This case involves a challenge by Joyner to a provision of the Arizona Constitution which forbids certain state officials from remaining in office if they run for an elected federal position before the final year of their state term. The case was brought by Joyner to enjoin its enforcement against him.
1
The district court granted the relief Joyner sought and held that the Arizona provision is unconstitutional because it conflicts with the Qualifications Clause of Article I, Section 2 of the United States Constitution.
*1526 I.
FACTS
Conrad Joyner is a member of the Board of Supervisors for Pima County, Arizona. His present term of office began on January 1, 1981, and ends on January 1, 1985. In 1982, Joyner ran an unsuccessful campaign in the Republican primary for nomination to the United States House of Representatives.
Article 22, § 18 of the Arizona Constitution was proposed by the Arizona Legislature in 1979, and approved by the voters at the 1980 general election. It provides:
Except during the final year of the term being served, no incumbent of a salaried elective office, whether holding by election or appointment, may offer himself for nomination or- election to any salaried local, state or federal office.
Under Arizona Revised Statutes §§ 12-2041 and 12-2042, the Arizona Attorney General and County Attorney may bring a quo warranto action against a state official who runs for federal office in violation of Article 22, § 18 to force him to resign from the state position and to declare that position to be vacant.
Joyner contended that Article 22, § 18 is unconstitutional. The district court granted Joyner’s motion for summary judgment, holding that Article 22, § 18 is unconstitutional as it relates to salaried elective state officials offering themselves for federal office. The court ordered that Joyner be allowed to run for the House of Representatives without having to resign from the Pima County Board of Supervisors.
The State of Arizona appeals the district court’s order and also argues that Joyner did not have standing to bring his action. Joyner, in addition to claiming that Article 22, § 18 is unconstitutional, also contends that we should dismiss the appeal because the case is now moot. We address the standing and mootness issues first, and then turn to the merits.
II.
STANDING
The State asserts that Joyner did not have standing to challenge the constitutionality of Article 22, § 18, except as applied to Joyner’s own candidacy for federal office.
The standing doctrine derives from the “case or controversy” requirement of Article III of the ’United States Constitution, and “is the threshold question in every federal case, determining the power of the court to entertain the suit.”
Warth
v.
Seldin,
The question then arises whether Joyner has standing to assert that Article 22, § 18 is unconstitutional as it applies to third parties, i.e., all salaried elective officeholders who might seek state or federal elective office. The State relies on
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
Nonetheless, the rule we enunciate in this case by its terms would embrace situations other than that presented by Joyner. To enunciate such a rule does not involve an issue of standing. When a rule by which a plaintiff’s conduct is governed is broad enough to cover others engaged in somewhat similar activities, the fact that the plaintiff can assert only his rights under the rule does not thereby narrow the rule so as to make it not applicable to others when properly invoked. Joyner’s lack of standing to assert all possible jus tertii merely means that those who rightfully assert them later are neither encumbered nor aided by res judicata or, perhaps, by collateral estoppel.
III.
MOOTNESS
Turning to the mootness issue, Joyner contends that this case has become moot since he lost the primary election and is no longer a candidate for Congress. He argues that this case is not covered by the principal exception to the mootness doctrine, that applicable to cases that are “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
See Dunn v. Blumstein,
.Election cases like the present'one come within the type of controversy that is “capable of repetition, yet evading review.” “Evading review” for the purpose of the exception need not mean that review is impossible. It only means that in the ordinary course of affairs it is very likely to escape review. Appellate courts are frequently too slow to process appeals before an election determines the fate of a candidate. If such cases were rendered moot by the occurrence of an-election, many constitutionally suspect election laws — including the one under consideration here — could never reach appellate review.
Id.; Rosario v. Rockefeller,
IV.
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF ARTICLE 22, SECTION 18
Joyner’s complaint specifically alleges that Article 22, § 18 violates the Qualifications Clause of Article I, Section 2 of the United States Constitution, as well as the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 2 The district court concluded *1528 that Article 22, § 18 is unconstitutional under the Qualifications Clause and did not reach the Equal Protection claim. We reverse the district court, and also hold that Article 22, § 18 does not conflict with the Equal Protection Clause.
A. Qualifications Clause Claim
According to the Qualifications Clause, Article I, Section 2, Clause 2 of the United States Constitution:
No Person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the Age of twenty five Years, and been seven Years a Citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.
From the beginning of the Republic, commentators have asserted that the three qualifications contained in the Claused-age, citizenship, and residency — are exclusive, and that neither Congress nor the states may require more of a candidate.
See, e.g.,
1 J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution 453-63 (5th ed. 1891).
3
In
Powell v. McCormack,
Neither Joyner nor the State disagrees with respect to these generalities. Joyner, quite understandably, asserts that Article 22, § 18 impermissibly conflicts with the Qualifications Clause because it imposes a fourth qualification on candidates for Congress — that they not hold elective office in Arizona unless they are in the last year of their term. The State, of course, disagrees. It argues that Article 22, § 18 does not add to the qualifications for federal office, but is an exercise of Arizona’s plenary power to regulate the conduct of its own elected officials. We hold that Arizona’s position is correct.
The courts considering challenges to state laws relying on the Qualifications Clause have distinguished between state provisions which bar a potential candidate from running for federal office, and those which merely regulate the conduct of state officeholders. The former category of laws imposes additional qualifications on candidates and therefore violates the Qualifications Clause, while the latter category is constitutionally acceptable since it merely bars state officeholders from remaining in their positions should they choose to run for federal office. The burden on candidacy, imposed by laws of the latter category, is indirect and attributable to a desire to regulate state officeholders and not to impose additional qualifications to serving in Congress.
For example, in
State ex rel. Pickrell v. Senner,
In contrast, the latter category of laws appears in a series of recent decisions in which courts have upheld against a Qualifications Clause attack state laws which do not disqualify a state officeholder from running for federal office, but which require the officeholder to resign or be removed from the state office should he seek election to Congress.
In
Signorelli v. Evans,
Joyner argues, however, that the
Signo-relli
line of cases applies only to judges, and not to nonjudicial officeholders. He also contends that Article 22, § 18 is unconstitutional under the authority of
Davis v. Adams,
First,
Signorelli
does not stand for the proposition that the only acceptable “resign to run” statutes are those that apply to judges. Instead, the
Signorelli
court distinguished between regulations which are constitutionally permissible because they affect “specified state offices peculiarly within the essential regulatory authority of the states,” and statutes placing “restrictions upon a broad range of occupations,” which are constitutionally suspect.
Second, Joyner’s reliance on Justice Black’s “in chambers” opinion in
Davis
does not carry the day.
Davis
involved a Florida law which provided that no state officeholder could qualify for election to another office unless he had first resigned from the state position — a “resign to qualify to run” statute. The Florida Secretary of State refused to allow two sheriffs and a mayor who wanted to run for the House of Representatives to file for election. The Florida Supreme Court upheld the actions of the Secretary of State,
State ex rel. Davis v. Adams,
Davis,
however, was not a decision on the merits, and therefore lacks precedential value.
See Locks v. Commanding General, Sixth Army,
In sum, we conclude Article 22, § 18 does not impose a fourth qualification on candidates for Congress because it does not prevent an elected state officeholder from running for federal office. Nor does it prohibit the filing for nomination to Congress by an elected state officeholder: The Arizona Secretary of State allowed Joyner to file for nomination for Congress. It merely requires that Joyner resign or be removed from office if he wishes to “offer himself for nomination or election” to Congress. It regulates the conduct of state officials by requiring those officeholders who run for other positions before the final year of their term to resign or be removed from their state office. Admittedly this is an indirect burden on potential candidates for Congress; it is not sufficient, however, to constitute an impermissible qualification for federal office.
Signorelli,
While we cannot interfere with the tenure of office which the United States may prescribe for its officers, it is clearly within our province to declare what effect the acceptance of such an office will have on the tenure of an officer of the State ... when that is declared by the [State] constitution ...
State ex rel. Watson v. Cobb,
B. Equal Protection Claim
Related to and overlapping with Joyner’s Qualifications Clause claim is his Equal Protection challenge to Article 22, § 18. Under traditional equal protection analysis, legislative classifications — even those made pursuant to a state’s exercise of its plenary power over state officials — are subject to varying degrees of judicial scrutiny. Normally, courts will focus on whether the classifications are rationally related to furthering a legitimate state interest.
Vance v. Bradley,
In undertaking our analysis of Article 22, § 18, we are guided by the recent Supreme Court decision,
Clements v. Fashing,
- U.S. -,
The Clements plurality explained:
*1532 In assessing challenges to state election laws that restrict access to the ballot, this Court has not formulated a “litmus-paper test for separating those restrictions that are valid from those that are invidious under the Equal Protection Clause.” Storer v. Brown,415 U.S. 724 , 730 [94 S.Ct. 1274 , 1279,39 L.Ed.2d 714 ] (1974). Decision in this area of constitutional adjudication is a matter of degree, and involves a consideration of the facts and circumstances behind the law, the interests the State seeks to protect by placing restrictions on candidacy, and the nature of the interests of those who may be burdened by the restrictions. Ibid.; Williams v. Rhodes,393 U.S. 23 , 30 [89 S.Ct. 5 , 10,21 L.Ed.2d 24 ] (1968).
Id.
at---,
Our conclusion is buttressed by the analysis of Article 22, § 18 made by the Arizona Legislative Council for the 1980 referendum in which the provision was adopted. According to this analysis, there are four principal justifications for the rule. First, it encourages an elected public official to devote himself exclusively to the duties of his office. Second, Article 22, § 18 reduces the possibility of public subsidies for officials who are merely using public office as a “stepping stone.” Third, the provision prevents abuse of office before and after an election. 10 Finally, it protects the expectations of the electorate in voting a candidate into state office. 11
*1533
These justifications are substantial, and reflect a legitimate and compelling state interest in orderly, consistent, and honest government.
12
Cf. Anderson v. Celebrezze,
- U.S. -,
We recognize that the burden the Arizona provision imposes on potential candidates is not inconsequential. However, Article 22, § 18, to repeat ourselves, does not prevent Arizona officials from becoming candidates for other offices. It merely requires that they not occupy a state office while seeking either a state or federal elective office. At worst it imposes upon officeholders a loss of income and the possibility of being without public office. These burdens are easily outweighed by the benefits of the Arizona provision.
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Joyner also sought relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court dismissed this claim. Joyner does not appeal its dismissal.
. Joyner also claims that Article 22, § 18 infringes the First Amendment. A majority of the Supreme Court, however, held in
Clements v. Fashing,
-U.S. -,
In addition, Joyner alleges that the Arizona provision conflicts with the Fourth Amend
*1528
ment, the Due Process Clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, and the Privileges and Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. These claims are wholly without merit. Article 22, § 18 infringes neither the Fourth Amendment nor the Privileges and Immunities Clause. Moreover, it does not deprive Joyner of property or liberty without due process of law since, as Justice Stevens points out in
Clements v. Fashing,
“a State [may] define the benefits and burdens of different elective state offices in any particular manner.”
. For a thorough survey of the origins and construction of the Qualifications Clause,
see Powell v. McCormack,
. Most of the cases cited by Joyner follow a similar pattern of holding that state laws rendering officials ineligible for state office are unconstitutional qualifications.
See, e.g., Stockton v. McFarland,
Other cases holding laws to be unconstitutional qualifications because they render candidates ineligible for federal office include
Dillon v. Fiorina,
. The
Signorelli
court also suggested that the separation of powers justifications for the New York provision might be analogized to those supporting the Incompatibility Clause of Article I, Section 6 of the United States Constitution.
. The
Signorelli
court was concerned that a state might use its regulatory authority, for example, “to require lawyers to resign from the bar or business executives to resign corporate offices prior to seeking public office.”
. Although Article 22, § 18 creates a classification which distinguishes between elected state officeholders who want to run for another office before the final year of their term and all other persons, that classification does not disadvantage a suspect class.
Cf. Clements v. Fashing,
- U.S. -,
. Article XVI, § 65 of the Texas Constitution provides that a declaration of candidacy for another office by certain state officials except in the last year of their term shall constitute automatic resignation from their office.
*1532 None of the litigants in Clements v. Fashing sought to run for federal office. The Court therefore did not look at the Texas laws in the context of the Qualifications Clause.
. We note that a plurality of the Supreme Court held that fundamental rights are infringed by classifications restricting access to the ballot in only two types of cases: where classifications are based on wealth,
see Bullock v. Carter,
. As Arizona explains at pages 31-32 of its Opening Brief:
A not insubstantial number of persons may contribute or pledge money to Joyner’s campaign not because they think he will win, but because they think he may lose.... These are the persons whose affairs can be affected, sometimes significantly, by Board of Supervisors’ actions, as on zoning, for instance. These persons may contribute or pledge to Joyner’s campaign to assure that Joyner will view them with favor (or at least bear them no animus) when they ... may be affected by Board of Supervisors’ actions. This incentive to give to Joyner’s campaign will be nowhere near as strong if Joyner were in the last year of his office’s term. He would then not have as much time to use his incumbent office after his loss at the primary or general election to bestow as many benefits or impose as much ill effect upon the person solicited. While the Arizona provision, with its last year’s exception, does not entirely eliminate opportunities for abuse of office, it tends substantially to reduce their number.
. The
Clements v. Fashing
Court justified the Texas provisions at issue in that case in strikingly similar terms to Arizona’s reasoning here.
. We do not believe that Arizona could achieve these interests by means of a “less restrictive alternative.” Using a recall initiative or voting the errant official out of office would be a clumsy and often ineffective means of promoting the state interests. Having state officials take a leave of absence during a campaign, see
Alex v. County of Los Angeles,
