The late former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Thomas P. “Tip” O’Neill, was fond of saying that “all politics is local.” Tip O’Neill, All Politics is Local (1994). Through its requirement that witnesses to ballot access “designating petitions” be “resident[s] of the political subdivision in which the office or position is to be voted for,” N.Y. Elec. L. § 6-132(2) (McKinney 1998), the State of New York has attempted to elevate this political adage into an affirmative command. The Constitution, however, protects certain forms of political activity from government interference even if they transcend local political boundaries. While the state does have legitimate interests that justify regulating the electoral process— especially when it seeks to protect the integrity of that process — it cannot mandate that all political activity be “local” without demonstrating the required fit be
We conclude that the section 6-132(2) witnеss residence requirement severely burdens interactive political speech and association rights protected by the First Amendment (as incorporated by the Fourteenth Amendment) without advancing any legitimate or important state interest. Accordingly, we hold this particular statutory requirement unconstitutional on its face.
BACKGROUND
John Sollazo, a registered member of the Independence Party of New York, sought to compete in the primary election held September 14, 1999, in order to gain the nomination of the Independence Party for the New York City Council seat representing the 50th Council District in Staten Island. In order for a City Council candidate’s name to appear on the primary election ballot, New York law requires that candidate to file a “designating petition” containing valid signatures from at least five percent of the registered party members within the district from which the candidate seeks election.
The plaintiffs filed a complaint pro se against the NYC Board, the New York State Board of Elections (“NYS Board”), and Governor George Pataki in August 1999, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief on the grounds that the witness residence requirement in section 6-132(2) violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments on its face by permitting only district residents to be eligible to witness signatures on the candidate’s designating petition. The NYC Board moved for dismissal pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), and after oral argument on August 31, 1999, the District Court (Frederic Block, Judge) delivered an opinion from the bench dismissing Plaintiffs’ complaint in its entirety. Judgment was entered on September 3, 1999. Plaintiffs moved this Court for an expedited appeal on the grounds that the primary election was to be held on September 14, 1999; that motion was denied. The primary election took place as scheduled without Sollazo’s name on the ballot.
DISCUSSION
We review the District Court’s dismissal of the plaintiffs’ complaint de novo. See Post v. Court Officer Shield No. 207,
I. Preclusive Effect of Molinari v. Powers
In another, widely noted New York ballot access case that was litigated in the Eastern District of New York after briefing in this appeal had been completed, but before oral argument, the NYS and NYC Boards entered into a stipulation providing that several provisions of the New York Election Law “impose[d] an undue burden on access to the ballot in connection with the 2000 New York State Republican Presidential Primary.” Molinari v. Powers, No. 99 Civ. 8447, Stipulation at 2 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 4, 2000). The parties in that case also agreed to waive their rights to appeal from any order entered by the district court based on that stipulation, see id., and upon acceptance by the district court, the stipulation served as the predicate for that court’s order of preliminary injunctive relief. See Molinari v. Powers,
After counsel appeared for the pro se plaintiffs and oral argument was held in this appeal on March 24, 2000, we ordered the parties to submit supplemental briefs addressing all of the issues presented on appeal, including the preclusive effect, if any, of the stipulation and order entered in Molinari. See Lerman v. Board of Elections, No. 99-9015, Order at 1-2 (2d Cir. Mar. 30, 2000). In their supplemental brief, the plaintiffs argue that the defendants in this case
*140 the defendants’ behavior looks disquiet-ingly like an attempt to have the best of both worlds — to abandon their defense of § 6-137 in a politically sensitive, vigorously contested case that was closely followed in the press, but avoid the usual precedential effects of doing so by pursuing their defense of § 6-132 in what was a pro se, low profile, appeal.5
II. Mootness
The NYC Board argues that the plaintiffs’ claims are moot, since the September 1999 primary election is over, having taken place without John Sollazo’s name on the ballot. However, this contention is mistaken since the plaintiffs’ claims fall within the exception to the mootness doctrine for issues “capable of repetition, yet evading review.” Meyer v. Grant,
III. Standing
The NYC Board also contends that as a resident of the 49th Council District, Lerman lacks standing under Article III to bring this action because she is “unaffected by the outcome” of the election in the 50th Council District and therefore suffers no injury from the absence of Sollazo from the primary ballot in that district. The District Court expressly declined to address the question, but indicated offhand that it, too, did not think Lerman had standing under Article III.
First, it is clear that Lerman has standing under Article III to assert her own claims under the First Amendment.
Lerman appears rather easily to have met the three requirements set forth by Defenders of Wildlife. Having associated with Sollazo in order to promote his political candidacy and help him gain access to the primary election ballot, Lerman asserts injury in having been deprived of the opportunity to gather signatures in behalf of his candidacy. Cf. Coalition for Sensible & Humane Solutions v. Wamser,
The NYC Board rests its challenge to Lerman’s standing primarily on the argument that because she does not live in the 50th District, she is “unaffected by the
Second, in addition to their standing to challenge the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement as applied to their own speech and associational activity, the plaintiffs also have third party (or jus tertii) standing to challenge the witness residence requirement on its face. The question of standing encompasses both constitutional and prudfential considerations. See Secretary of State of Md. v. Joseph H. Munson Co.,
The District Court concluded that the plaintiffs lacked standing to raise a facial challenge to the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement, asserting that in order for that challenge to go forward, the plaintiffs needed to “establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the act would be valid.” Lerman v. Board of Elections, No. CV-99-4901, transcript at 7 (E.D.N.Y. Aug. 31, 1999) (citing City of New York v. United States,
The plaintiffs clearly have standing under both Article III and the overbreadth doctrine to challenge the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement, both as applied to them and on its face. We therefore proceed to address the merits of the plaintiffs’ claims.
IV. Constitutionality of the Section 6-132(2) Witness Residence Requirement
The district court in Molinari concluded that the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement is unconstitutional on its face, violating the First Amendment (as incorporated by the Fourteenth Amendment) by infringing upon the plaintiffs’ political speech and associational rights and their right to equal protection. See Molinari v. Powers,
A. The Burden on First Amendment Rights and Degree of Scrutiny to Be Applied
In determining the level of scrutiny to be applied to the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement, we first must assess the extent to which that requirement burdens First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. See Buckley v. American Constitutional Law Found., Inc.,
Ordinarily, policing this distinction between legitimate ballot access regula
The petition circulation activity at issue in this case, while part of the ballot access process, clearly constituted core political speech subject to exacting scrutiny. See American Constitutional Law Found.,
It should be clear, however, that even if one characterizes this restriction on petition circulation as being more directly concerned with the “mechanics of the electoral process” than with speech, requiring us to evaluate the severity of the burdens on political speech and association posed by that regulation before determining the level of scrutiny to be applied, the witness residence requirement severely burdens political speech by “drastically reducing] the number of persons ... available to circulate petitions.” American Constitutional Law Found.,
Sollazo’s particular case highlights the burdens on political speech and association imposed by the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement. First, there should be little doubt that the witness residence requirement dramatically reduced the number of potential petition circulators available to advance Sollazo’s political message. As сounsel for Lerman noted at oral argument, there are approximately 170,000 registered members of .the Independence Party statewide, but only 760 in the 50th District. The witness residence requirement therefore renders almost 99.5 percent of all Independence Party members ineligible to circulate petitions within the 50th District. The fact that many of these statewide party members might not have had any interest in circulating petitions on behalf of Sollazo has no bearing upon the burden that the residence requirement imposes upon interactive political speech. Even if, as a practical matter, the requirement only prevented Sollazo from using a handful of those statewide party members, “for some minor candidates” — especially for a minor party candidate, such as Sollazo, running in a political subdivision as small as the 50th District — “parting with one or two avid circulators could significantly impact their campaigns,” Krislov,
Second, while Sollazo formally needed only 38 signatures to qualify for thе ballot, as a practical matter a candidate seeking election “needs a surplus of signatures, because they will likely be challenged on any number of grounds, resulting in some, perhaps many, invalidations.”
The District Court distinguished American Constitutional Law Foundation by positing a distinction between initiative petition circulators, whom it considered to be engaged in interactive political speech, and candidate petition circulators such as Lerman, whom it considered to be engaged in a “classic ballot access type” of activity. Lerman v. Board of Elections, No. CV-99-4901, transcript at 10-11 (E.D.N.Y. Aug. 31, 1999). It ultimately relied upon this distinction to conclude that the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement poses only a minimal burden on interactive political speech and, therefore, less scrutiny was required when evaluating that requirement than in American Constitutional Law Foundation. This distinction, however, is rather strained. There is no basis to conclude that petition cireulation on behalf of a candidate involves any less interactive political speech than petition circulation on behalf of a proposed ballot initiative — the nature of the regulated activity is identical in each instance. The District Court’s distinction depends almost entirely upon its characterization of candidate petition circulation as being “classic,” but the fact that candidate elections have a longer history than ballot initiatives or referenda upon petition does not actually establish anything with respect to the burden placed on “interactive political speech.” To be sure, the distinction between candidate and initiative campaigns can be relevant in certain circumstances. For examplе, the government’s interest in preventing corruption or the appearance of corruption is sufficiently important to justify limits on contributions to candidate campaigns, but is not sufficiently important when it comes to regulating contributions to initiative campaigns, since there are no candidates to corrupt in those campaigns. Compare Buckley v. Valeo,
B. Application of Strict Scrutiny to the Section 6-182(2) Witness Residence Requirement
Since the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement imposes a severe burden on political speech and association, the requirement must therefore be narrowly tailored to advance a compelling state interest in order to pass constitutional muster. See California Democratic Party v. Jones,
As a general matter, the first interest asserted by the defendants — ensuring integrity and preventing fraud in the electoral process — is unquestionably compelling. See Krislov v. Rednour,
The defendants have failed to suggest any meaningful relationship between the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement and their interest in protecting the integrity of the signature collection process. With respect to that interest, the “usual justification” for a residence requirement is to ensure that the petition witness be answerable to a subpoena. Molinari,
There also is little reason to believe the defendants’ assertion that district residents are more likely to have “somе familiarity with persons who sign petitions” or be more qualified to ensure the integrity of the petition circulation process. In an electoral district consisting of many thousands of voters, the likelihood of district residents having any greater “personal familiarity” than non-residents is rather low. Indeed, New York law no longer even requires, as it once did, that petition witnesses attest to personal knowledge of the identity of designating petition signatories. See Molinari,
Noting the exception to the residence requirement that permits non-resident notaries public or commissioners of deeds to circulate and witness petitions, see N.Y. Elec. L. § 6-132(3) (McKinney 1998), the defendants urge us, in effect, to characterize petition circulators as quasi-public officials. Such a characterization, however, does not accurately reflect the role actually played by petition circulators in the ballot access process. As partisans of the candidates for whom they are circulating petitions, petition circulators — regardless оf whether they are district residents — almost certainly are motivated entirely by an interest in seeing their candidate gain access to the ballot, rather than any interest in ensuring integrity in the signature collection process. See Grant,
The defendants’ arguments based on the other two interests are even weaker, and both fail for similar reasons. Requiring a candidate to have a “modicum of support” within their district before their name appears on the ballot is well-established as a legitimate and important state interest, which helps to “avoid[] confusion, deception, and even frustration of the democratic process.” Jenness v. Fortson,
The defendants’ final asserted interest^-preventing non-resident witnesses from “imposing” the costs of a primary upon a district’s residents fails for similar reasons. As with their assertion of the state’s interest in ensuring a “modicum of support” from within the district, the defendants’ argument with respect to the “imposition of primary election costs” appears to misunderstand the nature of the ballot access process — for candidates only are placed on the ballot if they obtain the requisite number of signatures by registered party members from within the electoral district, no matter where the witnesses live.
Finally, the argument that the witness residence requirement does not affect Lerman’s “absolute right to enter the 50th district ... [to] express, as vigorously as she desired, her views and opinions about the issue's facing the voters in that district and the candidates for the City Council” Suрp. Brief of Defendants Appellee Governor George E. Pataki at 7, is irrelevant. “We have consistently refused to overlook an unconstitutional restriction upon some First Amendment activity simply because it leaves other First Amendment activity unimpaired.” California Democratic Party v. Jones, — U.S.-,-,
Since the section 6-132(2) witness residence requirement does not bear any relationship to the asserted state interests, we conclude that the statute has no “plainly legitimate sweep” at all, Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
CONCLUSION
We hold that the requirement under Section 6-132(2) of the New York Election Law that witnesses to ballot access designating petitions be residents of the political subdivision in which the office is to be voted violates the First Amendment on its face. We therefore REVERSE the District Court’s judgment and REMAND with instructions to enter judgment consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Notwithstanding this five percent threshold, the statute also provides that for any office that is “to be filled in the city of New York by all the voters of any city council district,” the candidate's designating petition need not contain more than nine hundred signatures. N.Y. Elec. L. § 6-136(2)(c-1) (McKinney 1998).
. D'Agostino is not a party to this appeal.
. While counsel now has appeared on behalf of each of the plaintiffs in this apрeal, the plaintiffs' complaint initially was filed in the District Court pro se. We therefore evaluate the sufficiency of the complaint using the less stringent standard applicable to pro se plaintiffs. See Elliott v. Bronson,
. While Governor Pataki was not a party in Molinari, the plaintiffs maintain that his absence from that case has no bearing upon whether issue preclusion applies here, since the NYS and NYC Boards, which were parties in Molinari, are responsible for enforcement of New York election laws. See N.Y. Elec. L. § 3-104 (McKinney 1998).
.Section 6-137 of the New York Election Law sets forth the framework governing the selection of delegates and alternate delegates in the Democratic and Republican Parties' presidential primary elections for the year 2000. N.Y. Elec. L. § 6-137 (McKinney Supp.2000); see also Molinari v. Powers,
. While opining that Lerman's standing was "very questionable,” the District Court elected not to address the Article III standing question, asserting that "in light of my decision, the standing issue is not terribly compelling here, because I’m deciding the case on the merits, in any event.” Lerman v. Board of Elections, No. CV-99-4901, transcript at 19 (E.D.N.Y. Aug. 31, 1999). However, such an assertion of "hypothetical jurisdiction” — assuming that Article III jurisdiction exists for the purpose of deciding the merits — has been rejected by the Supreme Court. See Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
. At no point has it been suggested that D'Angelo and D'Agostino, who were signatories to candidate Sollazo's designating petition, lack standing under Article III.
. We also note that the obligation to "read the pleadings of a pro se plaintiff liberally and interpret them 'to raise the strongest arguments that they suggest,’" McPherson v. Coombe,
. The NYC Board’s argument also misunderstands the nature of the Articlе III standing inquiry itself, for it appears to conflate the threshold question of Lerman’s standing under Article III — i.e., whether she has alleged an "injury-in-fact” that is fairly traceable to the challenged conduct and redressable by a favorable judicial decision — with the question of whether Lerman has a valid claim on the merits. The two questions, however, are distinct. See Coalition for Sensible & Humane Solutions v. Wamser,
. It is not even clear that Salerno's "no set of circumstances” test articulates an exclusive standard for making facial challenges outside the First Amendment context, as a plurality of the Supreme Court recently has noted:
To the extent we have consistently articulated a clear standard for facial challenges, it is not the Salerno formulation, which has never been the decisive factor in any decision of this Court, including Salerno itself (even though the defendants in that case did not claim that the statute was unconstitutional as applied to them, ... the Court nevertheless entertained their facial challenge).
City of Chicago v. Morales,
. In this context, the NYC Board’s argument that the plaintiffs do not have third party standing to assert Sollazo’s rights as a candidate for office is misplaced. To be sure, were we solely to consider the prudential limitations against third party standing in isolation, we might well conclude that the plaintiffs lack third party standing to assert Sollazo's claims, since there is no indication that Sollazo faces
. Indeed, in the context of the Republican presidential primary, the chairman of the New York State Republican Party conceded that a campaign must collect at least six times the required number of signatures "to ensure survival against post-petition challenges” that almost invariably result from New York’s arcane technical requirements. Molinari,
. Under this requirement, only the first signature given by a voter is considered valid; if the voter subsequently signs the petitions of other candidates, those later signatures are deemed invalid. On the other hand, if both of the voter’s signatures bear the same date, then neither signature is considered valid. See N.Y. Elec. L. § 6-134(3) (McKinney 1998).
. The plaintiffs do not challenge those provisions in section 6-132 that require petition witnesses to be qualified voters in the State of New York and registered members of the party of the candidate for whom they wish to circulate petitions. Since the plaintiffs do not challenge these provisions, we need not resolve their constitutionality. We conclude only that these requirements are more narrowly tailored to the state's interest in ensuring the integrity of the ballot access process than the witness residence requirement. See American Constitutional Law Found.,
. We do not understand the defendants’ argument to refer literally to the direct financial “costs” of holding a primary election, since the expenses associated with holding elections are not borne by district residents alone, but rather constitute "a charge upon the town or city ... [or] village in which such election district is situated.” N.Y. Elec. L. §4-136(1) (McKinney 1998). However, even if district residents were, in fact, somehow directly responsible for the costs of holding a primary election, those expenses only would be incurred after a sufficient number of district residents had themselves indicated their assent by signing the designating petition of an eligible candidate. See Molinari,
