Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote the opinion, in which Judge COPENHAVER and Senior Judge MICHAEL joined.
OPINION
Plaintiff-appellee George R. Wood sought to have his name included on the Commonwealth’s November 1994 general election ballot as an independent candidate for the United States Senate. Because Wood had failed to comply with Virginia’s filing deadline for independent candidates,
see
Va.Code Ann. §§ 24.2-506, 24.2-507(1), the Commonwealth refused to place his name on the ballot. Wood thereafter brought this suit, alleging that the Commonwealth’s filing deadline violated his rights and those of his supporters under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution of the United States. The district
court
granted summary judgment in Wood’s favor, holding that the Commonwealth’s filing deadline for independent candidates for the United States Senate does as Wood alleges, violate both the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Because the district court erred in concluding that its disposition of this case is controlled by our decision in
Cromer v. South Carolina,
I.
Virginia law requires that all candidates for public office, with the exception of Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates,
see
Va.Code Ann. § 24.2-543, file declarations of candidacy and nominating petitions signed by one-half of one percent of registered Virginia voters by at least 150 days before the general election,
see
Va.Code Ann. §§ 24.2-506, 507(1), 509, 510(1), 515, which is the day on which political parties must hold their party primaries,
see
Va.Code Ann. § 24.2-515. This 150 day filing deadline applies to independent and party candidates alike. Independent candidates therefore must file their declarations and petitions “by 7:00 p.m. on the second Tuesday in June” before the November election, Va.Code. Ann. § 507(1), which is
In this case, there is no dispute that Wood, an independent candidate for the United States Senate, failed to comply with the Commonwealth’s 150 day filing deadline. Instead, Wood challenges that deadline as unconstitutional under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, arguing that the deadline “unconstitutionally burdens the voting and associational rights of [him] and his supporters.” Appellee’s Br. at l. 2 Before the district court, the Commonwealth advanced administrative convenience as the “sole justification” for the 150 day deadline, see J.A. at 126, contending that the 150 day deadline was “necessary to verify the requisite signatures on the petition and to print the ballots for the general election,” J.A. at 120. The district court, believing that its decision was “controlled” by our opinion in Cromer, rejected the Commonwealth’s rationale, holding that, under Cromer, where a state’s only asserted justification for a deadline is administrative convenience, a deadline longer than ninety days prior to the general election is per se unconstitutional.
II.
A.
In
Anderson,
the Supreme Court fashioned the test that must be applied when determining whether a state’s ballot access laws pass constitutional muster. Specifically, in the course of striking down Ohio’s 229 day filing deadline for independent presidential candidates, which required those candidates to submit statements of candidacy and nominating petitions 229 days before the general election and 75 days before the party primaries,
see
must first consider the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the rights protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments that the - plaintiff seeks to vindicate. It then must identify and evaluate the precise interests put forward by the State as justifications for the burden imposed by its rule. In passing judgment, the [c]ourt must not only determine the legitimacy and strength of each of those interests, it must also consider the extent to which those interests make it necessary to burden the plaintiffs rights. Only after weighing all these factors is the reviewing court in a position to decide whether the challenged provision is unconstitutional.
Id.
at 789,
In applying the
Anderson
standard, it must be determined whether the challenged electoral law places “severe” restrictions on the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of candidates and voters, or, rather, imposes only “reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions” on those rights.
See Burdick v. Takushi
We applied the
Anderson
standard in
Cromer
to invalidate South Carolina’s 200 day filing deadline for independent candidates for the state legislature, which required such candidates to formally declare their candidacy
200
days before the general election and 70 days before the party primaries. There, we first considered the “two most critical burdens on independent candidacies: sheer length of time between the filing date and general election (as much as seven months), and simultaneous filing deadlines for independents and primary candidates.”
Cromer,
Even though South Carolina never asserted an interest in administrative convenience, and even though, absent any consideration of administrative convenience, we thought it clear that South Carolina’s 200 day filing deadline would be unconstitutional, we nonetheless undertook to discuss what we characterized as “the most obvious state interest justifying any pre-election filing deadline[,] ... the need to provide a decent interval for administrative processing and for voter education.” See id. at 825. And we even went so far as to offer our view that
the need to provide a decent interval for administrative processing and for voter education ... surely could[justify a state’s] require[ment] [that] independent candidates ... declare and perfect their candidacies 60 to 90 days before a general election[, but] [b]eyond that period, some other interest would seem to be needed to justify an earlier declaration of independent candidacy.
Id. at 825.
The district court concluded that this last statement in particular “controlled” the case
Cromer is the controlling case. Cromer established] 90 days as the outside limit for filing deadlines absent some explanation additional to “administrative processing and voter education[,]”
J.A. at 127. Accordingly, the court ordered that
[t]he Commonwealth of Virginia is hereby ENJOINED from enforcing the declaration of candidacy and petition filing deadline imposed on independent candidates for the office of United States Senator, as established by Va.Code Ann. § 24.2-507(1). The Commonwealth shall designate a new filing date, not to precede the general election date by more than 90 (ninety) days.
J.A. at 115.
Although the district court can hardly be faulted for relying upon our statements in
Cromer,
it is evident that those statements were
obiter dictum.
In
Cromer,
the only issue before us was the constitutionality of South Carolina’s 200 day filing deadline, and, as noted, the state had not even asserted administrative necessities in support of its filing deadline. Our veiled reference to a possible bright-line rule that a state’s administrative needs could not justify a filing deadline of more than 90 days prior to the general election,
see id.
at 825 (“Beyond [a 60 to 90 day] period, some other interest
would seem to be needed
to justify an earlier declaration of independent candidacy.”) (emphasis added), therefore, was simply dicta, which we now disavow.
See Timmons,
— U.S. at -,
Accordingly, the district court mistakenly, albeit understandably, erred in relying upon the 90-day bright line rule referenced in Cromer to invalidate Virginia’s 150 day filing deadline, and in fading to apply, in the first instance, the balancing test articulated by the Supreme Court in Anderson.
B.
The Commonwealth urges that, rather than remand this case to the district court for reconsideration under Anderson, we should decide, on the record before us, that judgment in favor of the Commonwealth is appropriate, and so direct the district court. We share the Commonwealth’s skepticism as to whether, as a matter of both law and fact, Wood can show that the 150 day deadline imposes any cognizable burden on his independent candidacy, much less a “severe” one. Nonetheless, we believe that a remand to the district court, to further develop the factual record, is appropriate.
The Commonwealth’s 150 day deadline imposes significantly less burdens on independent candidacies than did South Carolina’s 200 day deadline which we invalidated in
Cromer.
The “two most critical burdens” that South Carolina imposed upon independent candidates,
see Cromer,
Moreover, both the Supreme Court and this court have commented approvingly on or actually upheld in related contexts filing deadlines identical to or more burdensome than that imposed by the Commonwealth.
In
Jenness v. Fortson,
And, in
Hess v. Hechler,
Finally, in
Cromer,
we all but approved, albeit implicitly, the Commonwealth of Virginia’s filing deadline now under attack.
See
Va.Code Ann. § 24.1-166(B)(1) (1985),
amended by,
§ 24.2-507 (1993). Thus, we declared the dissent’s assertion that our holding in that case called into question the electoral laws of thirty-two states, including Virginia,
see Cromer,
In light of this caselaw, we doubt whether Wood can show that the Commonwealth’s 150 day filing deadline imposes any significant burden on the constitutional rights of Wood and his supporters, much less a “severe” burden. Rather, it appears to us
Nonetheless, we decline, on the record before us, the Commonwealth’s invitation to conduct the Anderson balancing ourselves. In Anderson, the Supreme Court instructed that a fact-specific inquiry be undertaken, in which the severity of the restrictions that a ballot access law imposes on voters and candidates and the state’s asserted interests in the particular electoral restrictions are evaluated and weighed against each other. Although the caselaw appears to foreclose any claim that the Commonwealth’s 150 day filing deadline imposes any substantial burden on access to the ballot, the factual record on this score remains largely undeveloped. And, as the Commonwealth conceded at oral argument, the record before us is likewise virtually barren of any evidence of the strength or legitimacy of the Commonwealth’s interests, administrative or otherwise, in the 150 day deadline.
Accordingly, the case is remanded to the district court for further factual development both as to the burdens that the 150 day deadline imposes upon independent candidates and their supporters, and as to the interests of the Commonwealth in imposing that deadline, and for the district court to apply, in the first instance, the test mandated by the Supreme Court in Anderson. On remand, the district court should not limit the Commonwealth’s interests to that in administrative convenience, but should consider all interests that the Commonwealth chooses to assert in defense of its 150 day filing deadline.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. General elections are held on the Tuesday following the first Monday in November. Consequently, the "second Tuesday in June before the November election” is 150 days prior to the general election.
. In his complaint, Wood also alleged that his Equal Protection rights were violated by the imposition of a shorter deadline (74 days) for Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates, see Va. Code Ann. § 24.2-543, than for independent candidates for the Senate. The district court did not address this claim in its opinion below, and Wood has not raised it on appeal. Accordingly, we do not address this claim.
