delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question is whether 28 U. S. C. § 2281 1 required the convening of a three-judge court in the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania to hear this case. It is a class action brought by and on behalf of persons awaiting trial and confined in Philadelphia County prisons because either unable to afford bail or because charged with nonbailable offenses. The complaint alleges that provisions of the Pennsylvania Election Code, in violation of the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, absolutely deny petitioners' class the right to vote in *514 that they neither permit members of the class to leave prison to register and vote, nor provide facilities for the purpose at the prisons, and in that they expressly prohibit persons “confined in penal institutions” from voting by absentee ballot. 2 The complaint names as defendants two Commonwealth officials, the Attorney General and Secretary of State of Pennsylvania, and certain municipal officials of the County and City of Philadelphia: the City Commissioners of Philadelphia who constitute the Board of Elections and Registration Commission of the City and County of Philadelphia, the Voting Registration Supervisor for the City and County, and the Superintendent of Prisons for the County.
On oral argument before a single judge on petitioners’ motion for a temporary restraining order, the Commonwealth officials appeared by a Deputy Attorney General, who conceded that the challenged provisions of the Election Code, as applied to petitioners’ class, were unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment. The municipal officials, on the other hand, vigorously defended the constitutionality of the provisions as so applied. The single judge deemed the contrary view of the municipal officials to be irrelevant, as he regarded the Commonwealth officials to be the “principal defendants.” See
*515
n. 3,
infra.
He therefore ruled that the concession on behalf of the Commonwealth officials meant there was no case or controversy before the court as required by Art. Ill of the Constitution, and dismissed the complaint.
3
On petitioners’ appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed.
I
The single judge clearly erred in holding that the concession of the Commonwealth officials foreclosed the existence of a case or controversy. All parties are in accord that Pennsylvania law did not oblige the municipal officials to defer to the concession of the Commonwealth officials, or otherwise give the Commonwealth officials a special status as “principal defendants.” 4 Indeed, the brief filed in this Court by the Commonwealth officials forthrightly argues that “[t]he District Court made an egregious error. The Attorney General and the Secretary of the Commonwealth are not the only defendants in this case. The City Commissioners of Philadelphia, the Voting Registration Supervisor, the Registration Commission, and the Superintendent of Prisons for Philadelphia County are also parties. These parties have contested vigorously the issues raised by petitioners both in the District Court and on appeal. *517 They have provided adversity of interest, and will sharply define the issues, to the extent they are not already clear.” Brief for Respondents Commonwealth of Pennsylvania et al. 4^5. 5
Thus, there is satisfied the requisite of Art. Ill that “[t]he constitutional question ... be presented in the context of a specific live grievance.”
Golden
v.
Zwickler,
*518 II
The Court of Appeals also erred. We disagree with its holding that McDonald v. Board of Election Comm’rs, supra, rendered petitioners’ constitutional claims wholly insubstantial.
Title 28 U. S. C. § 2281 does not require the convening of a three-judge court when the constitutional attack upon the state statutes is insubstantial. “Constitutional insubstantiality” for this purpose has been equated with such concepts as “essentially fictitious,”
Bailey
v.
Patterson,
In McDonald, appellants were a class of pretrial detainees in Cook County, Illinois, already registered to vote, who sought to vote only by absentee ballot. Their timely applications to the Cook County Board of Election Commissioners for absentee ballots were denied on the ground that pretrial detainees were not included among those persons specifically permitted by the Illinois Election Code to vote by absentee ballot. Appellants brought suit alleging that in that circumstance the Illinois Election Code denied them equal protection of the laws, particularly as the Code provided absentee ballots for those “medically incapacitated,” and for pretrial detainees who were residents of Cook County but incarcerated outside of Cook County. 6
The threshold question presented in
McDonald
was “how stringent a standard to use in evaluating the classifications made [by the Illinois absentee ballot provisions] and whether the distinctions must be justified by a compelling state interest . . . .”
“[TJhere is nothing in the record to indicate that the Illinois statutory scheme has an impact on appellants’ ability to exercise the fundamental right to vote. It is thus not the right to vote that is at stake here but a claimed right to receive absentee ballots. Despite appellants’ claim to the contrary, the absentee statutes, which are designed to make voting more available to some groups who cannot easily get to the polls, do not themselves deny appellants the exercise of the franchise; nor, indeed, does Illinois’ Election Code so operate as a whole, for the State’s statutes specifically disenfranchise only those who have been convicted and sentenced, and not those similarly situated to appellants. [Citation omitted.] Faced as we are with a constitutional question, we cannot lightly assume, with nothing in the record to support such an assumption, that Illinois has in fact precluded appellants from voting.” Id., at 807-808. (Emphasis supplied.)
For all that appeared, Illinois might make the franchise available by other means :
“Appellants agree that the record is barren of any indication that the State might not, for instance, *521 possibly furnish the jails with special polling booths or facilities on election day, or provide guarded transportation to the polls themselves for certain inmates, or entertain motions for temporary reductions in bail to allow some inmates to get to the polls on their own.” Id., at 808 n. 6.
Thus, “[s]ince there is nothing in the record to show that appellants are in fact absolutely prohibited from voting by the State . . id., at 808 n. 7, we concluded that the Illinois absentee ballot provisions were to be tested by the “more traditional standards for evaluating . . . equal protection claims,” id., at 808, and that under those standards the provisions could not be said to be arbitrary or unreasonable, particularly since “there is nothing to show that a judicially incapacitated, pretrial detainee is absolutely prohibited from exercising the franchise.” Id., at 809.
Petitioners’ constitutional challenges to the Pennsylvania scheme are in sharp contrast. Petitioners allege 7 that, unlike the appellants in McDonald, the Pennsylvania statutory scheme absolutely prohibits them from voting, both because a specific provision affirmatively excludes “persons confined in a penal institution” from voting by absentee ballot, Pa. Stat. Ann., Tit. 25, § 2602 (w) *522 (12) (Supp. 1972-1973), and because requests by members of petitioners’ class to register and to vote either by absentee ballot, or by personal or proxy appearance at polling places outside the prison, or at polling booths and registration facilities set up at the prisons, or generally by any means satisfactory to the election officials, had been denied. Thus, petitioners’ complaint alleges a situation that McDonald itself suggested might make a different case.
This is not to say, of course, that petitioners are as a matter of law entitled to the relief sought. We neither decide nor intimate any view upon the merits. 8 It suffices that we hold that McDonald does not “foreclose the subject” of petitioners’ challenge to the Pennsylvania statutory scheme. The significant differences between that scheme and the Illinois scheme leave ample “room for the inference that the questions sought to be raised [by petitioners] can be the subject of controversy.” See supra, at 518, 519.
We therefore conclude that this case must be “heard and determined by a district court of three judges . . . .” 28 U. S. C. § 2281. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore reversed and the case is remanded with direction to enter an appropriate order pursuant to that section for the convening of a three-judge court to hear and determine the merits of petitioners’ constitutional claims, see
Kennedy
v.
Mendoza-Martinez,
It is so ordered.
Notes
Title 28 U. S. C. § 2281 provides:
“An interlocutory or permanent injunction restraining the enforcement, operation or execution of any State statute by restraining the action of any officer of such State in the enforcement or execution of such statute or of an order made by an administrative board or commission acting under State statutes, shall not be granted by any district court or judge thereof upon the ground of the unconstitutionality of such statute unless the application therefor is heard and determined by a district court of three judges under section 2284 of this title.”
Pa. Stat. Ann., Tit. 25, § 623-1
et seq.
(1963 and Supp. 1972-1973); § 2602 (w) (12) (Supp. 1972-1973). Several elections, including the 1972 presidential election, have been held since this action was filed, but this does not render the case moot. See
Moore
v.
Ogilvie,
The unpublished transcript of the oral opinion of the single judge reads in pertinent part as follows:
“It has been stated that no Federal Court has jurisdiction to pronounce any statute, either of the State or of the United States void because irreconcilable with the Constitution except as it is called upon to adjudge the legal rights of litigants in actual controversies.
“Now, in the instant case the Attorney General, as the chief legal officer of the Commonwealth, obviously represents, as Counsel have stated in their arguments this morning, the ‘principal’ Defendant or Defendants. The position taken by the remaining Defendants seems to be the result of the fact that the Attorney General has not, in accordance with his past practice, rendered an opinion together with suggested procedures, plans, etc., covering the subject matter of the opinion.
“It is, therefore, our conclusion that in the posture of this case as it presently exists . . . there is no controversy in the sense in which that term is used by the Courts, and we find ourselves compelled to, therefore, dismiss the complaint. It is so ordered.” App. 85.
Thus, this is not a situation in which a State confesses error and represents that the error will be corrected without need for further court action. See,
e. g., Titmus
v.
Tinsley,
We also read respondents’ brief as rejecting the view of the single judge that the municipal officials must defer to the commonwealth officials’ concession pending the issuance of a formal opinion of the Attorney General on the question of the constitutionality of the statutes.
Insofar as the single judge may have rested his finding of the absence of a case or controversy on the alleged difficulty of formulating a remedy, he also erred. See
Louisiana
v.
United States,
The Illinois absentee voting statute, Ill. Rev. Stat., c. 46, §§ 19-1 to 19-3 (1971), made absentee voting available to four classes of persons: (1) those who were absent from their county of residence for any reason; (2) those who were “physically incapacitated”; (3) those whose observance of a religious holiday prevented attendance at the polls; and (4) those who served as poll watchers in precincts other than their own on election day. See McDonald v. Board of Election Comm’rs, supra, at 803-804.
“The existence of a substantial question of constitutionality must be determined by the allegations of the bill of complaint.”
Ex parte Poresky,
The
-per curiam
opinion of the Court of Appeals states: “We have carefully considered each of the contentions raised by the [petitioners] and find them to be without merit.”
