This case challenges the constitutionality of Colorado Revised Statutes § 1 — 4—801(l)(i) (1980) which provides that a person seeking elective office as an unaffiliated candidate must be registered in Colorado as an unaffiliated voter for at least one year before filing a nomination petition. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court concluded the statute imposed no constitutionally impermissible burden and granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant, Secretary of State Natalie Meyer.
Thournir
v.
Meyer,
The facts are undisputed. Ms. Thournir moved to Colorado from California in February 1981, but she did not register as an unaffiliated voter until July 14, 1982. On August 19, 1982, she filed nominating petitions with the State to run as an unaffiliated candidate for Congress. Despite the designation of her candidacy, Ms. Thournir had been a member of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) in California since 1976, but Colorado election laws in existence at the time would permit voters to register only as a “Democrat,” a “Republican,” or as “Unaffiliated.” 2 After litigation initiated by the Secretary in state court resulted in Ms. Thournir’s removal from the ballot because of her failure to meet the qualifications of Colo.Rev.Stat. § l-4-801(l)(i), Ms. Thournir filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenging the statute. 3 Subsequent actions in state court involving other candidates and changes in the Secretary’s rules have significantly moderated the effect of the statute on independent candidates in ways not germane here; therefore, we approach this case solely on the basis of how the statute affects a person in the precise status of Msi Thournir at the time she sought to run as an unaffiliated candidate.
We review
de novo
a district court’s decision on a motion for summary judgment,
Osgood v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The principal question presented for our consideration is whether Colo.Rev.Stat. § 1 — 4—801(l)(i) places a constitutionally impermissible burden upon unaffiliated candidates which effectively excludes them from the election process.
See Anderson v. Celebrezze,
*410 The right asserted here by Ms. Thournir appears twofold. She advocates her individual right to seek office, but she also asserts the associational rights of the members of the Socialist Workers Party to advocate their political beliefs through the aegis of her candidacy. We shall consider the issues separately.
ASSOCIATIONAL RIGHTS
Colorado did not recognize party affiliation other than Democrat and Republican in 1982,
Thournir v. Meyer,
Moreover, this generic sameness resulted in the elimination or denial of the existence of any political party other than Democrat and Republican. Thus, when Ms. Thournir submitted herself in candidacy for Congress, she could not carry the banner of the Socialist Workers Party. Ms. Thournir and her trial counsel recognized this peculiarity of then existent Colorado law in district court proceedings. In his recitation of undisputed facts during an early hearing, counsel stated: “[Ms. Thournir] registered to vote in early July 1982, and she registered as unaffiliated as the Socialist Workers Party is not a recognized party within the State of Colorado.” (R. Vol. I, doc. 4, at 26). In her affidavit for summary judgment, Ms. Thournir stated: “Affi-ant registered in the City and County of Denver as an unaffiliated voter. (While Affiant was in fact a member of the SWP, Affiant was not allowed to register as such because of other then-existing Colorado Election Code provisions prohibiting registration as anything except ‘Democrat’, ‘Republican’, or ‘Unaffiliated’).” • Id., at 29-30. Indeed, as a purely factual matter, there is nothing in the record to suggest Ms. Thour-nir actually sought or was to appear on the ballot as a candidate of the Socialist Workers Party, notwithstanding her own ideology and claim of party membership.
We therefore cannot accept Ms. Thour-nir’s thesis that her putative candidacy represented a distinct political body of common interest which was denied an opportunity to voice its views because she was refused a place on the ballot. Instead, we must view Ms. Thournir’s case as we would that of a person who maintained no identifiable political affiliation and who simply sought an opportunity to stand for public office.
Indeed, when questioned during oral argument, her counsel admitted the community of interest represented by her candidacy had to have been all of Colorado’s unaffiliated voters. Thus, despite the political views and the interests she shared with people who claimed membership in the SWP, those views and interests were substantially diluted within the whole of the diverse views and interests of persons claiming no affiliation with the major political parties. Indeed, the peculiar Colorado law created the unique situation in which “the rights of voters and the rights of candidates do [] lend themselves to neat separation.” 6 Therefore, we must regard Ms. Thournir’s membership in the Socialist Workers Party essentially irrelevant to the question before us. 7
*411 So focused, we find ourselves unable to deal with the broad issues of associational rights that form the nucleus of Ms. Thour-nir’s case. Because of the strictures of then current state law and the fact that Ms. Thournir was truly unaffiliated in the eyes of that law, we believe there is no legal substance to her claim of denial of associational rights. Indeed, we conclude that claim is not justiciable. Given her inability to be the candidate of a particular voter group, we simply cannot assay the associational rights Ms. Thournir attempts to vindicate. While we in no way denigrate the significance of those rights, we find no vehicle in this case that would allow us to reach them.
MS. THOURNIR’S INDIVIDUAL RIGHT
Given our previous analysis, we must now examine the durational registration requirement only as it affects all individual unaffiliated candidates in Colorado regardless of their political ideology. This circumscription of'the right involved diminishes its magnitude in the balancing test required by Rainbow Coalition.
While the right to freely exchange political thought has resulted in a severe limitation of a state’s power to affect associational and voting rights of political parties,
Eu v. San Francisco Cty. Democratic Cent. Comm.,
In
Bullock v. Carter,
So directed, it becomes difficult for us to see how Ms. Thournir’s removal from the ballot had a significant impact in 1982 upon the unaffiliated voters of Colorado.
See City of Akron v. Bell,
Here, the Secretary has established the purpose for Colorado’s durational requirement is to protect the integrity of the party system and to prohibit “frivolous” candidacies. Reasonable restrictions on candidacy to accomplish these ends are sufficient to uphold the statute.
Storer v. Brown,
*412 DUE PROCESS CLAIMS
Ms. Thournir challenges Colo.Rev. Stat. § 1 — 4—801(l)(i) as a
de facto
residency requirement prohibited by
Dunn v. Blumstein,
Ms. Thournir also argues the statute is a “broadly worded trap” because “it fails to discriminate between those who have, and those who have not, been affiliated with their party” for one year. As we have already pointed out, under the 1980 election laws from which this case arose, “party” affiliation other than that of Democrat or Republican was irrelevant to an “unaffiliated” candidate. Consequently, we can find no basis for Ms. Thournir’s argument, as the statute would not have to provide a means to distinguish the duration of membership in a nonrecognized political group.
Ms. Thournir contends the statute creates an impermissible, conclusive presumption that she was not a member of the SWP for the necessary one year. ■ We think that argument falls, once again, upon the statute’s failure to give recognition to the SWP. The irrelevance of her party membership as an unaffiliated candidate moots any suggestion of an issue based upon impermissible conclusions within the statute.
Ms. Thournir finally argues the State of Colorado disenfranchised her and her supporters when, by regulation of the Secretary, she was not permitted to run as a write-in candidate. The Secretary has pointed out, and Ms. Thournir has admitted, this regulation was repealed in 1987; hence this issue is moot.
Having found no factual substance to, or support for, the central issues of this appeal, and having concluded the district court correctly analyzed the remaining issues, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Because the election in which Ms. Thournir sought to run has been held, the Secretary has moved to dismiss this appeal as moot. We disagree.
See Barnard v. Chamberlain,
. This limitation on candidacy has not been raised directly in this proceeding.
.Ms. Thournir did not regain a place on the ballot and did not run in the 1982 election. The ultimate disposition has been delayed because of prior appeals from, and remands to, the district court.
. Ms. Thournir advocates the "strict scrutiny” review we refused to follow in
Rainbow Coalition,
. Current Colorado law is much different. An independent candidate can run under any affiliation other than the name of an official political party. CoIo.Rev.Stat. § l-4-801(l)(a) (Supp. 1989).
.
Bullock v. Carter,
.Ms. Thournir's attack here is dissimilar from the focus of
Baer v. Meyer,
. Ms. Thournir argues the State has no interest in a particular person's choice of party affiliation, and that is correct. We do not, however, believe that the State is under any burden to pass a "less restrictive means” of accomplishing *412 its legitimate purpose as that purpose applies to an individual candidate’s right to seek office.
