OPINION
A Michigan constitutional amendment imposes lifetime term limits on state legislators. The plaintiffs, four voters and two public interest groups, claim that the amendment violates their rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. They sued Michigan’s Secretary of State to enjoin enforcement of the amendment. • The district court upheld the law and granted summary judgment for Michigan. We AFFIRM.
I. Background
The parties stipulated to the facts. For many years, Michigan legislators had been winning reeleetion consistently. Incumbent legislators who sought reeleetion would retain their seats over ninety-two percent of the time. In 1992, a large majority of Michigan voters, 58.8 percent, approved a constitutional amendment to impose term limits on many state and federal officials, including state legislators, state executives, and federal congressmen. It added the following language, in pertinent part, to Michigan’s constitution:
No person shall be elected to the office of state representative more than three times. No person shall be elected to the office of state senate more than two times.... This limitation on the number of times a person shall be elected to office shall apply to terms of office beginning on or after January 1,1993.
This section shall be self-executing. Legislation may be enacted to facilitate operation of this section, but no law shall limit or restrict the application of this section. If any part of this section is held to be invalid or unconstitutional, the remaining parts of this section shall not be affected but will remain in full force and effect.
Mich. Const. art. 4, § 54. Section 54 imposes “lifetime” term limits as opposed to “consecutive” term limits. Lifetime term limits forever bar officials from serving more than a set number of terms, whereas consecutive term limits allow them to serve an indefinite number of terms so long as they periodically leave office. Section 54 will impact state representatives beginning with the 1998 primary elections. It will prevent 65 out of Michigan’s 110 representatives from seeking reeleetion.
The plaintiffs are four individual voters and two non-profit corporations, the Citizens for Legislative Choice and the Michigan Handicapped Voters’ Rights Association. The two corporate plaintiffs, as their names suggest, seek to promote voting choices generally. The individual plaintiffs seek to vote for representatives subject to the term limits. They reside in 'the districts of two state representatives, Mary Lou Parks and Ilona Varga, who are prohibited from running for reeleetion by § 54. Both representatives state that they would seek reeleetion if possible. The plaintiffs voted for them in the prior election and assert that they would do so again. They also voted against the amendment, as did a majority of the voters
The plaintiffs contend that § 54 violates their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights to vote for their preferred legislative candidates. They do not challenge the provisions that affect state executive officers, and both sides agree that the congressional term limits are unconstitutional. The plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment holding § 54 unconstitutional, and a permanent injunction requiring Michigan to place all the excluded candidates on the ballot.
II. Jurisdiction
The plaintiffs claim that this court has federal question jurisdiction because § 54 violates their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. They rest jurisdiction on 28 U.S.C. §§ 1381, 1343(a)(4), and 2201. Michigan’s counsel concedes that federal jurisdiction exists. Despite this agreement, a federal court has a responsibility to establish that jurisdiction is proper. Moore v. McCartney,
There is authority that, in general, a state’s decision to limit the terms of its elected officials raises no substantial federal question. State ex rel Maloney v. McCartney,
The Supreme Court of West Virginia upheld the term limits. Maloney,
Although a summary dismissal, Moore binds all lower courts until subsequent Supreme Court decisions suggest otherwise. Mandel v. Bradley,
One other circuit has considered this jurisdictional analysis. Bates v. Jones,
Despite doubts, we will not decide the propriety of jurisdiction. Michigan’s counsel chose not to contest jurisdiction in the district court or in this court. Therefore, neither side has advised this court of their views on Moore. In addition, we need not decide the jurisdictional issue; because we uphold § 54 on the merits, our decision will have the same practical effect as if we decided this case on jurisdictional grounds, namely, to let § 54 stand. Therefore, setting aside the jurisdictional question, we turn to the other issues.
III. Standing
To establish standing, a plaintiff must show, among other elements, the existence of an actual case or controversy. Miyazawa v. City of Cincinnati,
Here, the district court correctly found that all plaintiffs established standing. Michigan, however, contends that the potential injury is not immediate. It argues that if lifetime term limits are struck down, they could be replaced with a valid alternative, consecutive term limits. Consecutive term limits, like lifetime term limits, would prevent the term-limited representatives from running in this election, although they would allow those representatives to run in future elections. Therefore, Michigan contends that any injury will not occur until a future election.
Despite this argument, nothing in § 54’s severability clause authorizes a court to replace lifetime term limits with consecutive term limits if it invalidates the lifetime limits. Without express authorization, a court may not reinterpret or limit language to make a provision constitutional. Vittitow v. City of Upper Arlington,
Next, Michigan argues that the non-profit corporations lack standing. To establish associational standing, an organization must show, among other elements, that the interests it seeks to protect are germane to its organizational purpose. Hunt v. Washington State Apple Adver. Comm’n,
IV. The Merits
Having disposed of the preliminary issues, we turn to the merits. We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Tinker v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
A. The Balancing Approach
In this approach, courts evaluate candidate eligibility requirements by balancing the state’s interests against the individual voter’s interests. Anderson v. Celebrezze,
Under the Anderson-Burdick balancing test, therefore, a court first must evaluate the extent to which a regulation burdens First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. - The Supreme Court has identified two factors in determining whether a regulation burdens voting rights severely or only incidentally: content-neutrality and alternate means of access. See Burdick,
In evaluating the severity of the burden, the court also decides how much deference to afford the state’s interests. If the regulations burden voting rights incidentally, or impose only “reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions,” they receive a rational basis review. See id. at 788,
1. The Severity of the Burden
A voter has no right to vote for a specific candidate or even a particular class of candidates. Miyazawa v. City of Cincinnati,
Indeed, many courts have addressed the precise issue in this case. Twenty-four federal judges or state supreme court justices have reached the merits of whether lifetime term limits for state legislators violate the First and Fourteenth Amendments. While legal reasoning is more about quality than quantity, we are, nonetheless, impressed by the overwhelming number of judges who have voted to uphold these term limits. Twenty-three out of the twenty-four judges voted to uphold them: nine judges on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
Most importantly for the Anderson-Burdick analysis, lifetime term limits impose a neutral burden, not a content-based burden. Section 54 burdens no voters based on “the content of protected expression, party affiliation, or inherently arbitrary factors such as race, religion, or gender.” See Bates II,
Furthermore, the plaintiffs have many other avenues to express their preferences. They can, in fact, vote for experience. They can vote for the term-restricted candidates for other offices. For the legislature, they can vote for former city councilmen, legislative aides, and many other candidates with political experience. Indeed, the plaintiffs may elect anyone who has served less than three terms in the state house. Citizens for Legislative Choice,
Although the plaintiffs contend that § 54 burdens them severely, their theory proves too much. They argue that lifetime term limits burden an identifiable group of voters, those who favor candidates with significant legislative experience, for the benefit of another group of voters, those who favor novice legislators. To accept their view, however, every restriction would burden some identifiable group. For example, age ceilings permanently bar voters from electing another class of candidates, those with significant life experience. Under the plaintiffs’ theory, voters who favor significant life experience are an identifiable group of voters, and age ceilings permanently, and unfairly, burden their voting choices.
While the plaintiffs concede that a state may impose age limits, they fail to persuasively distinguish age limits from term limits. They merely brand age limits “reasonable” and term limits “unreasonable.” For example, they assert that “[a] reasonable qualification as to age, citizenship, [and] residency, ... precisely because it is reasonable, does not impose a ‘severe restriction.’ ” Next,
Apart from its overly broad sweep, the plaintiffs’ argument deteriorates even on its own terms. On the one hand, they complain that lifetime term limits prevent them from electing an entire class of candidates, those with experience. They then offer consecutive term limits as a more reasonable .alternative. Consecutive term limits, however, would prevent voters from electing another class of candidates, those with recent experience. The plaintiffs do not explain why a state may restrict candidates based on recent experience but not overall experience.
We also reject the plaintiffs’ final argument. They contend that § 54 burdens another identifiable group, racial minorities and inner-city residents. They note that, in all of the districts with a majority of black voters, a majority of voters voted against the amendment. They also note that many representatives from these districts hold important leadership positions. Based on these facts, the plaintiffs hypothesize that § 54 disproportionately burdens blacks, because blacks must rely on experienced legislators to garner support for their policy preferences.
None of this evidence supports the plaintiffs’ theory. They do not allege that § 54 was intended to hurt minorities. They present neither empirical nor anecdotal evidence that term limits hurt minority voters. On the contrary, § 54 burdens white suburban voters in the same manner as black inner-city voters. The fact that many, blacks voted against § 54 proves neither discriminatory .intent nor impact. Nothing indicates that term limits will prevent their future representatives from obtaining leadership positions, or that current legislative leaders obtained their positions solely through longevity. Finally, some authority indicates that term limits may help minority interests: “Meretricious policies which sacrifice the well-being of economic, social, racial, or geographical minorities are. most likely where a political figure ... can rely upon electorate inertia fostered by the hopelessness of encountering a seemingly invincible political machine.” State ex rel Maloney v. McCartney,
2. Michigan’s Interests
The State of Michigan has a compelling interest in enacting § 54. As a sovereign polity, Michigan has a fundamental interest in structuring its government. E.g., Gregory v. Ashcroft,
The plaintiffs do not seriously contend that Michigan lacks a compelling interest in structuring its government. Instead, they argue that, under' the compelling interest standard, a State must identify its precise interests and not hypothesize justifications. They then
This argument lacks merit. A State need not justify its laws with “elaborate, empirical" verification.” Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party, — U.S. -,
3. Narrow Tailoring
Michigan narrowly tailored § 54 to satisfy its compelling interests. Michigan asserts that only lifetime term limits will ensure a complete turnover of all legislative seats every few years, and that only lifetime term limits can erase all of the problems associated with incumbency. We defer to Michigan’s judgment.
Contrary to the plaintiffs’ assurances, consecutive term limits are not a viable alternative. E.g., Eu,
Therefore, even if we found that lifetime term limits burdened voters severely, we would still uphold § 54 under the compelling interest standard. As a result, § 54 passes the Anderson-Burdick balancing test regardless of whether we apply rational basis or strict scrutiny. There is a question, however, whether the Anderson-Burdick test even applies. In the next section, we discuss the alternative.
B. The Deferential Approach
Anderson and Burdick implicate rights and interests related to, but fundamentally different from, the rights and interests involved in this case. See Bates II,
Term limits, on the other hand, implicate a different, and in some respects a far more important interest: the State’s power to prescribe qualifications for its officeholders. E.g., Gregory v. Ashcroft,
This framework grants the States the required deference, but still allows federal courts to invalidate qualifications that violate another constitutional provision. “Through the structure of its government, and the character of those who exercise government authority, a State defines itself as a sovereign. ‘It is obviously essential to the independence of the States, and to their peace and tranquility, that their power to prescribe the qualifications of their own officers ... should be exclusive, and free from external interference, except so far as plainly provided by the Constitution of the United States.’ ” Gregory,
Nevertheless, the parties in this case confined their arguments to the Anderson-Bur-dick framework. As a result, we do not have the benefit of counsel in evaluating Judge Rymer’s approach. Moreover, we find no need to choose between the approaches, because we would affirm under either the balancing test or the deferential framework. Under either approach, our decision rests on the State’s sovereign interest in structuring its government. It is an interest recognized by both the text of the Constitution and the spirit of federalism.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Bates v. Jones,
. U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Hill,
. Legislature v. Eu,
. Citizens for Legislative Choice v. Miller,
. Bates v. Jones,
. The plaintiffs never allege that they generally vote for incumbents, as opposed to merely wanting to vote for these two particular incumbents.
. The plaintiffs take no position on term limits for state executive officers, another type of term limit. They do not discuss how this case may impact executive term limits.
. In addition, it appears that Michigan did not have the option of describing its purpose at length. According to the' joint stipulation of facts, Michigan requires its State Board of Canvassers to prepare a statement of purpose for a proposed amendment. This statement of purpose cannot exceed 100 words. See Mich. Const., art. 12, § 2, cl. 3.
. See McDaniel v. Paty,
