abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., Weaver v. Henderson,
This usurpation of the customary standard of review does not create an awkward anomaly. The primary integer in the preliminary injunction calculus is the plaintiffs probability of success on the merits.
See, e.g., Narragansett Indian Tribe v. Guilbert,
III. ANALYSIS
Against this backdrop, we turn to a consideration of whether Younger abstention is appropriate in this case. Our analysis unfolds in four layers.
A.
The
Younger
doctrine welds principles of federalism and comity into a fulcrum that can then be used to achieve a proper balance between sensitive federal and state interests.
See Younger,
Perhaps the most revealing elucidation of the balance that the
Younger
Court wished to achieve is found in
Middlesex County Ethics Comm. v. Garden State Bar Ass’n,
The Supreme Court reinstated the district court’s ruling.
B.
The next step in the pavane requires us to apply this tripartite framework to the case at bar.
1. Two of the three proceedings that Brooks seeks to enjoin — his petition questioning the constitutionality of Rule 37(17)(a) and the paternity suit in which he is embroiled — are pending before duly constituted state courts and are undeniably ongoing state judicial proceedings.
See New Orleans Public Serv.,
2. It is evident that New Hampshire has a vital interest in regulating the subject matter of Brooks’ claims. A state’s judicial system is an important cog in its governmental apparatus, and no judicial system can function smoothly unless the attorneys who participate in it are held to high standards of professionalism and accountability.
See id.
at 434-35,
*639
In the same vein, the confidentiality rule comprises a central element of the regulatory scheme. The NHSC has identified no fewer than four noteworthy purposes that the rule serves: (1) protecting attorneys’ reputations; (2) protecting complainants’ anonymity; (3) maintaining the integrity of pending investigations; and (4) preventing profligate disclosures that might endanger the interests of those sources from whom the state obtained information on a confidential basis.
See State v. Merski,
3. We also believe that the pending state proceedings allow an ample opportunity for Brooks to raise his constitutional challenge. The clearest illustration of this point is the proceeding presently pending before the NHSC (in which the very issue that forms the centerpiece of Brooks’ federal complaint is raised, briefed, and teetering on the brink of decision). Any other assessment would defile the basic presumption that state courts are fully capable of safeguarding federal constitutional rights.
See Middlesex,
Here, the presumption is reinforced because the NHSC has demonstrated unequivocally that it takes questions anent the confidentiality provisions seriously.
See, e.g., Petition of Burling,
Though Brooks maintains that the NHSC proceeding is less than adequate because of its confidential character, the Supreme Court has never suggested that having an adequate opportunity to present a federal claim requires the parallel state proceeding be open to the public. Rather, the test is whether “state law clearly bars the interposition of the constitutional claims.”
Moore v. Sims,
c.
Fulfillment of the three requirements for
Younger
abstention usually ends the federal inquiry.
See Bettencourt,
Judicial bias is a recognized basis for derailing
Younger
abstention,
see, e.g., Gibson v. Berryhill,
In the first place, the bias exception to the
Younger
abstention doctrine is inapposite if an ostensibly aggrieved party fails to employ available procedures for recusal of allegedly biased judges.
See Middlesex,
In the second place, the baseline showing of bias necessary to trigger
Younger
’s escape mechanism requires the plaintiff to offer some evidence that abstention will jeopardize his due process right to an impartial adjudication.
See Gibson,
To implicate due process, claims of general institutional bias must be harnessed to a further showing,
see Gibson,
In the third place, to the extent that Brooks contends that any individual Justice is actually biased or has prejudged his case, he offers no concrete evidence to that effect. Thus, he bumps up against the historic presumption that judges are “men [and women] of conscience and intellectual discipline, capable of judging a particular controversy fairly on the basis of its own circumstances.”
Withrow v. Larkin,
D.
We add brief comments concerning two other claims that Brooks seems to make.
1. To the extent that Brooks invites us to forgo
Younger
abstention because his attorney is the subject of a bad-faith prosecution by the NHSC (arising out of disclosures made in violation of Rule 37(17)(a) whilst representing Brooks), we decline the invita
*641
tion. The NHSC’s investigation of Cobbin is not an enforcement proceeding brought without any realistic expectation of finding a violation of a rule; and, therefore, the investigation does not catalyze the bad-faith exception to the
Younger
doctrine.
See Younger,
2. In something of a non sequitur, Brooks, citing
Younger,
claims that the threat of disciplinary proceedings against him and his attorney for violations of the confidentiality rule chills the exercise of his First Amendment rights, and that the confidentiality rule is therefore “flagrantly and patently violative of express constitutional prohibitions in every clause, sentence and paragraph, and in whatever manner and against whomever an effort might be made to apply it.”
Younger,
IV. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Although Brooks raises an important question about the interplay between New Hampshire’s attorney disciplinary system and the First Amendment, that question is presently pending before the New Hampshire Supreme Court in a judicial proceeding that Brooks himself instituted. If, in the end, Brooks is not content with the result of that adjudication, he may then seek certiorari in the Supreme Court of the United States. He may not, however, rewardingly request the federal district court to enjoin the state proceedings.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The rule in effect at the time, with exceptions not relevant here, provided that all records and proceedings involving allegations of attorney misconduct “shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed." N.H.Sup.Ct.R. 37(17)(a). The same rule also provided that "participants in the proceedings shall conduct themselves so as to maintain the confidentiality mandated by this rule,” and warned that "[violation of this duty shall constitute an act of contempt of the supreme court." N.H.Sup.Ct.R. 37(17)(g).
. Following oral argument on this appeal, the NHSC substantially revised Rule 37(17). See N.H.Sup.Ct., Order of March 7, 1996 & appendices. The amendments take some steps toward meeting Brooks' objections by relaxing the confidentiality restrictions applicable to attorney disciplinary proceedings. But because the amendments are without retroactive effect — the Order specifically provides that the amendments shall be effective as to complaints filed on or after March 7, 1996 — they have no significant impact on this appeal.
.Despite Brooks' importuning, we have no appellate jurisdiction over the district court’s denial of the flurry of temporary restraining orders that he sought prior to the district court's disposition of his motion for a preliminary injunction.
See
*637
United States v. Miller,
. Although several courts have applied an abuse of discretion standard in reviewing
Younger
abstention cases,
see, e.g., Martin Marietta Corp. v. Maryland Human Relations Comm'n,
. The other integers in the calculus include (1) the likelihood of irreparable injury in the absence of a preliminary injunction, (2) the relative balance of hardships if the order is issued or denied, and (3) the effect on the public interest of granting or withholding interim injunctive relief.
See Narragansett Indian Tribe,
. The defendants represent the state's interest. By way of illustration, the NHSC is charged with the paramount responsibility of establishing procedures and standards governing attorney discipline "that are emblematic of the character of the profession."
Petition of Burling,
. Although the NHSC recently amended the version of the confidentiality rule that is at issue here, see supra note 2, the state nevertheless retains a strong interest in preserving the expectations of confidentiality created by the former regime.
. For what it may be worth, we note that, if the NHSC follows past practice, its eventual disposition of Brooks’ petition will be embodied in a published, publicly accessible opinion.
See, e.g., Petition of Burling,
. The structural bias claims, weak in all events, are further undermined by the recent amendments to the confidentiality rule. See supra note 2. Those amendments, adopted without dissent by the Justices, liberalize the rule in such a way as to provide a strong indication that the Justices are not wed to secrecy.
