This сase arises out of Lyndon H. La-Rouche, Jr.’s unsuccessful quest for the Democratic Party’s 1996 nomination for President. The Party’s application of certain of its internal rules deprived LaRouche of two delegates to the 1996 Democratic National Convention. LaRouche contends that application of those rules violated the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1971, 1973-1973bb, because the Party did not submit them for judicial or administrative preclearance. He also contends that application of the rules violated his rights under the Constitution. With a limited exception, we conclude that we are without jurisdiction to decide La-Rouche’s Voting Rights Act claims and therefore remand them for the convening of a three-judge district court. We affirm the dismissal of LaRouche’s constitutional claims.
I
LaRouche declared his candidacy for the Democratic Party’s 1996 nomination for President on August 7, 1993. On March 12, 1994, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) adopted its Delegate Selection Rules for the 1996 Democratic National Convention. Rule 11(K) provided:
*976 For purposes of these rules, a Democratic candidate for President must be registered to vote, must be a declared Democrat, and must, as determined by the Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, have established a bona fide record of public service, accomplishment, public writings and/or public statements affirmatively demonstrating that he or she has the interests, welfare and success of the Democratic Party of the United States at heart and will participate in the Convention in good faith.
In January 1995, the DNC adopted the “Call to the 1996 Democratic National Convention,” which in Article VI defined “presidential candidate” as:
any person who, as determined by the National Chairperson of the Democratic National Committee, has accrued delegates in the nominating process аnd plans to seek the nomination, has established substantial support for his or her nomination as the Democratic candidate for the Office of the President of the United States, is a bona fide Democrat whose record of public service, accomplishment, public writings and/or public statements affirmatively demonstrates that he or she is faithful to the interests, welfare and success of the Democratic Party of the United States, and will participate in the Convention in good faith.
By the spring of 1996, LaRouche had qualified for a position on the Democratic Party primary ballot in numerous states. On January 5,1996, however, before the first primary was held, DNC Chairman Donald L. Fowler issued a letter addressed to the chairpersons of all state Democratic Party organizations. Expressly exercising his authority under Rule 11(K) and Article VI (hereinafter “Rule 11(K)” or “the Rules”), Fowler determined that:
Lyndon Larouche [sic] is not a bona fide Democrat and does not possess a record affirmatively demonstrating that he is faithful to, or has at heart, the interests, welfare and success of the Democratic Party of the United States. This determination is based on Mr. Larouche’s expressed political beliefs, including beliefs which are explicitly racist and anti-Semitic, and otherwise utterly contrary to the fundamental beliefs ... of the Democratic Party and ... on his past activities including exploitation of and defrauding contributors and voters.
Following this determination, Fowler instructed the state parties that:
Accordingly, Mr. Larouche [sic] is not to be considered a qualified candidate for nomination of the Democratic Party for President-Therefore, state parties ... should disregard any votes that might be cast for Mr. Larouche, should not allocate delegate positions to Mr. Larouche and should not recognize the selection of delegates pledged to him at any stage of the Delegate Selection Process.
Further, Mr. Larouche will not be entitled to have his name placed in nomination for the office of President at the 1996 Democratic National Convention. No certification of a delegate pledged to [him] will be accepted by the Secretary of the DNC....
Neither the Rules nor the Fowler letter were submitted to the Attorney General or a district court for preclearance under section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
LaRouche was not excluded from any primary ballot because of Fowler’s letter. He appeared on Democratic Party primary ballots in twenty-six states, receiving a total of 597,853 votes. He alleges 1 that under the otherwise operative party rules, he won sufficient support in Louisiana’s Democratic Party primary and in Virginia’s Democratic Party caucuses to be entitled to one national convention delegate from each state. The respective state party chairpersons, however, carried out the instructions in the Fowler letter and ruled that LaRouche was not entitled to the two delegates. In addition, La-Rouche asserts that local precinct delegates pledged to him were excluded from Texas Democratic Party caucuses. And although Arizona’s Secretary of State certified La-Rouche’s name for that State’s “presidential *977 preference election," the Arizona State Democratic Party filed a lawsuit in state court that resulted in the cancellation of that election. 2 Finally, LaRouche asserts that the District of Columbia Democratic Party refused to accept the candidacy of delegates pledged to him.
On August 2, 1996, less than one month before the Democratic National Convention, LaRouche, would-be LaRouche delegates, and LaRouche supporters who either voted for him in primaries and caucuses or assert-edly were barred from doing s~ (collectively referred to in this opinion as "LaRouche") filed suit in the District Court for the District of Columbia against Fowler, the DNC, and state Democratic Party officials and organizations in Arizona, the District of Columbia, Louisiana, Texas, and Virginia (collectively referred to in this opinion as "the DNC"). The suit alleged, inter alia, the failure to pre-elear changes in voting procedures in violation of the Voting Rights Act, as well as the violation of rights guaranteed by the Constitution and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. La-Rouche sought compensatory and punitive damages, declarations that the DNC rules and Fowler's actions were void for lack of preclearance and were unconstitutional, and injunctions ordering defendants to seat his delegates at the convention and prohibiting the DNC from reenacting Rule 11(K) or any similar rule for future conventions. La-Rouche also sought the appointment of a three-judge district court to hear the case, pursuant to section 5 of the Voting Rights Act and 28 U.S.C. § 2284.
On August 15, 1996, the district court denied the application for a three-judge court and dismissed the entire complaint, with prejudice as to all defendants, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). The court riled that "[n}ot only has the U.S. Supreme Court held that the national political parties possess the right under the First Amendment to `identify' those who constitute their `association' and to `limit the association to those people only,' the only defendants able to afford the relief sought, viz., Chairman Fowler and the DNC, are neither `covered jurisdictions' nor agents thereof under ... the Voting Rights Act and, thus, not subject to its `preclearance' requirements."
II
Before reaching the merits of La-Rouche's claims, we must first consider defendants' contention that those claims are moot because the 1996 election is over: La-Rouche does not dispute the mootness of his specific request for аn injunction ordering the seating of his delegates at the 1996 Convention, but contends that his underlying causes of action continue to pre~ent a live controversy. He is plainly ctirrect as to his claims under the Constitution and § 1983, because his request for damages on those claims saves them "from the bar of mootness." Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div. v. Craft,
*978
We also agree with LaRouche that both these and his other claims are saved from mootness because the situation is "capable of repetition, yet evading review." This exception to the mootness doctrine applies if: "(1) the challenged action [is] in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration[;] and (2) there [is] a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party [will] be subject to the same action again. . . ." Spencer v. Kemna, - U.S. -, -,
Under the "evading review" prong of this exception, we consider "whether the challenged activity is by its very natnre short in duration, so that it could not, or probably would not, be able to be adjudicated while fully live." Conyers v. Reagan,
Moreover, the date of the adoption of Rule 11(K) is not the critical date. Indeed, had LaRouche sued as soon as the DNC adopted the rule, his claims might well have been declared unripe, as the rule did not mention LaRouche at all. The Party gave no indication that it would apply the rule to LaRouche until January 1996, just seven months prior to the convention, a time certainly too short to permit district court challenge and appellate review. See Burlington Northern R.R. Co.,
LaRouche's challenge also satisfies the "capable of repetition" prong of the exception, as "there [is] a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party [will] be subject to the same action again.. . Spencer,
Defendants contend that it is "pure specu~ lation" whether the DNC will adopt a rule similar to Rule 11(K) for the 2000 Convention, or whether the DNC chair will apply any such rule to LaRouche. But the Party "has not disavowed" that it will do so. Cf. Morse v. Republican Party,
Finally, we reject defendants’ argument that
Keane v. National Democratic Party,
Accordingly, we conclude that
Keane
does not preclude application of the capable of repetition exception to the facts of this case. To the contrary, because “[tjhere [is] every reason to expect the same parties to generate a similar, future controversy subject to identical time constraints if we should fail to resolve the ... issues that arose” in 1996, we reject defendants’ effort to raise the bar of mootness.
See Norman,
Ill
We turn next to defendants’ contention that challenges to party delegate-selection rules constitute nonjusticiable political questions. Although this court twice before has rejected that contention,
see Bode v. National Democratic Party,
In
O’Brien,
the Supreme Court considered challenges to judgments of this court passing upon the constitutionality of delegate-seating determinations made by the Democratic Party’s Credentials Committee in- advance of the 1972 national convention. The Court noted that “these eases involve claims of the power of the federal judiciary to review actions heretofore thought to he in the control of political parties,” that “[hjighly important questions are presented concerning Justicia-bility,” and that it “entertain[ed] grave doubts as to the action taken by the Court of Appeals.”
Id.
at 4-5,
The defendants also contend that, since
O’Brien,
the Supreme Court has consistently held “disputes over internal party rules to be nonjusticiable.” Appellees’ Br. at 22. In fact, the Court has never so held. The first case defendants cite for this proposition is
Cousins v. Wigoda,
which did hold that “[t]he National Democratic Party and its adherents enjoy a constitutionally protected right of political association.”
Much' the same is true of the other Supreme Court decisions cited by defendants, including
Democratic Party v. Wisconsin ex rel. LaFollette,
The allegations made by LaRouche do not come within the basic criteria for political questions. For example, “[a] controversy is non-justieiable — i.e., involves a political question' — where there is ‘a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it....’”
Nixon v. United States,
Contrary to defendants’ description, this case jdoes not come to us merely as a dispute over whether LaRouche qualifies for delegates under internal party rules. Rather,
*981
LaRouche contends that the Party’s internal rules violate the Voting Rights Act. In so doing, he alleges the violation of an express and measurable statutory duty requiring covered “state[s] or political subdivision[s]” to preclear “any voting qualification ... or procedure with respect to voting different from that [previously] in force or effect....” 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. Although it may be difficult to determine whether Rule 11(K) comes within the Act’s terms, courts do not lack judicially discoverable and manageable standards for making that determination. The application of the Voting Rights Act’s language to the facts of the Party’s delegate-selection rules is a typical judicial exercise. As we will discuss in detail below, it is an exercise the Supreme Court itself undertook just two Terms ago — without raising the specter of a political question.
See Morse,
Nor do the plaintiffs’ constitutional (and § 1983) claims raise a political question. Those claims arise principally under the First Amendment and under the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Supreme Court-repeatedly has" adjudicated election disputes arising under those amendments,
see, e.g., Eu,
IV
We next consider LaRouehe’s challenge to the district judge’s determination that Rule 11(K) and the Fowler letter did not violate the Voting Rights Act. We conclude that both this court and the single-judge district court below largely lack jurisdiction to decide the merits of this issue because the question properly belongs before a three-judge district court.
See Goosby v. Osser,
A
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973c, states that “[a]ny action under this section shall be heard and determined by a court of three judges in accordance with the provisions of section 2284 of Title 28.” Section 2284(b)(1), in turn, provides that the district judge to whom a request for a three-judge court is made “shall, unless he determines that three judges are not required,” notify the chief judge of the circuit to convene a three-judge court. Appeals from decisions of three-judge courts under section 5 must be made directly to the Supreme Court.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1973c;
Allen v. State Bd. of Elections,
It has long been the rule that single district judges may not determine the merits of claims alleging the failure to pre-clear voting changes under section 5.
See, e.g., Backus v. Spears,
“[Ijnsubstantiality” for this purpose has been equated with such concepts as “essentially fictitious,” “wholly insubstantial,” “obviously frivolous,” and “obviously without merit.” The limiting words “wholly” and “obviously” have cogent legal significance. In the context of the effect of prior decisions upon the substantiality of constitutional claims, those words import that claims are constitutionally insubstantial only if the prior decisions inescapably render the claims frivolous; previous decisions that merely render claims of doubtful or questionable merit do not render them insubstantial.... A claim is insubstantial only if its unsoundness so clearly results from the previous decisions of this court as to foreclose the subject and leave no room for the inference that the questions sought to be raised can be the subject of controversy.
Although the DNC contends LaRouche’s challenge fails even under the Goosby standard, it also contends that standard was altered when Congress amended § 2284 in 1976. It points out that the pre-1976 version provided that “[a] single judge shall not ... dismiss the action,” 28 U.S.C. § 2284(5) (1970) (repealed 1976), while the current version does not. The DNC concludes that Congress must have meant, by this deletion, to permit a single judge to grant a motion to dismiss.
No court has noticed the language change pointed to by the DNC or interpreted it as having such import.
See League of United Latin Am. Citizens,
B
We turn, then, to the DNC’s fall-back position: that even under Goosby, La-Rouche’s section 5 claim must be dismissed because that section’s preclearance requirements “obviously” do not apply to defendants’ actions. In so doing, we say only enough to determine whether LaRouche’s claims are “obviously frivolous” or “wholly insubstantial,” and not to intimate a final view as to their merits.
The purpose of the Voting Rights Act was to remedy “racial discrimination in voting ... in areas where such discrimination had been most flagrant.”
Morse,
Section 4 of the Act authorizes the Attorney General to identify each “State or ... political subdivision of a state” in which racial discrimination in voting had occurred, pursuant to a formula set out in the section. 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(b); see Morse,
The leading case regarding the application of section 5 to political parties is
Morse v. Republican Party,
Justice Breyer, writing for himself and Justices O’Connor and Souter, concurred in the judgment.
See id.
When Congress passed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, Justicé Breyer wrote, it well knew the history of the White Primary Cases. It knew that “States had tried to maintain [the] status quo through the ‘all-white’ primary — a tactic that tried to avoid the Fifteenth Amendment by permitting white voters alone to select the ‘all-white’ Democratic Party nominees, who were then virtually assured of victory in the general election.”
Id.
The result in
Morse
precludes defendants’ contention that because the state party actions of which LaRouche complains occurred at party caucuses or conventions rather than at state-run party primaries, section 5 pre-clearance “obviously” was not required:
Morse,
too, involved a convention system.
Morse
also poses difficulties for defendants’ contention that the claims against Fowler and the DNC are frivolous because neither is listed as a “covered jurisdiction” under section 5: the defendant in
Morse,
the Virginia
*985
Republican Party, also was not listed. Nor can we distinguish
Morse
on the ground that it did not concern delegates to a national political convention: as Justice Stevens noted, “[t]he impetus behind the addition of the term ‘party office’ to § 14 was the exclusion of blacks from the Mississippi delegation to the National Democratic Convention in 1964.”
Id.
Finally, defendants contend that
Morse
can be distinguished as a case involving
state
party rules, while the case before us involves
national
party rules. The DNC, they say, was not acting under the authority of a covered jurisdiction when it adopted Rule 11(K); it was acting under its own authority. Likewise, defendants say, the state parties were not acting under state authority when they excluded LaRouche delegates; they were acting under the compulsion of the national party’s rules. The problem with labeling this distinction as “obvious” is that a similar one was considered and rejected in
Morse.
Virginia had not required the party to enact a filing fee or even to nominate its candidates in any particular way; those decisions were the party’s own. Yet, Justice Stevens found that the freedom the State gave the Party provided no defense. To the contrary, he said, Virginia’s grant to the Party of “the right to choose the method of nomination makes the delegation of authority in this case more expansive, not less, for the Party is granted even greater power over the selection of its nominees.”
Id.
Justice Stevens summed up his view as follows:
The imposition by an established political party — that is to say, a party authorized by state law to determine the method of selecting its candidates for elective office and also authorized to have those candidates’ names automatically appear atop the general election ballot — of a new prerequisite to voting for the party’s nominees is subject to § 5’s preclearanee requirement.
Id.
None of this is to suggest that there may not be good reasons to limit the reach of
Morse’s
“delegation” theory before it touches national party rules. One such reason is reflected in Justice Breyer’s caution, acknowledged by Justice Stevens and stressеd by the dissenters, that “First Amendment questions about the extent to which the Federal Government, through preclearance procedures, can regulate the workings of a political party convention, are difficult ones.”
Morse,
There is another strong argument for shortening the reach of the delegation theory. It is clear that what drove the majority opinions in
Morse
to extend the Voting Rights Act to state party activities was a concern generated by the historical background to the passage of the Act. The concern was that if the statute were applied only to direct actions by the covered states, those states might simply delegate their authority to their state parties — just as the Court found had happened in the White Primary Cases — and thus open “a loophole in the statute the size of a mountain.”
Id.
But the fact that defendants ultimately may be able to distinguish the national party rules at issue here from the state party rule at issue in
Morse
does not mean that a single district judge had the authority to dismiss LaRouche’s challenge. No court has yet drawn the distinction considered here, so we can hardly say that “prior decisions inescapably render the claims frivolous.... ”
Goosby,
We make one exception to our remand. Included among the defendants in this case are the District of Columbia Democratic Party, the District of Columbia Democratic State Committee, and the chair of that committee. The District of Columbia is not a covered jurisdiction. See 28 C.F.R. pt. 51, app. Nor is there any allegation that the District of Columbia defendants acted with the authority of any covered jurisdiction or that their actions affected voting rights in any covered jurisdiction. Indeed, LaRouche does not even offer a theory for section 5 coverage of the District of Columbia defendants. See Reply Br. at 11 (discussing each of the other categories of defendants). Therefore, because the section 5 claims are “wholly insubstantial” with respect to these defendants, the district court had authority to dismiss them and we affirm that dismissal. 13
*987 V
LaRouche also contends that Rule 11(K) and the Fowler letter deprived plaintiffs of their rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and under the following provisions of the Constitution: Article II, Section 1; the First and Fifth Amendments; the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment; and the Fifteenth Amendment. These claims, like the Voting Rights Act claim, are certainly not frivolous. Here, however, the district court’s jurisdiction and our standard of review are considerably different. These statutory and constitutional claims do not require a three-judge court for decision. Although they were asserted in the same complaint as the Voting Rights Act claims, a single district judge may decide them and then refer the Voting Rights Act claims to a three-judge court.
See Hagans v. Lavine,
Although LaRouche bases his claims on both § 1983 and the Constitution, we have previously recognized that the case law relating to § 1983 claims, and that relating to claims brought directly under the Constitution, “have been assimilated in most ... respects.”
Williams v. Hill,
Similarly, LaRouche presents his constitutional claims as an amalgam of the constitutional provisions cited above. He suggests no separate analysis for his First Amendment claims and asserts no difference between -the appropriate analyses under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses. 15 As the Supreme Court’s recent elec *988 tion law cases also treat such claims using a single basic mode of analysis, 16 we will do so here as well. Finally, LaRouche does not distinguish between his rights as a citizen and candidate and the rights of his adherents as citizens, supporters, and voters. The- Supreme Court has found these various interests closely tied together and, except as indicated below, we find it unnecessary to disentangle them in order to resolve the merits of LaRouehe’s challenge. 17
To succeed on his claims under § 1983 and the Constitution, LaRouche and his adherents must show (1) that the conduct they complain of is a form of “state action,”
18
and (2) that such action deprived them of their constitutional rights.
See Washington v. District of Columbia,
A
The Supreme Court first considered whether political party activity constituted state action in the White Primary Cases described in Part IV above. We construed those cases broadly in
Georgia v. National Democratic Party,
where we found, state action in the formulas the national partiés used to allocate delegates to national nominating conventions.
See
We initially took the same approach again in
Brown v. O’Brien,
holding that delegate-seating decisions by the Credentials Committee of the 1972 Democratic National Convention constituted state action. We rejected one constitutional attack on such a decision on its merits, but sustained another attack on the ground that the Committee’s action was so unfair as to violate the Due Process Clause.
See
Three years later, in a case arising out of the same delegate-selection battle,
see supra
note 4, the Supreme Court again sidestepped the question of whether party action was state action. In
Cousins v. Wigoda,
the Court held that an Illinois court had uneon-stitutionally attempted to enjoin delegates selected pursuant to Democratic Party rules from taking their seats at the 1972 national convention. Because the case arose in the context of a state court injunction, however, the existence of state action was clear and it was “not necessary” to determine “whether the decisions of a national political party in the area of delegate selection constitute state or governmental action.”
When we again considered the question of whether national party action was state action, we found the answer to be “much less clear” than we had in
Georgia
and
Bode. See Ripon Soc’y, Inc. v. National Republican Party,
Unfortunately, the question of whether the delegate- or candidate-selection rules of political parties constitute state action has not become any clearer since
Ripon.
Subsequent Supreme Court decisions dealing with party rules all have involved conflicts between those rules and state laws, rather than intra-party disputes like this one.
See, e.g., Eu,
If a party must produce the nation’s “uncontested choice” for President of the United States to qualify as a state actor, the Democratic (or Republican) Party plainly does not qualify. Nor did the. actions of the DNC at issue here involve a “state-regulated election” in the Flagg Bros, sense. Although arguably the state parties could have read the Fowler letter as instructing them to kеep LaRouche off state primary ballots, there is no allegation that they attempted to do that, and an affidavit filed by the DNC indicates that it did not intend the letter to be read in that way. See J.A. 273 (Aff. of Richard Q. Boylan, Director of Party Affairs and Delegate Selection for the DNC). In fact, La-Rouche participated in all of the state-run primary elections at issue, and his adherents expressed their support by voting for him. The rub did not come until he wanted to use the results of those state-run primaries to require the Party to accept his convention delegates. At that point, the DNC simply ignored the results of the primaries and selected delegates according to internal party rules. 24
Nor does a national political convention readily fit the Flagg Bros, description of a “public function” as one “traditionally exclusively reserved to the State.” Indeed, histo *991 ry is largely to the contrary. See V.O. Key, Jr„ Politics, PaRties and PRESSURE Groups 475 (1953) (noting that the institution of the convention “[e]volv[ed] completely outside the Constitution and laws.... [It is] an extraconstitutional, semiprivate gathering”). But see id. at 400 (“The national conventions, creatures of party custom, remain beyond state jurisdiction, yet state law often prescribes the methods for the choice of delegates to the convention.”) (referring to practice prior to the decisions in Cousins and LaFollette, discussed infra). 25
This brings us back finally to the splintered majority opinions in
Morse,
which appear to revive a considerably more expansive view of state action and the White Primary Cases than that expressed in
Flagg Bros.
As noted above, the opinions of both Justice Stevens and Justice Breyer rested their conclusions that the party was the “state” for purposes of the Voting Rights Act on their, reading of the history of the White Primary Cases. Justice Stevens relied particularly on the fact that Virginia reserved the two top positions for the major parties to fill with their nominees, thus delegating to the parties “the power to determine part of the field of candidates from which the vоters must choose.”
Morse,
The Justices’ opinions in
Morse
on the constitutional import of the White Primary Cases do not, of course, represent holdings on that issue, since the question in
Morse
was whether the Virginia Republican Party’s actions were those of a “state or political subdivision” under the Voting Rights Act, and not whether they where those of a “state” under the Constitution and § 1983. Nonetheless, Justice Stevens’ opinion made clear that he equated the two, and that he based his conclusion about the Voting Rights Act on his reading of the constitutional test of the White Primary Cases.
See, e.g., id.
If the result in
Morse
signals the Court’s future view of state action in the electoral context, then there would be grounds for concluding that the Democratic Party’s conduct here constituted state action. As noted in Part IV, the states have delegated substantial control over the delegate-selection process to the state party. ■ The states also have given the candidates that emerge from the national party conventions various forms of preference in access to the states’ general election ballots.
Cf. Mrazek v. Suffolk County Bd. of Elections,
But even if a political party could be considered a state actor, it is at the same time clothed with strong First Amendment protections against intrusion by the state. 27 This is not simply a matter of dividing the universe of potential party activities into their public (state) and private (First Amendment-protected) spheres. The Court’s cases have made clear that the very actions at issue here — the Party’s decisions about who can be nominated as delegates and even about who can be considered a Democrat — are themselves clothed in First Amendment protection. Indeed, those cases suggest that if the State of Louisiana had tried to assist La-Rouche by attempting to enforce the results of its primary (which yielded him one delegate) against the DNC, it would have been met with the bar of the First Amendment.
For example, the plaintiffs in
Cousins v. Wigoda,
the Wigoda delegates, had been elected in the state-run Illinois primary as Chicago’s delegates to the 1972 Democratic National Convention. The Cousins delegates, who had been picked at private party caucuses, successfully challenged the seating of the Wigoda delegates before the Credentials Committee on the ground that the latter had been selected in violation of party rules requiring, inter alia, participation by minorities, women and youth. The Wigoda delegates counterattacked by obtaining an injunction from an Illinois court barring the Cousins delegates from taking their seats.
See
The Court followed
Cousins
in
LaFollette.
There, the Court ruled that the Wisconsin Supreme Court could not insist that delegates chosen through the state’s non-partisan, open primary be seated at the 1980 Democratic National Convention, when DNC rules provided that only voters publicly affiliated with the Party could participate in the delegate-selection process. “The issue,” the Court said, “is whether the State may compel the National Party to seat a delegation chosen in a way that violates the rules of the Party. And this issue was resolved, we believe, in
Cousins v. Wigoda.”
The fact that the actions of the Democratic Party at issue here themselves have a First Amendment dimension strongly suggests that we should not apply the usual test for the validity of electoral restraints imposеd by state governments — even if we were to conclude that the Party is a state actor. As the Court said in
O’Brien,
even if party delegate-selection rules are state action, we still must consider “the reach of the Due Process Clause in this unique context.”
B
In this section we consider how strictly to scrutinize the conduct attacked by LaRouche. LaRouche contends that the appropriate standard is strict scrutiny, requiring the party to demonstrate that its rules are “narrowly tailored to serve a compelling interest.” Although in the past the Supreme Court did apply strict scrutiny to state restrictions on candidates and parties seeking access to the ballot,
see, e.g., Rhodes,
Accordingly, even if we were to apply the Burdick test to the DNC’s rules, it would not necessarily result in strict scrutiny. La-Rouche and his supporters рlainly do have First Amendment interests at stake. 28 But if the restrictions imposed on plaintiffs are viewed from the standpoint of the “state’s” electoral process as a whole — that is, as a combination of ballot access provided through both political party nomination and independent candidacy — it is not necessarily clear that the restrictions on plaintiffs were “severe.” LaRouche’s adherents still retained the right to express their political views by supporting other Democratic nominees, even if they could not nominate La-Rouche. 29 And LaRouche retained the right *994 to run, and his supporters the right to vote for him, as either a third-party or independent candidate. 30 Nor is there any reason to believe that LaRouche’s ultimate chances of becoming President would have been measurably lessened by taking those routes than by seeking nomination at the Democratic National Convention — where by his own count he would have had only two of 4320 delegates. See Appellants’ Br. at 8 n.8; Appel-lees’ Br. at, 3. Accordingly, even if the specific burden imposed on LaRouche by the DNC Rules were “severe,” the overall burden imposed by the “state” may not have been severe enough to require strict scrutiny under Burdick.
More importantly, we are not persuaded that the Burdick test is appropriate for application to this case. That test, after all, was designed for a challenge to a state law by a citizen or political party asserting First Amendment rights, and hence weighs the state’s interests against the rights protected by the Amendment. It was not designed for a case in which the First Amendment weighs on both sides of the balance. The application of judicial strict scrutiny to the internal rules of a political party (setting aside, because they are not at issue here, party rules that effectively control state-run primary ballots) simply raises too many troubling questions. 31
May a court require a political party— itself a First Amendment creaturе — to show a compelling justification before it may limit a putative candidate’s ability to associate himself with the party? May a court require a political party to show that such a limitation is narrowly tailored to meet that compelling justification? The difficulty of the issue is made manifest by holding it up to a mirror: if a state, finding Rule 11(K) unfair, were to adopt LaRouche’s position by statute (by, for example, outlawing “litmus tests” for party nominees), could the Party be required to show a compelling interest for its rule to invalidate the statute? We already know the Supreme Court’s likely answer to this question, as
Cousins
and
LaFollette
presented similar situations. The answer is that the DNC would not have the burden of justifying its rule. To the contrary, it is the state that would have to show that its interest was “compelling ... to justify the ... abridgment of the exercise by ... the National Democratic Party of [its] constitutionally protected rights.”
Cousins,
But if a state cannot, at the behest of a plaintiff like LaRouche, require a political party to change its rules unless it can show a compelling reason for retaining them, then should it make a difference if a federal court is asked to impose the same requirement? The federal courts, after all, act with the authority of the “state” (i.e., the federal government), and their intrusion into the First Amendment rights of a political party can be
*995
as invasive as that of any state.
Cf. Tashjian,
There is yet another reason for rejecting the applicability of strict scrutiny to intra-party rules. One of the principal triggers for such scrutiny in the usual First Amendment context is viewpoint discrimination.
See, e.g., Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of Univ. of Va.,
But it is also obvious that viewpoint discrimination by a political party is quite another matter. Indeed, it is the sine qua non of a political party that it represent a particular political viewpoint. And it is the purpose of a party convention to decide on that viewpoint, in part by deciding which candidate will bear its standard: the liberal or the conservative, the free trader or the protectionist, the internationalist or the isolationist. Unlike a state, which is largely barred from making such decisions, a political party must make these decisions. Since in the end there will be only one Democratic and one Republican Party candidate on the general election ballot, their conventions .ultimately must choose a political viewpoint. Surely even plaintiffs would agree that if the Democratic Party had chosen LaRouehe over President Clinton as its candidate in 1996, the choice would have constituted the expression of a particular political point of view.
In sum, we conclude that even if a political party is a state actor, the presence of First Amendment interests on both sides of the equation makes inapplicable the test applied to electoral restrictions where the First Amendment weighs on only one side. As the Supreme Court has not yet had to devise a test for such a case, we return to the one this court applied the last time it faced a similar situation. In
Ripon,
we found that plaintiffs’ equal protection interest in the delegate-selection rules of a political party was “offset by the First Amendment rights exercised by the Party in choosing the [delegate allocation] formula it did.” ’
C
We begin the
Ripon
analysis by noting that the Party interest at issue is a “legitimate” one. “There are no racial or other invidious classifications here” as there were in the White Primary Cases.
Ripon, 525
F.2d at 588;
see also Eu,
Moreover, the Party’s interest is not merely legitimate. Here, the associational rights of the Democratic National Party are at their zenith. The Party’s ability to define who is a “bona fide Democrat” is nothing less than the Party’s ability to define itself. In
Eu,
for example, one of the challenged state laws “prevented] party governing bodies from stating whether a candidate adheres to the tenets of the party or whether party officials believe that the candidate is qualified for the position sought.”
The Party’s effort to limit the list of candidates who can represent themselves to the voters as Democrats “rationally advance[s the] legitimate interest of the party in winning elections.”
Ripon,
Here, the members of the National Party, speaking through their rules, chose to define their associational rights by limiting those who could participate in the process leading to the selection of delegates to their National Convention. On several occasions this Court has recognized that the inclusion of persons unaffiliated with a political party may seriously distort its collective decisions — thus impairing the party’s essential functions — and that political parties may accordingly protect themselves *997 from intrusion by those with adverse political principles.
LaRouche, of course, would dispute the applicability of this passage, arguing that unlike the open primary voters in Wisconsin, he is not “unaffiliated” with the Democratic Party and does not have “adverse political principles.” But the Party itself obviously disagrees — and vociferously so.
See
J.A. 73-74 (Fowler letter) (“Mr. Larouehe’s [sic] expressed political beliefs ... [are] utterly contrary to the fundamental beliefs, values and tenets of the Democratic Party_”). Nor is the Party required to accept LaRouche’s self-designation as the final word on the matter. Rather, the Party’s “freedom to join together in furtherance of common political beliefs ‘necessarily presupposes the freedom to identify the people who constitute the association.’ ”
Tashjian,
LaRouche makes clear that his fundamental complaint is not so much with the Party’s right to define itself, but rather with the “unfair” manner in which he contends it has done so. Even this claim is less than fully developed. Although he complains of the vagueness of the “bona fide Democrat” standard, he proposes no alternative substantive definition, and we can think of none that a court could impose within the strictures of the First Amendment. Indeed, LaRouche does not even propose an alternative set of procedures for selecting delegates, nor does he insist that the only fair procedure would be to seat any delegate whose candidate won sufficient votes in a primary. Instead, he asks only that the Party be enjoined “from promulgating similar provisions as found in Rule 11(K), in the future.” Compl. ¶ 150 (J.A. 49).
The answer to this aspect of LaRouche’s complaint is that the Party’s First Amendment rights extend not only to defining itself, but also to determining how to define itself. The Supreme Court made this point in both
Cousins
and
LaFollette
by upholding the Party’s right to determine who could select its delegates, notwithstanding the states’ views that a different process would be more appropriate.
See, e.g., LaFollette,
This court reached the same conclusion in Ripon, where we rejected the contention that the Equal Protection Clause required the Republican Party to allocate its national convention delegates on a one-person, one-vote basis. In letting stand the Party’s practice of awarding “victory bonuses” to states voting Republican in prior elections, we observed:
A party is .... more than a forum for all its adherents’ views. It is an organized attempt to see the most important of those views put into practice through control of the levers of government. One party may think the best way to do so is through a ‘strictly democratic’ majoritarianism. But another may think it can only be done (let us say) by giving the proven party professionals a greater voice....
Ripon,
A party may, of course, pay heavily at the polls for the perception that it treats its *998 members, delegates, or candidates unfairly. But that is a matter for the party to weigh, and for the people to decide in the general election. It is not a basis upon which, a court can intervene as long as the party’s processes rationally advance its legitimate interests.
Rule 11(K) and the Fowler letter were issued pursuant to the authority duly granted to the DNC and Chairman Fowler by the Charter and Bylaws of the Democratic Party.
35
If LaRouche disputed Fowler’s authority or conclusions, the place to take that dispute was to the national convention’s Credentials Committee and, if he received no satisfaction, to the floor of the convention itself.
36
As the Supreme Court said in
O’Brien,
“[i]t has been undеrstood since our national political parties first came into being as voluntary associations of individuals that the convention itself is the proper forum for determining intra-party disputes as to which delegates shall be seated.”
VI
The district court’s dismissal of the complaint as to the District of Columbia Democratic Party, the District of Columbia Democratic State Committee, and the Chairman of the District of Columbia Democratic State Committee is affirmed. Plaintiffs’ claims against the remaining defendants under section 5 of the Voting Rights Act are remanded to the district court for the convening of a three-judge court. The district court’s dismissal of plaintiffs’ claims under all other statutory and constitutional provisions is affirmed.
Notes
. Because the district court dismissed La-Rouche’s complaint for failure to state a claim, we must deem the allegations of the complaint to be true.
See Goosby v. Osser,
. Arizona's state-run "presidential preference election" had been scheduled for February 27, 1996, while DNC rules precluded participation in primaries before March 5. The Democrats in Arizona accordingly planned their own party-run primary for March 9 and sued to block the state-run primary. Despite LaRouche's objections, an Arizona state court blocked the state primary, noting in the process that the DNC had found LaRouche not to be a qualified candidate for the Democratic Party nomination. See Arizona State Democratic Comm. v. Secretary of State, No. CV96-00909, slip op. at 5 (Ariz.Super. Ct., Maricopa Co. Feb. 1, 1996) (Joint Appendix ("J.A.") at 346).
. Although in Part V we assume without deciding that LaRouche is correct in his contention that the conduct he challenges constitutes state action, Part V.A makes clear that contention is neither "insubstantial" nor "clearly foreclosed by prior decisions." We also note that the quoted phrase from Memphis Light appears to describe the test for subject matter jurisdiction rather than a requirement for avoiding mootness. Cf. Bell v. Hood,
.
Cousins, O’Brien,
and
Keane
all related to a dispute over the seating of Illinois delegates at the 1972 convention. In the Illinois state primary, voters elected' a slate of uncommitted delegates, including Chicago alderman Paul Wigoda, who were associated with Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley. A "reform" slate, including William Cousins, successfully petitioned the Party’s Credentials Committee to be seated in their stead.
See generally
Petitioners' Opening Brief at 5-9,
Cousins v. Wigoda,
In
Brown v. O'Brien,
Meanwhile, one day after the Supreme Court's stay of our initial judgment, and two days before the convention, the Illinois circuit court had ruled in favor of the Wigoda delegates and enjoined the Cousins delegates from participating in the convention.
See Cousins,
. In
Wymbs v. Republican State Executive Committee,
also cited by defendants, the Eleventh Circuit held nonjusticiable a challenge to Florida Republican Party rules for selection of delegates to the 1980 Republican National Convention.
See
. Goosby
involved a challenge to state election laws under the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, which at the time had to be made before a three-judge district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2281. Congress repealed 28 U.S.C. § 2281 in 1976, returning jurisdiction over suits to enjoin state statutes on constitutional grounds to single district judges.
See
Act of August 12, 1976, Pub.L. No. 94-381, 90 Stat. 1119. The courts uniformly have applied
Goosby's
"wholly insubstantial” standard to requests for three-judge courts under section 5 of the Voting Rights Act.
See, e.g., League of United Latin Am. Citizens,
. Although the legislative history does not address this change specifically, both the Senate and House Reports explain the reasons for other changes in the section and then note that "[t]he other powers here given the single judge, or expressly denied him, are similar to those stated in” the predecessor version of § 2284. S. Rep. No. 94-204, at 13 (1975); H.R. Rep No. 94-1379, at 7. The legislative history also states that the "bill in no way affects the right to a three-judge court where otherwise specifically mandated by statute, such as in ... the Voting Rights Act of ■ 1965....” H.R. Rep. No. 94-1379, at 2; see S. Rep. No. 94-204, at 2.
. The standard for preclearance by a district court is a showing that the qualification or prerequisite "does not have the purpose and will not have the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color....” 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. The Justice Department’s regulations provide that "the Attorney General shall make the same determination that would be made by the [district] court in an action for a declaratory judgment.” 28 C.F.R. § 51.52.
. The dissenting justices concluded that the Virginia Republican Party was not a "State or political subdivision” for purposes of section 5, both as a matter of statutory construction,
see id.
.
See also id.
. The DNC notes some tension between the passage quoted in the text and another passage distinguishing
Morse
from the Court’s summary affirmance of a three-judge court’s decision in
Williams v. Democratic Party,
Civ. No. 16286 (N.D. Ga. Apr. 6, 1972),
aff'd,
. We do not rule on a series of additional hurdles — not reached by the district court — that LaRouche must clear in order to establish his section 5 claim. For example, LaRouche must establish not only that the DNC Rules and letter were effectively the action of "a State or political subdivision,” but also that they amounted to (1) a "voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or procedure with respect to voting,” that (2) was "different from that in force or effect” on the dates specified in the statute. 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. LaRouche also must overcome the contention of several defendants that the district court lacks venue and personal jurisdiction over them.
. The Arizona defendants contend that they, too, should be treated differently because the actions LaRouche complains of — the cancellation of the state's presidential preference primary election as to which he had qualified for a ballot position — was accomplished through an Arizona
*987
state court order.
See
Appellees' Br. at 27 (citing
Arizona State Democratic Comm. v. Secretary of State,
No. CV 96-00909 (Ariz.Super. Ct., Maricopa Co. Feb. 1, 1996)) (J.A. 342-50);
see also supra
note 2. But the fact that an electoral change was ordered by a state court rather than some other state body does not necessarily take it out of the coverage of section 5, and we therefore cannot conclude that the claim against the Arizona defendants is "obviously frivolous.”
Cf. Hathorn v. Lovorn,
. LaRouche also asserted claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3) which, he contends, provides a cause of action for conspiracies to violate constitutional rights even if the defendants are not state actors. Since we conclude
infra
that La-Rouche's constitutional rights were not violated even if the defendants are considered state actors, § 1985(3) does not advance LaRouche's cause. In any event, the discussion
infra
also demonstrates that plaintiffs can establish neither of the two requirements for a § 1985(3) cause of action: "(1) that some racial, or perhaps otherwise class-based, invidiously discriminatory animus [lay] behind the conspirators’ action, and (2) that the conspiracy aimed at interfering with rights that are protected against private, as well as official, encroachment.”
Bray v. Alexandria Women’s Health Clinic,
.
But see infra
note 37 (discussing plaintiffs' allusion to procedural due process claim). In the circumstances of this case, plaintiff's reference to the Fifteenth Amendment also adds nothing to the analysis.
Cf. Mobile v. Bolden,
Nor is anything added by LaRouche's passing reference to Article II, Section 1, of the Constitu
*988
tion, which sets forth the qualifications for President of the United States. Although the DNC rule may have added a qualification for the position of Democratic candidate for President, it did not and was not intended to add a qualification for the Office of President itself any more than would any political party's basic requirement that its nominee be a member of the party.
Cf. Storer v. Brown,
.See Anderson v. Celebrezze,
.
See Anderson,
. For the kind of conduct at issue herе, the "under color of state law” standard of § 1983 and the "state action” requirement for a claim under the Constitution are synonymous.
See Hafer,
. Although we found state action, we rejected plaintiffs' challenges in both
Georgia
and
Bode
on the merits.
See Georgia,
.
Brown
rejected an attack by Illinois' uncommitted Wigoda delegates on their unseating and enjoined them from further prosecuting an Illinois state court action they had brought against those who challenged their seats before the Credentials Committee.
See
. In
Moose Lodge No. 107 v. Irvis,
. The challenge in
Flagg Bros,
was to a warehouseman’s proposed sale of goods entrusted-to him for storage, as permitted by New York law.
See
. The quotation from-
Jackson
has been repeated in several subsequent state action cases.
See, e.g., San Francisco Arts & Athletics, Inc. v. United States Olympic Comm.,
. This distinguishes the case from the Eleventh Circuit’s finding of state action in a decision by Georgia’s "presidential candidate selection com-miUee” to delete David Duke’s name from the list of potential Republican presidential candidates on the Georgia presidential preference primary ballot.
See Duke v. Cleland,
. The institution of the national nominating convention, which emerged in 1831, could be regarded as taking a step away from state action (at least under certain criteria), as it supplanted nomination by caucuses of each party’s members of Congress as well as nomination by state legislatures.
See
Key,
supra,
at 400-03; Congressional Quarterly, Guide to U.S. Elections 5 (1975). Although conventions were intended as a step toward the selection of nominees by the entire party membership, they often came under the control of party bosses.
See id.
at 404-07. President Harding, for example, reputedly won his party's nomination in the infamous (although possibly apocryphal) "smoke-filled room” at Chicago’s Blackstone Hotel in 1920.
See
Edward McChesney Sait, American Parties and Elections 590 n.93 (3d ed.1942). Although state-run primaries were introduced in the beginning of the 20th Century, it was not until 1972 that the parties chose the majority of their delegates through primaries.
See
Leonard P. Stark,
The Presidential Primary and Caucus Schedule: A Role for .Federal Regulation,
15 Yale L. & Pol’y Rev. 331, 333 (1996). Credentials challenges have occurred at almost every convention, and the conventions historically have been the judges of the qualifications of their members.
See
Key,
supra,
at 458-59; Congressional Quarterly,
supra,
at 11;
see also O'Brien,
. That view was in sharp contrast to the view of three of the dissenters, who would have limited the White Primary Cases to "state-regulated elections or elections conducted by organizations which in practice produce the uncontested choiсe of public officials.”
Id.
.
See Eu,
.
See Tashjian,
.
Cf. Anderson,
.
See Storer,
. As in
Ripon,
we also intimate no view about what standard should apply in a situation, like the White Primary Cases, "where there is only one party with a realistic chance to win the election, and where a vote in the nominating process is the only effective vote that can be cast.”
. Although LaFollette made this statement in , the course of reversing a state court judgment, Tashjian quoted it in the context of a federal action.
. While
Ripon,
unlike this case, involved a "one person, one vote” challenge, this distinction does not change our analysis. Notably, the
Ripon
court thought its case was analogous to others involving different constitutional challenges, including those under the First Amendment.
See
. The Eleventh Circuit reached a similar conclusion in
Duke v. Massey,
holding that "[t]he Republican Party has a First Amendment right to freedom of association and an attendant right to identify those who constitute the party based on political beliefs.... Therefore the ... Republican Party did not have to accept [David] Duke as a Republican presidential candidate. Duke does not have the right to associate with an 'unwilling partner.'”
. The Charter of the Democratic Party provides that "delegates shall be chosen ... according to the standards ... as may be specifically authorized by the Democratic National Committee in the Call to the Convention." See Charter of the Democratic Party of the United States art. 2, § 4 (1995) (J.A. 281). The Bylaws provide that "the Chairperson ... shall exercise authority delegated to him or her by the Democratic National Committee.” See Bylaws of the Democratic Party of the United States § 12 (1995) (J.A. 296).
. The Call for the 1996 Democratic National Convention provided that "[t]he Credentials Committee shall determine and resolve questions concerning the seating of delegates and alternates to the Convention.... The committee shall report to the Convention for final determination and resolution of all such questions.” The Call for the 1996 Democratic National Convention art. VII(I)(1) (J.A. 325). The Convention is "the highest authority of the Democratic Party,” Charter of the Democratic Party of the United States art. 2, § 2 (J.A. 281), and its adoption of the Credentials Committee report determines the final roll of those who may be seated at the Convention, see J.A. 277 (Boylan Aff.).
. Since the Credentials Committee forum was available to resolve LaRouche’s complaint before the contested delegates were formally seated, we reject his brief suggestion that the DNC deprived him of a liberty interest without an "opportunity to be heard,” in violation of the Due Process Clause. In any event, our conclusion that the Constitution protects the decisions the Party made here would render such a procedural due process claim untenable. We also reject La-Rouche’s contention that Fowler's characterization of his political beliefs as "racist and antiSemitic” deprived him of a “liberty" interest without due process of law.
See Siegert v. Gilley,
. This conclusion applies to plaintiffs’ claims against all of the defendants, who include state party officials and committees as well as Fowler and the DNC. Plaintiffs’ constitutional claims do not differentiate among the groups of defendants, nor do they suggest that the state defendants did anything other than obey the instructions of Fowler and the DNC.
