Lead Opinion
In this appeal, we are asked to rule upon the constitutionality of a Louisiana statute and canon of judicial ethics which have the effect of requiring a judge to resign his seat on the bench in order to run for elective non-judicial office. The issue is one which implicates important interests in political participation and equally important ones in the impartial administration of justice. Upon full consideration of the very difficult and perplexing questions presented, we conclude that the challenged statute and canon are constitutional and, therefore, reverse the district court.
Plaintiff Morial is a judge of the Court of Appeal, Fourth Circuit, State of Louisiana. Judge Morial was interested in becoming a non-party candidate for the office of the Mayor of New Orleans. By letter of October 16,1976, he requested that the Supreme Court of Louisiana grant him a leave of absence, without pay, from his judicial duties in order that he might conduct a campaign for the mayoralty. Morial’s request was made in view of Canon 7(A)(3) of the Louisiana Code of Judicial Ethics which provides:
A judge should resign his office when he becomes a candidate either in a party primary or in a general election for a non-judicial office, except that he may continue to hold his judicial office while being a candidate for election to or serving as a delegate in a state constitutional convention, if he is otherwise permitted by law to do so.1
The Louisiana Supreme Court unanimously denied Morial’s request for a leave of absence. He then addressed a letter to that court’s Committee on Judicial Ethics requesting an advisory opinion on the permissibility of engaging in activities to solicit support for his contemplated campaign.
Judge Morial, joined by thirteen citizen-voters who indicated their support for his candidacy, then brought suit in federal district court seeking a declaration that Canon 7(A)(3) was unconstitutional and enjoining its enforcement. Named as defendants were the Judiciary Commission of the State of Louisiana, its members, the Louisiana Supreme Court, and its members. The plaintiffs also sought a declaration that Louisiana R.S. 42:39, which prohibits any judge, save a justice of the peace, from qualifying for election to any non-judicial office unless he had resigned not less than twenty-four hours prior to the qualifying date, La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 42:39 (Pocket Part 1977), was unconstitutional and prayed for an injunction against its enforcement. The Governor, Attorney General and Secretary of State of Louisiana in their individual and official capacities were named as defendants in view of their obligation to enforce the “resign-to-run” statute.
The district court granted the plaintiffs’ prayer for relief. Judge Cassibry, in a scholarly and penetrating opinion,
Defendants urge that the district court should have dismissed this suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. They assert that any threat to the plaintiffs’ interests was purely hypothetical and speculative when the complaint was filed and thus did not give rise to a justiciable case or controversy. We cannot agree. The court’s power to adjudicate a case arising under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, pursuant to jurisdiction conferred by 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3) and 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201-2202, is not conditioned upon a plaintiff’s actually proceeding to violate some assertedly unconstitutional state law prior to bringing suit in federal court. Pre-conduct challenges to the validity of laws burdening first amendment rights are among the essential bulwarks of a system of free expression. See Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
Defendants also urge that principles of comity and federalism bar a federal court from entertaining a claim by a member of a state’s judiciary regarding a question of judicial administration. Younger principles, even were we to assume them applicable to disciplinary proceedings against a judge, see generally, Juidice v. Vail,
I. THE FIRST AMENDMENT CLAIMS
In judging the constitutional validity of Louisiana’s rule that judges resign their offices prior to becoming candidates for non-judicial office, this court must be guided by the approach adopted by the Supreme Court in U. S. Civil Service Comm’n v. National Ass’n of Letter Carriers,
Correct extrapolation of the Letter Carriers and Broadrick decisions requires careful attention to the Court’s analysis. Some lower courts have characterized these cases as employing a “balancing test.” Alderman v. Philadelphia Housing Authority,
The Court in Letter Carriers did not require that the means-end fit be perfect. Rather, it held that Congress could constitutionally restrict political activity by subordinate employees in order to prevent coercion by their superiors; the legislature did not have to rely upon a prohibition against coercion alone, a less restrictive and arguably effective alternative to the measure enacted. Id. at 566-67,
The Supreme Court’s utilization of different standards of scrutiny in cases involving the first amendment rights of public employees, compare Letter Carriers, supra with Elrod v. Burns, supra and Buckley v. Valeo, supra, can be reconciled only by concluding that the requisite closeness of the means-end relation must be determined on a case-by-case basis. The standard to be applied in any case is a function of the severity of impairment of first amendment interests. As the burden comes closer to impairing core first amendment values, e. g. the right to hold particular political views, Elrod v. Burns, supra,
Our analysis of the impact of the Louisiana rule upon the first amendment interests of the plaintiffs convinces us that the reasonable necessity standard extracted from Letter Carriers is appropriate in this case. We begin that analysis by detailing the affected interests, noting that the arithmetic of constitutional adjudication of restrictions upon candidacy requires the court to sum the affected interests of plaintiff Morial and the plaintiffs who would support him but for the canon’s bar. Bullock v. Carter,
Judge Morial’s interest in being free to run for Mayor while retaining his seat on the bench is substantial. The canon and statute heavily burden a decision to become an active candidate for non-judicial office by forcing a judge to resign a remunerative position of considerable prestige and power merely in order to run. Relegating one’s robes to the closet is a heavy price to pay for tossing one’s hat in the ring.
This burden, moreover, weighs upon the exercise of an important, if not constitutionally “fundamental,” right. Candidacy for office is one of the ultimate forms of political expression in our society. The citizen deeply committed to the triumph of an idea or program can equally be the citizen devoted to the representation of that idea or the implementation of that program. See Mancuso v. Taft, supra.
The first amendment interest of Judge Morial which the Louisiana rules leave unaffected must also be considered, however, in order to judge the substantiality of the impairment. Louisiana’s resign-to-run requirement does not burden the plaintiff’s right to vote for the candidate of his choice or to make statements regarding his private opinions on public issues outside a campaign context; nor does it penalize his belief in any particular idea. These are core first amendment values. See U. S. Civil Service Comm’n v. Nat’l Ass’n of Letter Carriers,
The impact of the resign-to-run requirement upon voters is even less substantial. Where candidacy restrictions have been invalidated on constitutional grounds the ef-
The impairment of the plaintiffs’ interests in free expression and political association stemming from enforcement of the resignation rule is thus not sufficiently grievous to require the strictest constitutional scrutiny. U. S. Civil Service Comm’n v. Nat’l Ass’n of Letter Carriers,
B. The State’s Interests and Their Relation to the Resign-to-Run Rule
Having determined that Louisiana’s resign-to-run rule must meet the test of reasonable necessity, we now turn to the articulation of the state’s interests to see whether the rule is reasonably necessary to effectuate those interests. Louisiana vigorously defends the resignation requirement as a measure designed to insure the actual and perceived integrity of state judges. The specific evils targeted are three. First, the state wishes to prevent abuse of the judicial office by a judge-candidate during the course of the campaign. The state also wishes to prevent abuse of the judicial office by judges who have lost their electoral bids and returned to the bench. Finally, Louisiana asserts an interest in eliminating even the appearance of impropriety by judges both during and after the campaign.
That these are interests grave and honorable, none can doubt. The government has at least as great an interest in assuring the impartiality of judicial administration of the laws as in assuring the impartiality of bureaucratic administration of the laws. See U. S. Civil Service Comm’n v. Nat’l Ass’n of Letter Carriers,
Even clearer is the reasonable necessity of the resignation requirement to the prevention of post-campaign abuse or its appearance. It is apparent that the prevention of post-campaign abuse calls for measures which are effective in the post-campaign period. A leave of absence for the duration of the campaign wholly fails to meet this requirement of post-campaign effectiveness; the state cannot be constitutionally faulted for failing to provide Judge Morial with a leave of absence. Moreover, the standard of reasonable necessity does not require the state to place entire reliance upon post-campaign measures such as disciplinary proceedings against judges who used their offices improperly or strict rules of recusal, both of which are designed to target perfectly those situations where the dangers of abuse or its appearance are greatest. As we have shown, the “reasonable necessity” test permits a degree of prophylaxis, particularly where the state has an interest in avoiding the appearance of impropriety. U. S. Civil Service Comm’n v. Nat’l Ass’n of Letter Carriers,
The plaintiffs couch their complaint in the language of the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment as well as in the language of the first. While it is true that a first amendment claim typically takes the form of an assertion that the government cannot deprive the plaintiff of some freedom and an equal protection claim takes the form of an assertion that the government may not single out the class of which the plaintiff is a member for deprivation, it is equally true that every first amendment claim can be transformed into an equal protection claim merely by focusing upon the classification that every legislative scheme embodies. It is, therefore, generally appropriate to employ the same standard of scrutiny to the derivative equal protection claim as would be applied to the underlying claim of a substantive deprivation.
The nub of the equal protection problem in the present case is that judges running for election to non-judicial office are singled out. The state makes two classifications. First, any judge may run for judicial office without resigning his seat on the bench. A classification is thus established between judges who wish to run for judicial office and judges who wish to run for nonjudicial office. Moreover, anyone other than a judge may run for non-judicial office without resigning the office he holds at the time he announced his candidacy. A second classification is thus established between judges and all other office holders. The constitutional problem is to determine whether these classifications are reasonably necessary to the vindication of Louisiana’s interest in the integrity of its elected judiciary.
The district court made formal findings of fact on the conduct of judicial and nonjudicial elections in Louisiana. The most important of these findings were that the conduct of political campaigns for the judicial and non-judicial offices were similar and that, when judges run for re-election or election to another judicial office, they “raise money, engage in political oratory, make campaign promises, appeal to various political and racial groups, advertise in the media, and run under political party labels in the same way as do other candidates running for non-judicial office.’’ (Finding of Fact 21). Newspaper headlines and campaign oratory describe the political affiliations and ideologies of candidates for judicial office. The district court concluded that “viewed against the reality of the full involvement in politics, then there is no rational basis for thus distinguishing between Judges who run for reelection or for a higher judicial office and Judges who run for nonjudicial office.” (Finding of Fact 31).
Because the judicial office is different in key respects from other offices, the state may regulate its judges with the differences in mind. For example the contours of the judicial function make inappropriate the same kind of particularized pledges of conduct in office that are the very stuff of campaigns for most non-judicial offices. A candidate for the mayoralty can and often should announce his determination to effect some program, to reach a particular result on some question of city policy, or to advance the interests of a particular group. It is expected that his decisions in office may be predetermined by campaign commitment. Not so the candidate for judicial office. He cannot, consistent with the proper exercise of his judicial powers, bind himself to decide particular cases in order to achieve a given programmatic result.
As one safeguard of the special character of the judicial function, Louisiana’s Code of Judicial Conduct bars candidates for judicial office from making “pledges or promises of conduct in office other than the faithful and impartial performance of the duties of the office;” La.Code of Judicial Conduct Canon No. 7(B)(c).
This analysis applies equally to the differential treatment of judges and other office holders. A judge who fails in his bid for a
Nothing in the case law convinces us that this conclusion is incorrect. In fact, such indications as are found reinforce the validity of our analysis. In Broadrick, the Supreme Court summarily disposed of the employees’ equal protection claim that the Oklahoma statute impermissibly singled out classified civil service employees for restrictions on partisan political expression. The Court stated,
In any event, the legislature must have some leeway in determining which of its employment positions require restrictions on partisan political activities and which may be left unregulated. See McGowan v. Maryland,366 U.S. 420 ,81 S.Ct. 1101 ,6 L.Ed.2d 393 (1961). And a State can hardly be faulted for attempting to limit the positions upon which such restrictions are placed.
On principle and precedent, we find the Louisiana canon and statute constitutional. Though the questions presented here are difficult ones, we are confident of the validity of our conclusions.
Conclusion
The interests of public employees in free expression and political association are unquestionably entitled to the protection of the first and fourteenth amendments. Mt. Healthy City School Dist. v. Doyle,
REVERSED.
APPENDIX I
The following states have adopted rules of judicial conduct substantially identical to Louisiana’s Canon 7(A)(3). Unless otherwise indicated, the canon is numbered 7(A)(3) in each code.
States marked with an asterisk have been identified by the American Judicature Society as having have adopted Codes of Judicial Conduct based on the A.B.A. Code or its predecessor.
ALABAMA *
ALASKA Alaska Stat., Rules of Court Procedure and Administration
ARIZONA 17A Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann., Sup.Ct.R. 45 (Pocket Part 1977)
COLORADO 7 Colo.Rev.Stat., Code of Judicial Conduct (1973)
CONNECTICUT Kaye, Mollier, 1 Conn.Prac., Code of Judicial Conduct (Pocket Part 1977)
DELAWARE 16 Del.Code Ann., Del. Judge’s Code of Judicial Conduct (1975)
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
FLORIDA Fla.Rules of Court, Code of Judicial Conduct (1975)
GEORGIA 9A Ga.Code Ann. § 24-3642 (1976); see 231 Ga. A1-A29; (1973);
HAWAII *
IDAHO *
ILLINOIS *
INDIANA *
IOWA 40 Iowa Code Ann. § 610 App. Code of Judicial Conduct (Rule 119)
KANSAS 7 Kan.Stat.Ann. § 20-175, Sup.Ct.R. 601 (1974)
MARYLAND 9C Md.Code Ann., Rule 1231 (1977)
MICHIGAN Mich. Court Rules, Code of Judicial Conduct (1977)
MINNESOTA Minn. Rules of Court, Code of Judicial Conduct (1977)
MISSOURI Mo. Rules of Court, Rule 2, (1977)
NEBRASKA *
NEVADA 1 Nev.Rev.Stat., Sup.Ct.R. 235 (1977)
NEW JERSEY Rules Governing the Courts of N.J., Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 7(A)(2) (1977)
NEW MEXICO 4 N.M.Stat.Ann. § 16-11 (Pocket Part 1975)
NEW YORK 29 N.Y. [Jud.App.] Law (McKinney), Code of Judicial Conduct (1975)
NORTH DAKOTA *
OHIO Rules Governing the Courts of Ohio, Code of Judicial Conduct (1977)
OKLAHOMA Okla. Court Rules & Proc., Code of Judicial Conduct (1976)
OREGON *
PENNSYLVANIA Pa. Rules of Court, Code of Judicial Conduct (1977)
RHODE ISLAND 2B R.I.Gen.L., Canons of Judicial Ethics, Canon 27 (1976)
SOUTH DAKOTA 7 S.D. Compiled Laws Ann. § 16-2-App. (Pocket Part 1977)
TENNESSEE 1 Tenn.Code Ann., Sup.Ct.R. 43 (Supp.1976)
TEXAS 1A Tex.Rev.Liv.Stat.Ann. Title 14, App. B (Vernon) (Pocket Part 1976)
UTAH*
VERMONT Vt.Stat.Ann. § 12 App. VIII, A.0.10 (Pocket Part 1977)
VIRGINIA *
WEST VIRGINIA 1 W.Va.Code App., Code of Judicial Conduct (Pocket Part 1977)
WISCONSIN Wis.Stat.Ann. § 256 App., Code of Judicial Conduct, Rule 3 (West) (1971)
* Source: Am. Judicature Soc’y, Resource Materials for 5th National Conference of Judicial Disciplinary Commissions, Table No. 5 (1976).
Notes
. La.Code of Judicial Conduct Canon No. 7(A)(3) (1975). The Louisiana canon is identical to that recommended by the American Bar Association, see ABA Code of Judicial Ethics Canon No. 7(A)(3) (1973), and a similar provision is in force in many states. Appendix I contains a list of such states.
The analogous federal code contains a similar prohibition. Code of Judicial Conduct for United States Judges Canon No. 7(A)(2) (1973).
. The Committee is established and given the authority to render advisory opinions by the Code itself. La.Code of Judicial Ethics Committee on Judicial Conduct (1975).
. Although oral argument in this case was heard by a three-judge panel of this court, on November 3, 1977 it was determined to decide this case en banc. In the order granting defendants’ motion for en banc consideration, the en banc court, Judge Fay dissenting, voted to stay the order of the district court pending further order of this court.
Subsequent to the entry of this order but prior to the election held November 12, plaintiff Morial resigned his judgeship. Just prior to and subsequent to the general election, several candidates in the primary and general elections brought suit in state court challenging Morial’s right to run. The Louisiana intermediate appellate court held, apparently as a matter of
The parties to this suit agree that the case is not moot notwithstanding these events. We concur. Suits challenging the validity of state election laws are classic examples of cases in which the issues are “capable of repetition, yet evading review.” The Supreme Court has decided a number of such cases after the challenged election had already taken place and no request for retrospective relief could be granted. American Party of Texas v. White,
The 1972 election is long over, and no effective relief can be provided to the candidates or voters, but this case is not moot, since the issues properly presented, and their effects on independent candidacies, will persist as the California statutes are applied in future elections. This is, therefore, a case where the controversy is ‘capable of repetition yet evading review.’
Storer v. Brown, supra,
While at one time it seemed that the Storer approach had been cast aside by the Court in Sosna v. Iowa,
. The plaintiffs’ claims under the first and fourteenth amendments present substantially identical issues. Nonetheless, we treat the first amendment claim separately from the equal protection claim in order later to highlight more readily certain aspects of the challenged state rule arising out of Louisiana’s special treatment of judges seeking election to non-judicial office.
. We recognize, of course, that the Supreme Court has not articulated the applicable test in precisely this way. Nonetheless, the Court’s reasoning and its holdings in cases closely analogous to that at bar support the appropriateness of a variable standard of scrutiny dependent upon the character and substantiality of the impairment of first amendment interests.
In Elrod v. Burns, supra, the Court invalidated an Illinois system of patronage dismissals. The plurality insisted that the state employ the least intrusive means of achieving its objective.
. Plaintiffs argue that Louisiana has largely disavowed these interests in insulating judges from political influence by providing for an elected judiciary. In view of this disavowal,
This argument raises questions that are best considered in the context of the equal protection analysis of the Louisiana rule. In effect, plaintiffs attack the permissibility of requiring judges who wish to run for non-judicial office to resign while permitting those who wish to run for judicial office to retain their seats. Framed in this manner, the thrust of plaintiff’s argument is directed at the legislative classification, the traditional focal point of equal protection analysis. See Part II, infra.
We pause, nonetheless, to reject the implied premise of the plaintiffs’ argument, i. e., that unless the state exercises the full extent of its power to prevent some evil, the state’s interest in preventing that evil cannot be considered constitutionally weighty. To take an obvious example, the Supreme Court in Buckley v. Va-leo recognized that the government’s interest in preventing undue influence upon elected officials was sufficiently important to justify the regulation of campaign contributions,
. See Appendix I.
The Louisiana Code of Judicial Conduct was adopted by the Louisiana Supreme Court pursuant to its rule-making authority under the most recent version of the Louisiana constitution. La.Const. art. V, § 5. The fact that judges adopted a restriction upon judges may also be of constitutional significance. See Ely, The Constitutionality of Reverse Discrimination, 41 U.Chi.L.Rev. 723, 734-36 (1974).
. Our conclusion on this issue does not disregard the fact that Judge Morial did not intend to run as a party representative. As the plaintiffs correctly point out, much of the language in Letter Carriers pointedly limited the Court’s holding to an adjudication of the validity of prohibitions on partisan political activity.
. Of course, if the legislative scheme embodies a classification which is itself constitutionally suspect, strict constitutional scrutiny is required without regard to the nature of underlying deprivation. See, e. g., Graham v. Richardson, 403 U.S. 365, 371-73,
. The district court recognized that this sketch represents accurately the judicial landscape of Louisiana notwithstanding the regularity of hotly contested judicial elections. Judge Cassibry wrote, “None of these findings should be construed as accusing any State Judge of being politically motivated in any decision he might render. Without exception, I am convinced that they decide their cases freely and impartially based on the law and evidence.” (Finding of Fact 30).
. The district court made no finding explicitly directed to the question of whether this canon is ordinarily observed in the conduct of campaigns for judicial office in Louisiana. Our own review of the exhibits consisting of newspaper articles and advertisements by candidates for judicial office revealed that most such articles and advertisements confined themselves to statements of the educational and professional attainments of the candidates.
. It might be argued that Louisiana’s interest in protecting the real and apparent integrity of its sitting judges is threatened as much by permitting politically involved persons to run for judicial office as it would be by allowing judges who became politically involved during the course of a campaign for non-judicial office to return to the bench after suffering electoral defeat. A mayor who runs for the judiciary and wins may carry commitments to the bench at least as strong as a judge who runs for the mayoralty and loses. A rule which permits the first threat to become actual while preventing the second might seem irrational.
The argument proves too much. As just stated, it would apply equally to elective and appointive judiciaries. A mayor who is appointed to a judgeship has had the same experience prior to the campaign as the mayor who is elected to a judgeship. Since the influences and commitments to which this argument is addressed are those incurred outside the judicial campaign context, the only way for the state to vindicate its interest would be to bar anyone with prior political exposure from judicial office, a rule as absurd as it is constitutionally suspect.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
With the greatest respect for the en banc decision, I feel compelled to dissent. Seldom has this Court been presented with issues more complex and important than the ones before us today. In his usual scholarly fashion, Judge Goldberg has astutely illustrated that the law which we are to apply is in a state of flux, and that reconciling the plethora of cases in this field is near to impossible. For that reason alone, it is difficult for me to quarrel with whether or not the tests which he proposes should govern the issues before us. A review of the relevant case law has brought to my attention no better way to handle these issues.
I interpret the Court’s First Amendment test to be that state restriction on political activities of public employees (where such activities contain substantial nonspeech elements) is constitutionally permissible if the state has a compelling interest, and the challenged restriction is reasonably necessary to further that compelling interest. Majority opinion p. 299 supra. The majority then proceeds to adopt the same standard of review for its equal protection analysis. Majority opinion p. 303 supra.
My problem with this case revolves around the equal protection issues — and my concern is not with the test which the majority adopts, but rather in the application of this test. Judge Goldberg correctly points out that the equal protection problem in the present case is that judges running for election to non-judicial office are singled out. The state makes two classifications. First, any judge may run for judicial office without resigning his seat on the bench. A classification is thus established between judges who wish to run for judicial office and judges who wish to run for non-judicial office. Moreover, anyone other than a judge may run for non-judicial office without resigning the office he holds at the time he announced his candidacy and quali
These classifications are troublesome. There appears to me to exist no legitimate reason to distinguish between judges who run for judicial office and judges who run for non-judicial office. Judge Cassibry in his findings of facts,
No differences have been shown to exist between the conduct of a political campaign for a judicial office and the conduct of a political campaign for a nonjudicial office, and the evidence in the record supports the contention that such campaigns are conducted in the same ways.
What Judge Cassibry’s finding means is that since judicial and non-judicial elections are conducted in the same manner, a judge who runs for any other judicial office is subjected» to the same potential corrupting influences as would be a judge who runs for any non-judicial office. Why then is it reasonably necessary to treat differently judges who are candidates for non-judicial office? How could members of the legal profession, political parties, vested interest groups and all others interested in elected positions fail to align themselves with one candidate or another in a contest for a judicial office? It is not difficult to imagine a situation with two or more judges seeking higher positions while serving in a judicial capacity. Surely at least one will lose. The record shows no basis for any less nor any more concern based upon such classification. And of course in any such race there could well be one or more non-judicial office holders likewise appealing to the same “power-groups.” Certainly if judicial integrity is our concern, there is no legitimate basis to exclude judges who run for judicial office.
While we are not dealing with a judge running for a judicial office, the classification issue is squarely before us. What justification is there for the total lack of equal concern by the Louisiana legislature when non-judicial office holders seek non-judicial offices? The majority argues most persuasively the need for “honest judges,” Is there less need for “honest mayors”? Is there less need for “honest governors”? The list is endless and the answer obvious. The legal question presented is not so easily answered.
The majority rests its opinion upon a state concern and reasonably necessary restrictions — not the unique aspects of judicial elections for indeed the experienced trial judge found there are none. I would agree that judicial responsibilities are unique and suggest they are also totally incompatible with the elective process. Certainly the federal appointive process and widespread state use of “merit retention” programs
Resign to run laws do have merit and can be upheld.
Recognizing this case as a difficult one and my voice as a lonely one, I, nevertheless, feel obliged to dissent. Classifications have been set up by the Louisiana statute and Canon which make little sense if the state of Louisiana is sincere about preserving the integrity of its judiciary. If, however, the state is not sincere in this belief, then a reevaluation of the First Amendment claim would be warranted since restrictions on First Amendment rights cannot be justified by a state interest that is less than compelling. Finding the present classifications violative of the Fourteenth Amendment, I would affirm the action of the trial court.
. The Governor of Louisiana could hypothetically run for any other elected position while holding office.
. States differ in whether judges are first appointed and then run on their record (Missouri plan), to those having nominating commissions (such as those instigated by President Carter), to those with screening panels which select a list of qualified candidates from which the Governor makes his appointments (Florida).
. A three judge panel has upheld those portions of Florida’s resign to run law which are relevant to this case. See Stack v. Adams,
. I concur in those portions of the Court’s en banc opinion which deal with the questions of jurisdiction and mootness.
