OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
The question presented for resolution in this case is whether the State of New
Although the combined rights of voters and candidates to be free of durational residency restrictions have been the subject of other recent litigation in this Court,
see Robertson v. Bartels,
Thus, rather than explore the uncertain boundaries of the collective right of candidates and voters to be free of ballot restrictions, I consider simply whether the State of New Jersey can justify with a narrowly tailored and significant interest the burdens it has imposed on the right to intrastate travel. I conclude that, based on the facts and circumstances of this case, it cannot do so. In particular, where the Plaintiff candidate has worked for almost twenty years in the very ward where he seeks election, has moved a distance of approximately thirteen city blocks from his prior residence, and has lived in the City he seeks to represent on the city council for his entire life, I find little State interest in excluding him from the ballot. I need not, and therefore do not, consider whether New Jersey’s durational residence requirement for candidates seeking local office might be constitutional as applied to other candidates in other factual settings.
Thus, for the reasons set forth in more detail below, I conclude that New Jersey’s durational residency requirement is unconstitutional as applied to the Plaintiff candidate, and shall order Defendants to place his name on the primary ballot.
II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The material facts giving rise to this dispute are uncontested and have been stipulated to by the parties. Craig Calla-way is a lifelong resident of Atlantic City. Until January of this year, he resided at 500 Wabash Avenue in Atlantic City. On January 31, 2002, he moved approximately thirteen blocks, to 725 North Ohio Avenue. He has since relocated twice more, both times apparently a relatively short distance.
Callaway’s perambulations are explained by the electoral map of his home city. Atlantic City is divided into six “wards,” each of which is entitled to one representative on the city council. The council also includes three at-large members. Calla-way’s pre-January residence, at 500 Wa
Callaway’s ambitions were stymied, however, by a ruling of the City of Atlantic City’s Solicitor’s Office that he was not eligible to run for the Third Ward seat, notwithstanding his move. According to the City Solicitor, New Jersey law requires that a candidate for local office have resided in the “local unit” for which he seeks office for “at least one year prior to the date upon which the election for the office is to be held.” See N.J. Stat. Ann. § 40A:9-1.13 (West 1993) (“the residency requirement”). “[Wjhenever an office is required to be filled by election from a district, ward or other subdivision,” the term “local unit” means “the district, ward or subdivision to which the office pertains.” Id. § 40A9-l.il. In other words, it is not enough that Callaway has lived in Atlantic City for over forty years; he must have lived in the particular ward for which he seeks election for at least one year before he can be elected to represent it.
Callaway responded to the City Solicitor’s Letter Opinion by filing this Complaint, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Fourteenth Amendment, in which he requests that this Court declare the dura-tional residency requirement unconstitutional, and issue an injunction, directing the City Clerk of Atlantic City to enter Callaway’s name as a candidate eligible for election to the city council from the Third Ward. Callaway’s Complaint named not only the City of Atlantic City, and its City Clerk and City Solicitor, but also the Attorney General of New Jersey, David Samson. As the parties agreed that the statutory deadline for the City Clerk to act is April 8, 2002,1 directed the parties to brief the issues presented on an expedited schedule. On April 3, 2002, I held a hearing and heard oral argument on Callaway’s Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order. The parties agreed at the hearing that no material fact was in dispute, and upon my suggestion, further agreed that, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a)(2), the pending Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order could be converted to a Motion for Permanent Injunctive Relief.
III. DISCUSSION
The first task in addressing any constitutional challenge is, necessarily, to identify the constitutional rights at issue. That determination, in turn, will likely reveal what level of scrutiny the court should apply to the challenged statutory provisions. As the array of plaintiffs in this case suggests, state restrictions limiting a candidate’s access to the ballot may implicate a variety of different interests. The Supreme Court has attempted to simplify matters by lumping together the rights of candidates, voters and, at times, political parties, and comparing the composite whole against the putative interests of the State in its regulation.
See, e.g., Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party,
Unfortunately, even after consolidating many of the Plaintiffs’ possible rights at issue, the level of scrutiny that this Court should apply is not particularly clear. The Attorney General contends that, under
In this labyrinth of conflicting decisions, the straighter course is to set aside for the moment the rights of the candidate
qua
candidate and instead to consider whether the residency requirement is invalid as an undue burden on Callaway’s fundamental right to travel. “A State, outside certain ill-defined circumstances, cannot classify its citizens by the length of their residence in the State.”
Saenz v. Roe,
The Third Circuit recognizes a right to travel of a somewhat different sort: a fundamental right to mfrastate travel, given constitutional force by the Due Process Clause.
See Lutz v. City of York,
I must, therefore, consider whether the Defendants have identified any sufficiently weighty and well-tailored state interests to counter-balance the burden on Callaway’s right. The parties, and my canvass of the pertinent cases and literature, suggest at least three possible interests. The Attorney General emphasized at oral argument the state’s interest in ensuring that candidates will be familiar with the issues of their constituency, and that voters will have an opportunity to know the candidates. Some cases have also alluded to an interest in preventing “carpetbagging.”
See, e.g., Robertson,
The State’s interest in guaranteeing knowledgeable candidates varies in strength depending on the office sought and the prior residence of the candidate. Candidates for statewide office might easily be well-informed about New Jersey without ever having set foot here. We live in a culture that is increasingly national, where the Internet, nationwide television news and national newspapers bring us closer together as a community, and constantly inform us of the hopes and struggles of our neighbors, at least as those aspirations and failures are writ large. On the other hand, it may well be reasonable to say that a candidate who relocates from Nome, Alaska to Atlantic City, New Jersey, will be relatively unlikely to know immediately the peculiar
local
problems of his or her new home. That assumption loses force as the point of origin of the candidate moves closer to the final destination. Ultimately, it seems almost absurd to say that someone who lives his whole life in a city doesn’t know enough about the problems of his neighbors, simply because they live on the other side of an invisible line that runs down the middle of their street. That is especially true when those lines are prone to wander.
See Robertson,
Similarly, the one-year residency requirement seems not especially well-tailored to the State’s interest in assuring that voters will know about the candidate. For example, in our modern media-saturated culture, most voters can and do learn almost everything they will ever know about a candidate only in the month or so before the election.
See Blumstein,
Furthermore, the parties have not drawn my attention to, and I have not independently located, any reported decision in which a court has found a significant state interest in preventing “carpetbagging.” The term has its origins in Southern Reconstruction hostility to Northern migrants, and I am not sure that it has ever lost the flavor of parochialism and favoritism. While voters may have the power to vote their personal prejudices, I do not believe that the law is obliged to aid them in that goal. New Jersey, it must be said, has some acquain
Finally, there is an insufficiently close relationship between the goal of protecting legitimate geographical limitations and the one-year residency requirement. Geographical limits appear in the United States Constitution itself. See U.S. Const. Art. I § 2 cl. 2. A political scientist might find justification for them not only in administrative necessity but also in the need to prevent “externalities.” A public servant should have to internalize the costs of his or her decisions. In other words, legislators should be affected by their own laws. By this argument, a city councilor should not be able to raise property taxes in Atlantic City without paying them himself. The one-year residency requirement, however, serves that end badly, if at all. For example, the danger of externalities is not present at all for candidates for statewide office who come from within the state. Nor, more pertinently for Callaway, do city councilors from neighboring wards within the same city have much opportunity to benefit themselves at the expense of their voters.
I conclude, therefore, that the Defendants have not identified any “narrowly tailored” and “significant” government interest in the residency requirement to sustain it in the unique factual circumstances of this case. As I have noted, the degree of the State’s interests, and the relation between the residency requirement and those interests, might vary depending on the office sought and the background of the candidate. I therefore emphasize that this case involves a challenge to the statute only as it has been applied to Callaway. I intimate no view as to the constitutionality of the residency requirement in other cases. I conclude only that in this case, the challenged statute impermissibly burdens Callaway’s right to “intrastate travel.”
Lutz,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, I shall declare that N.J. Stat. Ann. §§ 40A:9-1.11, -1.13 are unconstitutional as applied to Callaway. Accordingly, I shall also grant the Plaintiffs Motion for a Permanent Injuction, and direct the Defendants to place Callaway on the appropriate primary ballot for city council in Atlantic City’s Third Ward.
Notes
. At oral argument, Callaway asserted that he was challenging the residency requirement both facially and as applied. Facial challenges, however, are generally only available where a statute might chill free speech or expression. See Richard H. Fallon et al, Hart & Wechsler’s The Federal Courts and the Federal System 202-211 (4th ed.1996).
. It strikes me that in most cases the market, which is to say the electoral process, will do an adequate job of achieving the same goal. Rational voters prefer candidates who know what the voters want over candidates who do not. On the other hand, it might be the case that local elections, in particular, command relatively little attention from voters and the media, so that information about candidates is scarce. Conceivably, that might be a "market failure” that would justify state involvement.
. George Bailey, of course, is Jimmy Stewart's character in the Frank Capra classic, It’s a Wonderful Life (RKO Radio Pictures 1946).
