OPINION
Plaintiffs challenge an Ohio election statute which requires independent congres *370 sional candidates to file a statement of candidacy and nominating petition with a minimum number of signatures by the day before the primary election. The district court denied injunctive relief and granted Defendants’ motions to dismiss. Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the district court erred because Ohio’s early filing deadline violates their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
Ohio law requires an individual interested in becoming an independent congressional candidate in the general election to file both a statement of candidacy and a nominating petition by 4:00 p.m. on the day 'before the primary election immediately preceding the general election at which the candidacy is to be voted on by the voters. Ohio Rev.Code § 3513.257. In years in which there is no presidential election, primaries are held on the Tuesday of the first full week of May. However, in presidential election years, primaries are held on the Tuesday of the first full week of March. Id. § 3501.01. A nominating petition must contain a number of signatures equal to at least one percent of the electors in the individual’s congressional district. Id. § 3213.257(C). On March 1, 2004, the day before the 2004 primary, David Lawrence attempted to file a statement of candidacy for the First Congressional District of Ohio with the Hamilton County Board of Elections (“Board”). • The Board declined to receive his statement because he failed to include the requisite nominating petition.
On June 4, 2004, Lawrence presented his nominating petition to the Board containing a sufficient number of signatures. However, the Board rejected the petition because it was untimely filed. On June 14, 2004, Lawrence and Yifat Shilo, a voter in the First Congressional District who wished to vote for Lawrence, filed a complaint in federal district court seeking an injunction requiring the Board to place Lawrence on the November ballot and permanently enjoining enforcement of Ohio’s early filing deadline. The district court' held a hearing and issued an order denying Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary and a permanent injunction. A short time later the trial court summarily granted Defendants’ motions to dismiss the complaint relying on the analysis in its order resolving the motion for injunctive relief. Plaintiffs timely appealed both the denial of injunctive relief and the granting of Defendants’ motions to dismiss.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Mootness
Defendants assert that the court of appeals should affirm the district court’s dismissal of the complaint because the controversy is ñow moot since the 2004 election has already taken place. When a case becomes moot pending appeal, “it is the duty of the appellate court to set aside the decree below.”
U.S. Dep’t of Treasury v. Galioto,
“A case is moot when the issues presented are no longer ‘live’ or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.”
Los Angeles County v. Davis,
Neither party disputes that the occurrence of the 2004 election made it impossible for the courts to grant the preliminary injunctive relief Plaintiffs sought of placing Lawrence’s name on the 2004 ballot. However, Plaintiffs contend that the court should still address their request to permanently enjoin the application of Ohio’s early filing deadline because the injury they alleged is capable of repetition, yet evading review. Plaintiffs have easily met their burden of establishing the first prong. Challenges to election laws are one of the quintessential categories of cases which usually fit this prong because litigation has only a few months before the remedy sought is rendered impossible by the occurrence of the relevant election.
See Morse v. Republican Party of Va.,
The issue of whether Plaintiffs have established the second prong of the capable of repetition yet evading review exception is more complex because there is no evidence in the record addressing whether Lawrence plans to run for office or Shilo plans to vote for an independent candidate in a future election. The Supreme Court has stated that the purpose of the second prong is to determine “whether the controversy was
capable
of repetition and not ... whether the claimant had demonstrated that a recurrence of the dispute was more probable than not.”
Honig v. Doe,
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Even if the court could not reasonably expect that the controversy would recur with respect to Lawrence or Shilo, the fact that the controversy almost invariably will recur with respect to some future potential candidate or voter in Ohio is sufficient to meet the second prong because it is somewhat relaxed in election cases. Courts have applied the capable of repetition yet evading review exception to hear challenges to election laws even when the nature of the law made it clear that the plaintiff would not suffer the same harm in the future.
See Rosario v. Rockefeller,
B. Constitutionality of Ohio’s Early Filing Deadline
Plaintiffs appeal both the district court’s denial of its motion for preliminary and permanent injunctions and the granting of Defendants’ motions to dismiss. The core issue in both of these determinations is whether Ohio’s early filing deadline is constitutional as a matter of law. 1 Therefore, this issue will be analyzed first separately, before assessing the ultimate propriety of each of the district court’s orders.
In Ohio an independent candidate will not appear on the ballot unless he or she meets the requirements of the early filing deadline.
See
Ohio Rev.Code § 3513.257. The Supreme Court has observed that such election laws “place burdens on two different, although overlapping, kinds of rights-the right of individuals to associate for the advancement of political beliefs, and the right of qualified voters, regardless of their political persuasion, to cast their votes effectively.”
Williams v. Rhodes,
There is no bright-line test to determine when a state oversteps its bounds and impermissibly infringes on the constitutional rights of voters.
Storer v. Brown,
Plaintiffs assert that Ohio’s filing deadline for independent congressional candidates imposes a severe burden on their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The primary support they offer for this statement is a citation to expert testimony that early filing deadlines place significant burdens on independent candidates because independents often do not decide to run until after the deadline has passed. Though an earlier deadline does impose more of a burden than a later deadline, the Supreme Court has held that little weight is given to “the interest the candidate and his supporters may have in making a late rather than an early decision to seek independent ballot status.”
Storer,
Plaintiffs point out that in the Anderson case the Supreme Court found that an Ohio law requiring independent presidential candidates to file in March imposed a significant burden on independents and those inclined to vote for them. However, Plaintiffs gloss over a vital distinction. The early deadline discussed in Anderson imposed such a significant burden because it put independent candidates at a disadvantage vis-a-vis the major parties’ nominees who were not named until nearly five months later. In this case, congressional candidates who seek a place on the ballot through the primary process must file a declaration of candidacy sixty days before the primary election. Ohio Rev.Code § 3513.05. Consequently, all candidates seeking a place on the ballot in November must engage in substantial campaign work before the early primary in order to obtain a space on the ballot. Those running in a primary must file sixty days before the primary, campaign, and win their party’s primary while independent candidates must spend the time before the primary acquiring the requisite number of signatures and then file their petition by the day before the primary. All candidates are burdened by the fact that Ohio chooses to conduct its primary at an early date, but there is no particular group which feels the additional burden of being placed at a disadvantage with respect to the rest of the field. The district court correctly concluded that this difference between this case and the Anderson case is significant. Here the burden imposed by Ohio’s early deadline is nondiscriminatory.
There is no reason for this Court to conclude that the burden Ohio has placed on all candidates to engage in significant campaign efforts prior to March in order to obtain a place on the ballot is severe or inherently unreasonable. The filing deadline for independent candidates is not so early that a diligent candidate cannot meet the requirement. Furthermore, the burden on independent candidates to file the day before the primary is reasonable because it prevents such candidates from
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being able to make a decision to run for office after learning which candidates will be representing the major parties.
2
Although Plaintiffs urge that independents not only should, but must, have this advantage, there is nothing in the case law which suggests that a state is required to give independent candidates the advantage of jumping into a race in response to late-breaking events which impact the political landscape when major parties do not have the same flexibility.
See Munro v. Socialist Workers Party,
One of the reasons the
Anderson
court found that the early filing deadline imposed a severe burden on independent presidential candidates was that they had to make a decision based on a history that ended in March while the major parties were able to take into account the development of events for another five months.
Anderson,
The only way for Ohio to move its filing deadline for independent candidates closer to November without creating the inequity of allowing independent candidates to jump into the race after the major party candidates have been determined would be to move the primary to a later date. The court would be overstepping its bounds to hold that either Ohio’s decision to hold its primary at a relatively early date in presidential election years, or its decision to require all potential candidates to take action prior to that date in order to gain a place on the November ballot, are so unreasonable that strict scrutiny is necessary. When considering Ohio’s election scheme as a whole, the early filing deadline is both reasonable and nondiscriminatory and, therefore, within Ohio’s constitutional authority to regulate elections as long as it advances an important state regulatory interest.
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The district court observed that the Supreme Court has acknowledged a state’s strong interest in maintaining the stability of its political system and ensuring that candidates have a modicum of support before putting their name on the ballot. Although there are clearly limits, a wide range of methods of requiring potential candidates to show support have been upheld as legitimate means to achieve this important state interest.
See Munro,
Plaintiffs’ arguments that there are no legitimate state interests which justify such an early deadline are unpersuasive. Plaintiffs argue that placing the filing deadline so many months before the November election is not necessary. Though there is case law to support this proposition, it comes from cases in which strict scrutiny was applied and the state was, therefore, obligated to demonstrate that there was no less restrictive means by which it could achieve its important interest.
See New Alliance Party,
All of Plaintiffs’ arguments that Ohio’s early filing deadline violates their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights fail. The filing deadline for independent congressional candidates set forth in Ohio Revised Code Section 3513.257 is constitutional as a matter of law. The district court properly denied injunctive relief and dismissed the suit. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although neither the district court nor any of the parties have addressed whether Plaintiffs' claim is a facial challenge or an as-applied challenge, Plaintiffs' request that application of Ohio's early filing deadline be permanently enjoined demonstrates that it is asserting that the deadline is unconstitutional on its face.
. The cases Plaintiffs cite for the proposition that early filing deadlines impose a severe burden all deal with cases in which the deadline for independents (or minor parties) to file was substantially in advance of the primary election. See
Anderson,
