Opinion
—This is a case about anonymity and the political process. Government Code section 84305 1 requires that candidates for public office, and individuals or groups supporting or opposing a candidate or ballot measure, must identify themselves on any mass mailings they send to prospective voters. In this case, a candidate for city council and two committees he controlled sent prospective voters five mass mailings that did not contain the identifying information required by statute. When the government agency responsible for enforcing the statute brought administrative charges against the candidate and the two committees he controlled, the candidate brought this lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the statute. He argues that persons who send prospective voters mass mailings designed to influence the outcome of an election are entitled, under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, to remain anonymous, and that section 84305’s requirement that such persons identify themselves is therefore unconstitutional.
We conclude that section 84305 does not violate the First Amendment rights of candidates or candidate-controlled committees.
*854 I
Daniel Griset was a candidate for reelection to the Santa Ana City Council in 1988. During the month before the election, the Griset Campaign Committee, which Griset controlled, sent prospective voters a mass mailing carrying the letterhead of the “Washington Square Neighborhood Association.” The mailing failed to identify Griset or the Griset Campaign Committee as the sender. During the same month, the Santa Ana Progress Committee, also controlled by Griset, sent prospective voters four mass mailings attacking Griset’s opponent, Rick Norton. The mailings—entitled “Meet the Real Rick Norton,” “Swap Meet,” “The 7 Lies Swap Meet Owner Rick Norton Wants You to Believe,” and “Beware of Tricksters”—each identified the Santa Ana Progress Committee as the sender, but none of the mailings identified Griset as the controlling candidate.
In March 1990, the Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC) named Griset (who won the election), the Griset Campaign Committee, and the Santa Ana Progress Committee as respondents in an enforcement action, alleging that they had violated section 84305 by sending the five mass mailings described above. Griset then filed a lawsuit to enjoin the FPPC proceedings. The trial court denied Griset’s motion for a preliminary injunction, and the enforcement action proceeded. Based on stipulated facts, the FPPC found that Griset had committed five violations of section 84305. The FPPC imposed a $2,000 fine against Griset and the Griset Campaign Committee, and an $8,000 fine against Griset and the Santa Ana Progress Committee.
The validity of section 84305 was not an issue in the administrative proceedings. Following the conclusion of those proceedings and the imposition of a fine on plaintiffs, plaintiffs added a petition for writ of administrative mandamus (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5) as a cause of action in the pending suit for declaratory and injunctive relief. They contended there that the statute was invalid as applied and on its face. In response to plaintiffs’ subsequent motions for issuance of a peremptory writ on that cause of action and for summary adjudication and judgment in the action for declaratory and injunctive relief, the trial court denied the petition for writ of mandate. In so doing it ruled that, while there was a possibility that section 84305 might be invalid in other circumstances, the administrative action involved only candidates and their controlled committees.
The court then entered separate orders. The first denied the petition for writ of administrative mandamus. The second denied plaintiffs’ motions for summary adjudication and judgment on the causes of action seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. Plaintiffs appealed only from the order denying their petition for writ of mandate.
*855 The Court of Appeal recognized the limited basis of the trial court’s ruling, agreed that section 84305 was not invalid as applied to plaintiffs, and affirmed the trial court order denying the petition for writ of administrative mandamus. Notwithstanding that conclusion, the court also considered the facial validity of the statute as it might apply not only to candidates and their controlled committees, but to all persons and entities potentially subject to its disclosure requirement. Because we agree that section 84305 is valid as applied to plaintiffs, we need not reach the broader question addressed by the Court of Appeal. We therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal, but express no view regarding the validity of section 84305 as applied to persons and entities other than candidates and their controlled committees.
In part II.A., we set forth the text of section 84305 and related statutes. In part II.B., we review the leading cases from the United States Supreme Court that govern the question whether a statute that bars anonymous mailings in political campaigns violates the First Amendment rights of candidates or candidate-controlled committees. In part III, we apply the principles derived from precedent to analyze the constitutionality of section 84305.
II
A
Section 84305, the challenged statute, provides:
“(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), no candidate or committee shall send a mass mailing unless the name, street address, and city of the candidate or committee are shown on the outside of each piece of mail in the mass mailing and on at least one of the inserts included within each piece of mail of the mailing in no less than 6-point type which shall be in a color or print which contrasts with the background so as to be easily legible. A post office box may be stated in lieu of a street address if the organization’s address is a matter of public record with the Secretary of State.
“(b) If the sender of the mass mailing is a single candidate or committee, the name, street address, and city of the candidate or committee need only be shown on the outside of each piece of mail.
“(c) If the sender of a mass mailing is a controlled committee, the name of the person controlling the committee shall be included in addition to the information required by subdivision (a).”
Section 82041.5 defines “mass mailing” in these words: “ ‘Mass mailing’ means over two hundred substantially similar pieces of mail, but does not *856 include a form letter or other mail which is sent in response to an unsolicited request, letter or other inquiry.” 2
B
Although the United States Supreme Court has never addressed the precise question that confronts us—whether a statute that prohibits anonymous mass mailings by candidates or candidate-controlled committees in political campaigns violates the First Amendment—the high court in several opinions has discussed the degree to which government entities may compel the identification of persons engaged in activities protected by the First Amendment.
In three cases, all decided between 1958 and 1960, the high court rejected as unconstitutional attempts by state and local governments to require disclosure of names of persons exercising their First Amendment rights.
N.A.A.C.P.
v.
Alabama
(1958)
*857
In the second case,
Bates
v.
Little Rock
(1960)
The third case to consider the rights to anonymity of persons engaged in First Amendment activities did not involve the associational rights upheld in
N.A.A.C.P.
and
Bates;
rather, as in this case, it concerned the right to anonymity for persons engaged in political speech. In
Talley
v.
California
(1960)
The high court invalidated the ordinance because it abridged the First Amendment by requiring persons circulating handbills to identify themselves. The court explained that “identification and fear of reprisal might deter perfectly peaceful discussions of public matters of importance”
(Talley
v.
California, supra,
Thus, in the three cases discussed above, the United States Supreme Court established that governmental entities may not, absent substantial justification, compel those engaged in First Amendment activities to identify themselves when identification would impair their ability to engage in those
*858
activities; the high court also established that any statute requiring disclosure must bear a reasonable relationship to the asserted governmental purpose and must be narrowly tailored to achieve that purpose. But in two more recent cases, the high court has held that the government’s need to ensure the integrity and reliability of the electoral process will, at least in some instances, provide an adequate justification to compel those exercising their First Amendment rights to identify themselves. These two cases are
Buckley
v.
Valeo
(1976)
In
Buckley, supra,
In
Buckley, supra,
*859
Thereafter, in
First National Bank of Boston
v.
Bellotti, supra,
In short, what we learn from these five decisions of the United States Supreme Court is this: Courts must carefully examine governmental limitations on the right of those who wish to remain anonymous while exercising their First Amendment rights. In some circumstances, however, the government’s interests in conducting fair and honest elections and in providing prospective voters with the information necessary to make an informed choice may justify a requirement that persons identify themselves when they engage in speech designed to influence the outcome of elections. Whether these governmental interests permit us to uphold the constitutionality of section 84305, which prohibits anonymous mass mailings by candidates or candidate-controlled committees in election campaigns, is the issue we explore below.
Ill
As noted earlier, Griset, a candidate for public office, violated section 84305, which requires that candidates for public office, and individuals and groups supporting or opposing a candidate or ballot measure, must identify themselves in any mass mailings they send to prospective voters. Griset attacks that portion of the Court of Appeal’s opinion upholding the constitutionality of the statute as applied to mass mailings by candidates and their controlled committees in elections for public office.
Griset contends that section 84305 implicates the First Amendment because it prohibits anonymous political speech. As he points out,
*860
political speech is at the core of the First Amendment: “ ‘[T]he First Amendment “has its fullest and most urgent application” to speech uttered during a campaign for political office.’ ”
(Burson
v.
Freeman
(1992)
Griset is correct that section 84305 implicates First Amendment rights because it prohibits anonymous political speech. In this respect, it does not differ from the ordinance of the City of Los Angeles that the United States Supreme Court invalidated in
Talley
v.
California, supra,
The second proposition of Griset’s argument—that a statute prohibiting anonymous mass mailings in political campaigns may be upheld only if it is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental interest—has not been conclusively resolved. This is the test most frequently applied to statutes or ordinances that burden First Amendment freedoms, and it was applied by the high court when, in
Burson
v.
Freeman, supra,
Moreover, there is recent authority from the United States Supreme Court indicating that, in at least some election law cases, a lesser degree of scrutiny may be appropriate. In
Burdick
v.
Takushi
(1992)
Earlier this year, the high court granted review of an Ohio case in which it is likely to shed further light on the appropriate standard to apply in assessing the constitutionality of election laws. In
McIntyre
v.
Ohio Elections Comm.
(1993)
In this case, we need not decide whether we agree with the Ohio Supreme Court that the relaxed standard enunciated in
Burdick
v.
Takushi, supra,
The state’s interests that justify section 84305 are compelling. The statute is part of the Political Reform Act of 1974 (§ 81000 et seq.) The provisions
*862
of the act requiring disclosure of expenditures in election campaigns have two purposes: to inform the electorate and to prevent corruption of the electoral process. (§ 81002, subd. (a).) These interests have been held to be compelling.
(Socialist Workers etc. Committee
v.
Brown
(1975)
The primary interest asserted by the FPPC in support of the statute at issue—to provide the voters with information to aid them in making their choices at the ballot box—is virtually identical to the primary interest asserted by the federal government in
Buckley, supra,
This governmental interest is of sufficient magnitude to permit the restriction on the First Amendment rights of candidates (and committees controlled by them) who wish to send political mass mailings anonymously. In
Buckley, supra,
the high court characterized as “substantial” the government’s interest in providing the electorate with information to aid the voters in evaluating candidates for public office. (424 U.S. at pp. 66-68 [46 L.Ed.2d at pp. 714-716].) Here, in determining the constitutionality of section 84305, we must consider this state interest against the extent of the burden the statute places on candidates and committees they control. (
Section 84305 does not in any way prohibit the communication of ideas. It does not attempt to regulate the content of expression. Nor does it restrict the quantity of speech. It merely requires sender identification for a narrow range of public speech—speech designed to influence the outcome of an election. Thus, the restraint on First Amendment freedoms is carefully limited.
On the other hand, as stated earlier, the state’s interest in a well-informed electorate is a compelling one. Section 84305 seeks to further the First Amendment values of informed and open political debate and exercise of the electoral franchise. And, in requiring candidates and the committees controlled by them to disclose their identities in mass mailings, the statute is narrowly drawn to meet that goal. Voters have a vital interest in learning the views of those who seek to govern them, for only through learning these views can the voter intelligently decide who to vote for. A candidate, whose identity is known and who is seeking public office, has a lesser interest in anonymity. The statute does not require disclosure of a wide range of
*863
information pertaining to the candidate or committee responsible for the mass mailing; it merely requires disclosure of the name and address of the candidate or committee, and, when mailings are sent by a candidate-controlled committee, the name of the controlling candidate. The disclosure must be made with the mailing itself, so that the voter will have the information when he or she reviews the mailing. (See
Buckley, supra,
There may be instances when the requirement of sender identification on mass mailings will deter candidates from making mass mailings. (See
Buckley, supra,
Like former Elections Code section 12047, which was at issue in
Canon
v.
Justice Court, supra,
Here, in arguing that section 84305’s failure to distinguish between protected and unprotected speech is a defect that renders that statute unconstitutional, Griset places substantial reliance on a Court of Appeal decision,
Schuster
v.
Municipal Court
(1980)
Schuster, supra,
But
Buckley, supra,
*865
Relying on the Court of Appeal’s decision in
Schuster, supra,
Griset also argues that the government’s interest in the integrity of the electoral process is too “abstract” to adequately justify section 84305. He reasons that even if this governmental interest is a compelling one, section 84305, as written, will not implement it. We disagree.
The facts of this case demonstrate how section 84305 operates directly to preserve the integrity of the electoral process. Griset sent at least one mass mailing—purporting to be from the Washington Square Neighborhood Association—that attacked third parties for actions favorable to Griset’s opponent while omitting any information that would tell the reader that Griset and his committee paid for the mass mailing. Prospective voters reading this mass mailing may have been deceived into believing that this mailing came from a “grass-roots” group of concerned neighbors, rather than from a candidate for public office. Had Griset complied with section 84305, the prospective voters reading the mass mailing would have been better able to give it the weight it deserved. 4
Additionally, Griset argues that the high court’s decision in
Buckley, supra,
This is unpersuasive. In
Buckley, supra,
By requiring candidates and the committees they control to identify themselves in their mass mailings, section 84305 is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest: to provide the voters with important information to assist them in making a reasoned choice at the polls, the ultimate expression of their First Amendment rights. Accordingly, we conclude that as applied to candidates and their controlled committees section 84305 does not violate the First Amendment. 5
IV
The Court of Appeal correctly held that section 84305, which requires the senders of mass mailings in political campaigns to identify themselves, is not unconstitutional as applied to candidates and candidate-controlled committees.
*867 The judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed.
Lucas, C. J., Mosk, J., Arabian, J., Baxter, J., George, J., and Werdegar, J., concimred.
Notes
All further unlabeled statutory references are to the Government Code.
Section 82013 defines the term “committee” as follows: “ ‘Committee’ means any person or combination of persons who directly or indirectly does any of the following: HO (a) Receives contributions totaling one thousand dollars ($1,000) or more in a calendar year. [1 (b) Makes independent expenditures totaling one thousand dollars ($1,000) or more in a calendar year; or [1 (c) Makes contributions totaling ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or more in a calendar year to or at the behest of candidates or committees.”
As to the meaning of “controlled committee,” section 82016 states: “ ‘Controlled committee’ means a committee which is controlled directly or indirectly by a candidate or state measure proponent or which acts jointly with a candidate, controlled committee or state measure proponent in connection with the making of expenditures. A candidate or state measure proponent controls a committee if he, his agent or any other committee he controls has a significant influence on the actions or decisions of the committee.”
The statutory scheme does not define “sender.” But the FPPC has, by regulation, defined “sender” as “the candidate or committee who pays for the largest portion of expenditures attributable to the designing, printing, and posting of the mailing . . . .” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 2, § 18435, subd. (b).)
The Ohio Supreme Court is not the first court to pass on the constitutional validity of a statute that prohibits anonymous political advertising. (Compare
United States
v.
Insco
(M.D. Fla. 1973)
Amicus curiae California Political Attorneys Association argues that the application and enforcement of section 84305 by the FPPC in past administrative cases shows that it is not narrowly tailored to further a compelling state interest. But the manner in which the FPPC has applied the statute in past enforcement decisions tells us nothing about whether the statute is, as Griset contends, unconstitutional insofar as it applies to candidates and their controlled committees, or as applied in this case.
Griset also asserts that section 84305 violates the “liberty of speech” clause of the California Constitution, which states: “Every person may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of this right. A law may not restrain or abridge liberty of speech or press.” (Cal. Const., art. I, § 2, subd. (a).) Griset, however, presents no argument on this provision of our state Constitution apart from his argument based on the First Amendment. Instead, he relies on
Schuster, supra,
As a general matter, the liberty of speech clause in the California Constitution is more protective of speech than its federal counterpart. (See, e.g.,
Wilson
v.
Superior Court
(1975)
