Plaintiffs are former independent political candidates who appeal the district court’s order granting summary judgment to the state defendants on plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge to Alabama’s ballot access restrictions. Specifically, under Alabama law, independent candidates seeking ballot access must submit a petition with the signatures of at least three percent of qualified electors who cast ballots at the last general election for governor, and the signature petition must be filed by the first primary election date, which is the first Tuesday in June. See Ala.Code § 17-8-2.1 (2005) (current version at Ala.Code § 17-6-22); Ala.Code § 17-16-6 (2005) (current version at Ala. Code § 17-13-3). Plaintiffs contend that the three-percent signature requirement and primary election date filing deadline, independently and in combination, infringe upon their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. After review and oral argument, we agree with the district court that, based on the record in this ease, plaintiffs have not shown a constitutional violation, and thus we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
A. 2002 Election Campaign
On April 3, 2001, plaintiff Johnny Swanson, III joined the 2002 race for United States Senator in Alabama as the candidate of his newly formed party, the Independent Democrats of Alabama. In the early spring of 2002, plaintiff Frank Cobb began his campaign as an independent candidate for Alabama House Representative District 40, and plaintiff Joseph Grimsley began his campaign as an independent candidate for Sheriff of Barbour County.
Under Alabama law, if a political party has not garnered more than twenty percent of the votes cast at the preceding general election, that political party must petition the Alabama Secretary of State or county probate office for placement on the ballot. See Ala.Code § 17-16-2 (2005) (current version at Ala.Code § 17-13-40); *897 Ala.Code § 17-8-2.1(a)(l) (2005). Prior to 1995, Alabama required that independent and minor party candidates must provide the signatures of one percent of voters with their petitions. In 1995, Alabama adopted a requirement that petitions include “the signatures of at least three percent of the qualified electors who cast ballots for the office of Governor in the last general election for the state, county, city, district, or other political subdivision in which the political party seeks to qualify candidates for office .... ” Ala.Code § 17-8-2.1(a)(l) (2005) (emphasis added).
Under this three-percent signature requirement, plaintiff Swanson needed to gather 39,536 valid signatures in order to appear on the general election ballot in his statewide race in 2002. Plaintiffs Cobb and Grimsley needed to gather several hundred valid signatures to appear on the ballot for their local races.
Prior to 2002, independent candidates had to submit the required number of valid signatures “six days after the second primary election,” which was July 1 in the 2002 election cycle. Ala.Code § 17-8-2.1 (1995). On December 28, 2001, the Alabama governor signed Act. No.2001-1131 (“the Act”), which, inter alia, moved the deadline for independent candidate registration to the date of the first primary election. See Act of Dec. 28, 2001, 2001 Ala. Laws 1131. 1 The first primary election date in the 2002 election cycle was June 4, 2002.
On March 29, 2002, the Act was submitted to the Department of Justice for pre-clearance. On May 28, 2002, the Department of Justice precleared the Act, and the Alabama Secretary of State issued a press release to the general public about the registration deadline change to June 4, 2002, exactly one week after the Act went into effect. 2
Although plaintiff Swanson first learned about the Act shortly after it was submitted for preclearance in March 2002, the Secretary of State’s Office did not inform him of the new June 4 deadline until a week before the deadline. Plaintiff Grims-ley learned about the new deadline as he was collecting signatures on the first primary election date on June 4, and plaintiff Cobb learned about the deadline several days after June 4.
On July 1, 2002 (i.e., the old filing deadline before the Act went into effect), Cobb and Grimsley attempted to file their registration petitions with the required number of verified signatures. By July 1, 2002, Swanson had submitted just under 11,000 signatures to be verified by the Secretary of State’s Office, well short of the three-percent signature threshold even if all signatures were verified. Swanson actually would have been short even if the one-percent signature threshold had been in effect.
B. Preliminary Injunction Suit and Hearing
On June 4, 2002, Swanson filed an initial complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. On August 13, 2002, Swanson, joined by Cobb *898 and Grimsley, filed an amended complaint against the Alabama Governor, Alabama Attorney General, Alabama Secretary of State, and Probate Judges of Barbour County and Calhoun County. 3 The amended complaint alleged that Alabama’s ballot access laws violated the Qualifications Clause; the Interstate Commerce Clause; and the First, Tenth, Fourteenth, and Seventeenth Amendments. The amended complaint sought three forms of relief: (1) injunctive relief to place plaintiffs Swanson, Cobb, and Grimsley on the general election ballot; (2) injunctive relief to stop the implementation of the Act; and (3) a declaratory judgment that the three-percent signature requirement and the Act are unconstitutional.
In August 2002, the district court held a preliminary injunction hearing. Plaintiffs Swanson, Cobb, and Grimsley testified about obstacles they faced in collecting valid signatures. Cobb and Grimsley stated that they had collected a sufficient number of signatures by the first primary election date of June 4, but they did not submit their petitions until July 1 because of the late notice of the deadline change. Swanson admitted that he fell short of the three-percent signature threshold, but said that he lost volunteers willing to gather signatures after he learned about the deadline change to June 4.
Mark Bodenhausen of the Libertarian Party and Bob Belcher of the Reform Party testified that primary polling places are critical venues for gathering signatures and asserted that the new filing deadline-the first primary election date-would undermine ballot access efforts. Bodenhau-sen stated that the Libertarian Party gained general ballot access in the 2002 election cycle based on solid election results from the 2000 race, which followed a $100,000 signature-gathering campaign begun seventeen months before the 2000 election. 4
Richard Winger, the editor of an election law newsletter, testified that polling places are the best locations to gather signatures and that the deadline change would have a “very significant effect” on independent candidates attempting to qualify for ballot access. Winger also testified that Alabama was the second toughest state for independent and minor party candidates to gain ballot access in 2002. David Gillespie, a political science professor at Presbyterian College, testified that Alabama’s ballot access laws were more restrictive than many states and would not contribute to voter education.
Despite the short notice of the new June 4, 2002 filing deadline, independent candidates Jimmy Blake and Tracy Larkin testified that they met the three-percent signature requirement and qualified for ballot access in their local races in the 2002 election. 5 Both candidates admitted that they would have had more difficulty qualifying for ballot access if they were not already well-known.
After the hearing, the district court granted a preliminary injunction in part and denied it in part on August 30, 2002.
Swanson v. Bennett (Swanson I),
219
*899
F.Supp.2d 1225, 1234 (M.D.Ala.2002). The district court found that Alabama’s three-percent signature requirement was less than the five-percent signature requirements in other states that had been upheld in two United States Supreme Court cases as not excessive and constitutional.
Id.
at 1231 (citing
Storer v. Brown,
As to plaintiffs Cobb and Grimsley, the district court noted that they had met the three-percent signature requirement and determined that they had a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of their claims that they were deprived of “fair notice” of the change in the filing deadline. Id. at 1229-31. The district court found that Cobb and Grimsley expected to have until July 1 to meet the registration deadline and were given no notice of the new date of June 4. Id. at 1230. Furthermore, the district court found that “the State has failed to articulate an adequate reason for applying the new deadline to the current election cycle instead of delaying its applicability or granting candidates such as Cobb and Grimsley a grace period for compliance.” Id. Accordingly, the district court concluded that Cobb and Grims-ley satisfied the requirements for a preliminary injunction and ordered defendants to place Cobb’s and Grimsley’s names on the general election ballot. Id. at 1234. The district court emphasized that the problem with the deadline change statute was “not its content, but the manner in which it was promulgated without sufficient notice to those affected by its terms.” Id.
C. Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
Following the 2002 election, the district court addressed the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. In support of these cross-motions, plaintiffs’ brief noted that defendants did not dispute any of the factual allegations in this case, and defendants’ brief also observed that there were no genuine issues of material fact.
On August 24, 2004, the district court granted summary judgment to defendants in part.
Swanson v. Bennett (Swanson II),
After noting its preliminary injunction order and that the 2002 election cycle had passed, the district court stated that its conclusion at the summary judgment stage was now different from the preliminary injunction stage as to the fair notice claim. Id. at 1298. The district court determined that “the only way the same wrong could *900 recur for Grimsley, Cobb, and Swanson would be if Alabama were to change the law regarding the registration deadline again and fail to give them notice of it again .... ” Id. After finding that this scenario was unlikely to occur, the district court issued a show-cause order as to why the fair notice claim should not be dismissed as moot. Id. at 1298-99, 1301.
The district court next considered the three-percent signature requirement. The district court noted that, in its 2002 preliminary injunction order, it had already found that “the State did have an important interest in requiring independent candidates to show they had a ‘significant modicum’ of support before printing their names on the ballot.”
Id.
at 1299 (quoting
Swanson I,
The district court also cited this Court’s decision in
Cartwright v. Barnes,
In upholding Alabama’s three-percent signature requirement, the district court acknowledged that plaintiff Swanson offered the affidavit of Richard Winger, which stated that few other states imposed the restrictions that Alabama does.
Id.
The district court found this fact irrelevant because a court “ ‘is no more free to impose the legislative judgment of other States on a sister State than it is free to substitute its own judgment for that of the state legislature.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Swanson I,
Subsequently, on May 30, 2006, the district court granted summary judgment to defendants on plaintiffs’ additional claim that the filing deadline on the primary election date impermissibly burdened signature gathering.
Swanson v. Worley (Swanson III),
*901 After resolving those two claims, the district court considered whether the filing deadline — the day of the first primary election — impermissibly and unconstitutionally denied plaintiffs the opportunity to collect signatures at primary polling places, which plaintiffs asserted was “ ‘the most viable source of successful petition drives Id at 1263. The district court agreed with plaintiffs that the deadline on the primary election day deprived plaintiffs of a “meaningful opportunity” to gather signatures on the primary election day itself. Id. at 1263 n. 2. The district court acknowledged that plaintiffs had given these reasons why having the primary election day to collect signatures for the three-percent signature requirement was so important:
the mindset of electors is on election issues, petitioners are assured that the elector is a registered voter, the electors^] district and polling places are readily apparent, electors are not suspicious of the petitioners’ need for personal information, it is the only public place where petitioners’ activities are welcomed, and it is the least costly means of obtaining signatures.
Id. at 1263. Therefore, in evaluating the constitutionality of the filing deadline, the district court was advised of and noted the interrelationship between the deadline change and the three-percent signature requirement and how changing the deadline to the primary election day caused plaintiffs to lose the least costly and most effective way for plaintiffs to collect signatures to meet the three-percent signature requirement.
Nonetheless, the district court concluded that the deadline change to the primary election date for meeting the three-percent signature requirement was not unconstitutional because “other factors present in the Alabama election scheme alleviate ... this perceived loss.” Id. (quotation marks, internal citation, and alteration omitted). In evaluating the deadline change, the district court recited those other factors, including:
(1) “Alabama does not restrict voters from signing petitions based on their party affiliation”;
(2) Alabama does not “restrict voters who have already voted in [the] primary from signing the petition”;
(3) “[i]ndependent candidates can seek signatures from voters who have, already signed other petitions”;
(4) “there are no restrictions on how many signatures may come from a specific geographical area”;
(5) “Alabama does not restrict how many signatures can be submitted in an effort to meet the 3% requirement”; and
(6) Alabama “allows unlimited time to conduct the petitioning effort.”
Id.
(quotation marks and citation omitted). The district court then applied the balancing test and factors identified in
Swanson I
and concluded that “changing the deadline for independent candidates to collect signatures from six days after the second primary election to the day of the first primary election is reasonable and does not put an unreasonable burden on independent candidates.”
Id.
(quotation marks, citation, and alteration omitted). In reaching this conclusion, the district court relied in part on
Jenness
and characterized
Jenness
as holding that the “deadline [on the] primary election for independent candidates to meet [the five-percent] signature requirement is not ‘unreasonably early.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Jenness,
Plaintiffs timely appealed.
*902 II. DISCUSSION
In their brief on appeal, plaintiffs raise these two issues:
I. Is Alabama Statute § 17-7-1 requiring independent and minor party candidates to obtain signatures of three percent of the electors who cast votes for governor in the last election unconstitutional because it substantially burdens the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of voters and candidates but fails to serve any legitimate state interest?
II. Does the Alabama Statute § 17-7-1 changing the filing deadline for the signature petitions of independent and minor party candidates to the day of the primary election, combined with a three percent signature threshold, abridge the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of candidates and voters by denying them the only meaningful opportunity to collect signatures and meet the threshold?
Before addressing the merits of plaintiffs’ two claims, we outline the applicable balancing test for constitutional challenges to ballot access restrictions. 8
A. The Supreme Court’s Balancing Test
The Supreme Court long has recognized candidates’ constitutional rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to associate for political ends and to participate equally in the electoral process.
See Burdick v. Takushi,
In order to balance these interests, a court must first consider “the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the rights protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments that the [candidate] seeks to vindicate.”
Anderson,
Furthermore, if the state election scheme imposes “severe burdens” on the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, it may survive only if it is “narrowly tailored and advanee[s] a compelling state interest.”
Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party,
Under this framework, we first review the “character and magnitude of the asserted injury” to plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, considering the burden posed by the signature requirement and the June filing deadline independently and in combination.
B. Signature Requirement
Plaintiffs assert that Alabama’s three-percent signature requirement violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments. 10 Based on our precedent, we conclude that Alabama’s signature requirement by itself does not impose a severe burden on plaintiffs’ rights but is a reasonable, nondiscriminatory restriction.
This Court previously upheld a three-percent signature requirement in a challenge under the First and Fourteenth Amendments in
Libertarian Party of Florida v. Florida.
In
Libertarian Party,
we considered the constitutionality of a Florida statute requiring the signatures of
three percent
of all registered voters in order for a minor party candidate to appear on the general election ballot.
See id.,
Alabama’s three-percent signature requirement is less burdensome than Florida’s signature requirement in Libertarian Party. While Florida required signatures of three percent of all registered voters, Alabama requires only the signatures of three percent of qualified electors who voted in the last gubernatorial election, a significantly smaller pool than all registered voters.
Moreover, the Supreme Court has upheld even more restrictive signature requirements than Alabama’s three-percent requirement.
See Am. Party of Tex. v. White,
As the district court noted, Alabama’s statute also has the same alleviating factors that eased the burden of gathering signatures in
Libertarian Party. See Swanson II,
does not restrict voters from signing petitions based on their party affiliation, nor does it restrict voters who have already voted in a primary from signing the petition. Independent candidates can seek signatures from voters who have already signed other petitions, and there are no restrictions on how many signatures may come from a specific geographical area. Alabama does not restrict how many signatures can be submitted in an effort to meet the 3% requirement, and the state allows unlimited time to conduct the petitioning effort.
Swanson I,
*905
The ability of minor party candidates in Alabama to qualify for the ballot in the past also bolsters the reasonableness of Alabama’s three-percent signature requirement. Specifically, many Libertarian Party candidates met Alabama’s signature requirement and qualified for ballot access in both statewide and local offices in the 2000 election. Based on strong election results in the 2000 election, the Libertarian Party gained general ballot access for the 2002 election, entitling it to nominate a slate of both statewide and local candidates in the 2002 election in Alabama. The Libertarian Party’s successes in the 2000 and 2002 election cycles in Alabama demonstrate that the three-percent signature requirement does not hinder diligent independent and minor party candidates, and Alabama’s election law thus “provides a realistic means of access.”
Libertarian Party,
For all of these reasons, Alabama’s three-percent signature requirement is a reasonable, nondiscriminatory regulation that does not impose a severe burden. 12
C. Filing Deadline Combined with Signature Requirement
Even if a three-percent signature requirement alone passes constitutional muster, plaintiffs also contend that Alabama’s filing deadline on the first primary election date, in combination with the three-percent signature requirement, violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments. 13 Specifically, plaintiffs assert that primary polling sites are critical locations for gathering signatures to meet the three-percent signature requirement, that Alabama’s June filing deadline effectively precludes gathering signatures at primary polling sites, and that the filing deadline in tandem with the three-percent signature requirement severely burdens plaintiffs’ constitutional rights to ballot access. Based on our review of binding precedent and the undisputed facts in this case, we conclude that Alabama’s June filing deadline, in combination with the three-percent *906 signature requirement, does not place a severe burden on the constitutional rights of independent candidates.
We begin our analysis with
Jenness v. Fortson,
wherein the Supreme Court rejected a challenge to Georgia’s five-percent signature requirement and June filing deadline acting in concert.
Jenness,
In
Jenness,
the Supreme Court noted that this June filing deadline was not “unreasonably early,” distinguishing it from the February deadline invalidated in
Williams v. Rhodes,
Based on the reasoning in
Jenness,
other circuits have upheld statutes with filing deadlines on the primary election day (or even the day before) in combination with signature requirements, despite the deadline’s effect on signature gathering.
See, e.g., Lawrence v. Blackwell,
Plaintiffs do not cite, much less address,
Jenness
in their initial or reply briefs. Instead, plaintiffs rely on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Anderson v. Celebrezze
and this Court’s decision in
New Alliance Party v. Hand,
Anderson
is different in two material ways. First,
Anderson
involved a presidential election where the Supreme Court noted that “the State has a less important interest in regulating Presidential elections than statewide or local elections .... ”
Anderson,
Second, the Ohio statute in
Anderson
placed independent candidates at a relative disadvantage to major party candidates. Specifically, the Ohio statute invalidated in
Anderson
required major party candidates to declare their candidacies by late March in order to be on the primary election ballot, which was seventy-five days later in mid-June. Independent presidential candidates had to file a nominating petition with 5,000 signatures by the same date in late March in order to appear on the general election ballot, which was over seven months later in November.
Anderson,
In Anderson, although major party candidates had to declare their candidacies on the same date as the filing deadline for independent candidates, the Supreme
*908
Court noted that “the burdens and the benefits of the respective requirements are materially different .... ”
Id.
at 799,
In contrast, Alabama’s statute does not discriminate against independent candidates relative to major party candidates when the filing deadline for independent candidates is set on Alabama’s primary election date, which is sixty days after major party candidates must declare their candidacies.
15
Although major party candidates enjoy the benefits of the publicity and automatic support of an experienced party organization, major party candidates in Alabama have the additional burden of filing earlier, thus placing independent and major party candidates in comparable positions.
See Lawrence,
Similarly,
New Alliance Party v. Hand
is distinguishable because the old Alabama statute invalidated in that case was like the Ohio statute in
Anderson
and placed independent and minor party candidates at a relative disadvantage to major party candidates. In
New Alliance Party,
this Court addressed Alabama’s old election statute, which required local and statewide independent candidates to file their signature petitions in
April,
sixty days
before
the primary election.
See New Alliance Party,
In
New Alliance Party,
the April filing deadline placed unequal burdens on independent and minor party candidates (again similar to the late-March filing deadline seventy-five days before the primary election invalidated in
Anderson).
Just as in
Anderson,
Alabama’s old scheme required independent and minor party candidates to file their petitions on the same day that major party candidates simply declared their candidacies without any of the administrative justifications or corresponding benefits of the major party primary elections.
See id.
at 1570 & n. 3;
see also Anderson,
In contrast, as discussed above, Alabama’s new June filing deadline on the primary election date does not place independent and minor party candidates at a relative disadvantage to major party candidates. Indeed, major party candidates have the additional burden of declaring their candidacies sixty days before independent and minor party candidates must file their signature petitions in June, and independent and major party candidates thus are in roughly comparable positions. Accordingly, unlike the April filing deadline invalidated in New Alliance Party, Alabama’s new filing deadline is a nondiscriminatory restriction, and the strict scrutiny analysis applied in New Alliance Party is not appropriate for Alabama’s filing deadline on the primary election date for independent and minor party candidates.
More importantly in this case, the burden posed by Alabama’s filing deadline is significantly lessened by the statute’s alleviating factors. In particular, Alabama sets no limit on the time period for conducting the petitioning effort, a far more permissive scheme than filing deadlines that have been upheld in the past.
16
See, e.g., Am. Party of Tex.,
Plaintiffs attempt to sidestep the clear precedent in Jenness by pointing to evidence that few independent and minor party candidates have been able to obtain access to Alabama’s ballot since both the three-percent signature requirement and *910 June filing deadline have been in place. Since the signature filing deadline was moved to the primary election date in the 2002 election cycle, two independent candidates obtained ballot access in 2002 despite the short notice of the deadline change, two independent candidates obtained ballot access in 2004, and six independent and minor party candidates obtained ballot access in 2006.
Although plaintiffs note that these candidates were running for only local races and that no independent or minor party candidate has obtained ballot access in a statewide race since 2002, there is no evidence in this particular record that an independent or minor party candidate has even sought ballot access in a statewide race since plaintiff Swanson in 2002. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record in this case that any independent or minor party candidate sought and failed to gain ballot access in any Alabama races since plaintiffs in 2002. All we say here is that the evidence in this particular record does not establish any severe burden on rights; instead, the successes of several independent and minor party candidates demonstrate that Alabama’s election scheme does not “completely insulate the two-party system from minor parties’ or independent candidates’ competition and influence .... ”
Timmons,
Plaintiffs also point to Winger’s testimony that Alabama had the second toughest ballot access restrictions among all states in the 2002 election. This Court in
Libertarian Party
instructed that the legislative choices of other states are irrelevant, however, because a court is “no more free to impose the legislative judgments of other states on a sister state than it is free to substitute its own judgment for that of the state legislature.”
Libertarian Party,
Further, plaintiffs point to no case in which a court has invalidated a filing deadline on the primary election day combined with a signature requirement similar to Alabama’s laws. Because Alabama does not discriminate against independent and minor party candidates, and because there are significant alleviating factors in Alabama’s statute, such as the unlimited time to gather signatures, we conclude that Alabama’s filing deadline on the primary election date, in tandem with the three-percent signature requirement, is a reasonable, nondiscriminatory regulation.
D. State Interests
Because Alabama’s filing deadline on the June primary election date in combination with its three-percent signature requirement imposes reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions on plaintiffs’ rights, “less exacting review” of Alabama’s election regulations is proper.
Timmons,
The district court found that Alabama had “an important interest in requiring independent candidates to show they had a significant modicum of support before printing their names on the ballot.”
Swanson II,
Moreover, reasonable ballot access regulations promote important state interests in preserving political stability by “temper[ing] the destabilizing effects of party-splintering and excessive factionalism.”
Timmons,
Plaintiffs do not dispute that Alabama has legitimate, important interests in avoiding voter confusion and promoting political stability. Instead, plaintiffs contend that defendants failed to prove that the signature requirement and filing deadline were necessary to promote these important interests. However, this argument misapprehends the proper test for reasonable, nondiscriminatory regulations. Because any percentage requirement or filing deadline is “necessarily arbitrary” and “impossible to defend ... as either compelled or least drastic,” the test is not whether the regulations are necessary but whether they rationally serve important state interests.
Libertarian Party,
Alabama has articulated important interests justifying its reasonable, nondiscriminatory ballot access restrictions. Accordingly, we conclude that Alabama’s election scheme, with a three-percent signature requirement and filing deadline on the primary election date, does not abridge plaintiffs’ First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants on all claims. 19
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Act also amended the “sore loser” statute by moving the filing deadline in that statute for independent candidates to the date of the first primary election. See Ala.Code § 17 — 7—1 (a)(3) (2005) (current version at Ala. Code § 17 — 9—3(a)(3)). Even before this deadline change, Alabama's “sore loser” statute barred major party candidates who were defeated in a party primary election from running as independent candidates in the same election cycle. See id.; see also infra note 17.
. The State Election Handbook in 2002 described the Act, but noted that it was subject to Department of Justice preclearance and listed the candidate registration deadline as July 1, 2002.
. The district court later dismissed the Alabama Governor from the suit. This dismissal is not at issue on appeal.
. As discussed later, Alabama provides unlimited time for the petitioning effort. While there is a deadline for filing the petition, there is no limitation on the start date, which is why the Libertarian Party could begin its petitioning effort seventeen months before the election.
. Jimmy Blake qualified as an independent candidate for a county commissioner's seat in Jefferson County, and Tracy Larkin qualified as an independent candidate for Alabama State Senate District 26.
. In this appeal, the parties do not challenge the district court's conclusion that the facts in this case are not in dispute. No party claims that the case should be remanded for trial; instead, all parties agree that the appeal presents questions of law that should be resolved on summary judgment.
. Specifically, the district court found that Alabama's election laws included the following alleviating factors:
(1) allowing voters to sign the petition regardless of party affiliation; (2) allowing voters who already voted in the primary to sign the petition; (3) allowing voters to sign more than one petition; (4) lack of restriction on how many signatures were allowed from one area; (5) lack of restriction on how many signatures could be submitted in an effort to meet the 3% requirement; (6) allowing sufficient time to conduct the petitioning effort; (7) the ability of minor political parties to qualify for the ballot in the past; and (8) the cost required was not impermissibly burdensome.
Swanson II,
. The parties agree that we review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Willard v. Fairfield S. Co.,
. Alabama law provides candidates with two ways to demonstrate the required "significant modicum of support.” First, a political organization can obtain general ballot access by garnering twenty percent of the votes cast at the general election for state officers. See Ala.Code § 17-16-2 (2005). Alternatively, a political organization or a candidate can obtain ballot access for a particular election by satisfying the three-percent signature threshold by the first primary election date. See Ala.Code § 17-8-2.1 (2005). Only the second path is at issue here.
. Defendants contend that the signature requirement claim is moot. Although the 2002 election cycle has passed, it is well settled that ballot access challenges fall under the “capable of repetition, yet evading review” exception to the mootness doctrine.
See Norman v. Reed,
. The alleviating factors recognized in
Libertarian Party
included: (1) allowing voters to sign the petition regardless of party affiliation; (2) allowing voters who already voted in the primary to sign the petition; (3) allowing voters to sign more than one petition; (4) placing no geographic caps on the number of signatures that can be gathered from one area; (5) imposing no limit on how many signatures may be submitted for verification; (6) allowing sufficient time to conduct the petitioning effort; and (7) requiring no impermissibly burdensome expenses.
Libertarian Party,
In
Libertarian Party,
the plaintiffs had 188 days to collect signatures to meet the three-percent signature requirement.
Libertarian
*905
Party,
. In presidential elections, independent candidates need to obtain only 5,000 signatures to appear on the general election ballot in Alabama. See Ala.Code § 17-19-2(a) (2005) (current version at Ala.Code § 17-14-31(a)). Plaintiffs contend that if a less restrictive signature requirement sufficiently satisfies the State’s interests in presidential elections, there is no justification for requiring more signatures through the three-percent signature requirement in statewide elections.
However, presidential elections call for a different balancing of interests than statewide or local races. As the Supreme Court emphasized in
Anderson,
"the State has a less important interest in regulating Presidential elections than statewide or local elections, because the outcome of the former will be largely determined by voters beyond the State’s boundaries.”
Anderson,
. Although defendants also assert that this claim is moot absent plaintiffs’ expressed intent to run again, plaintiffs are certainly capable of-doing so, and it is reasonable to expect that they will do so in the future. As noted above, ballot access challenges fall under the "capable of repetition, yet evading review” exception to the mootness doctrine.
See Norman,
. We cite and rely upon the same decisions as did the district court. In
Swanson III,
the
*907
district court summarized its previous finding in
Swanson II
that the signature requirement was constitutional.
Swanson III,
. In Alabama, major party candidates must declare their candidacies sixty days before the first primaiy election. See Ala.Code § 17 — 16— 11 (2005) (current version at Ala.Code § 17— 13-5).
. Plaintiffs assert that independent candidates cannot petition more than a year in advance of the primary because of Ala.Code § 17-22A-7(b)(2) (2005) (current version at Ala.Code § 17-5-7(b)(2)), which bars candidates from accepting, soliciting, or receiving campaign contributions more than a year pri- or to the election. Plaintiffs point to no authority, and we find none, that treats this campaign contributions provision as limiting the petitioning period for ballot access. The ballot access provision at issue in this case contains no explicit limitation on the period for gathering signatures. Ala.Code § 17-8-2.1(a)(1) (2005). Even if Alabama had a twelve-month petitioning period, this would essentially double the petitioning periods in Libertarian Party and Jenness.
. The parties also contest whether Alabama’s election scheme serves an important state interest in discouraging "sore loser” candidates who lose in a major party primary election and attempt to run as independent candidates. The filing deadline on the primary election date clearly serves this interest because a losing candidate in a major party primary could not qualify on the same day as an independent candidate.
However, Alabama already has a separate “sore loser” statute that states that ballots shall not include "the name of any independent candidate who was a candidate in the primary election of that year and the name of any nominee of a political party who was a candidate for the nomination of a different political party in the primary election of that year.” Ala.Code § 17 — 7—1(c) (2005) (current version at Ala.Code § 17 — 9—3(b)). The early filing deadline is thus superfluous in the context of preventing "sore losers,” and we do not consider this interest to justify Alabama’s restrictions.
See Anderson,
. Additionally, the district court noted defendants' contention that "Alabama needs the additional time afforded by the earlier, first-primary-election deadline to verify petition signatures and to perform other administrative duties connected to the election cycle.”
Swanson III,
. Plaintiffs also request a reversal of the district court’s denial of their September 18, 2002 motion for attorney’s fees and costs, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. On October 25, 2002, the district court denied plaintiffs' motion for attorney's fees and costs "with leave to renew in a timely manner after a final judgment has been entered.” However, plaintiffs never refiled a motion for attorney’s fees and costs following entry of final judg *913 ment, and the district court thus never addressed the merits of this request. Accordingly, the request for attorney’s fees and costs is not properly presented to this Court on appeal.
