This еase poses an interesting, and readily answerable, constitutional question: can state election officials restrict the right to vote in a new, curative election to those who participated in the original, defective election? The district court found no state interest served by such a limitation, and rejected it as unconstitutional,
I. Factual Background
On June 7, 1994, a nonpartisan primary election was held for three seats on the Warwick School Committee. Voters were permitted to vote for up to two candidates for the three open positions. After the election, as a result of a protest filed by several of the 15 candidates, the Rhode Island Board of Elections ruled that each voter should have been limited to a single vote. The Board also found that there was a probability that the election results would have been different had the correct procedure been used, and it consequently ordered that a new election be conducted. It further ruled that the new election be limited to those' candidates and voters who participated in the original balloting. '
This action followed. 2 The plaintiffs are registered voters in the City of Warwick who were eligible, to vote in ,the first election but did not. They wish to be allowed to vote in the second one. They brought suit on behalf of themselves and all similarly .situated Warwick residents against the Board of Elections, alleging violations of their rights of free speеch, association, equal protection, and due process as guaranteed by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. 3
The district court ruled in their favor, finding that no state interest justified the limitation on ’ voters. The Board now appeals, claiming.that the district court erred in applying the applicable precedent to the circumstances of this case. The Board claims that its restriction on voters imposes a minimal burden on the plaintiffs while serving legitimate and compelling state interests.
Like the district court, and substantially for the reasons it gave, we conclude that the Board’s notion of the applicable constitutional principles is off the mark.
II. Discussion
In its simplest form, this case asks us to decide whether a state may condition the right to vote in one election on whethеr that right was exercised in a preceding election. So stated, the case is hardly worthy of discussion. The right to vote “ ‘is of the most fundamental significance under our constitutional structure,’ ”
Burdick v. Takushi,
— U.S. -, -,
The Board contends that this ease is not that one because the second election here is not a new, independent election, but simply a recreation of the defective primary. It asserts that this distinction renders the right-to-vote easelaw largely inapposite, and that no precedent bars its effort to hold a lawful version of the defective election by restricting participation to the original voters
The Board’s effort to distinguish this ease is flawed in several respects. First, we cannot aсcept the Board’s suggestion that the second election here is free from the requirements of a genuine election because its purpose is simply to replicate a previous event. The original election was defective and invalid, and the Board deemed its results unreliable. The primary objective of the second election therefore must be viewed as identical to that of the original one, to choose through valid procedures the candidates supported by a majority of the eligible voters. To exclude plaintiffs from the second election is to exclude them from the only primary that will determine the candidates for the school committee offices.
Moreover, the goal of reconstructing the original election is, at best, an illusory one. Presumably, some of the voters who voted the first time will be unable, for various reasons, to participate in the new election. Unexpected trips and illnesses, or even death, may intervene. Some voters no longer may be eligible, having moved from the area. In addition; some undetermined number of voters in the original election voted only for the bond issue that was on the ballot, and some of them could be expected to vote this time for the school committee candidates. An identical match of voters is therefore extremely unlikely.
The second flaw is found in the Board’s suggestion that the burden imposed by its action is slight because plaintiffs had ample opportunity to vote in the first election. This is tantamount to a claim that plaintiffs waived thеir right to vote in the second election by failing to vote in the first. However characterized, the contention is wholly without force.
While it is true that plaintiffs knowingly gave up the only opportunity they expected to have to vote in the primary, they did not thereby waive their interest in the outcome of the election. Nor did they demonstrate any willingness to forego a second chance to vote if circumstances should make a curative election necessary. In the absence of any advance warning that failure to vote in the first election would preclude voting in the second, their lack of participation in the original balloting cannot in any respect be viewed as a waiver of the right to vote in the new primary. And, while access to the first election may have been easily achieved, what is before us is the total denial of the right to vote in the only primary with any significance in the school committee race. That burden is undeniably severe, and it is in no way lessened by the past opportunity to vote in an invalid election. 5
Third, and most significantly, the Board is unable to articulate any meaningful interest served by its voter restriction. Of the seven separate interests listed, in its brief,
6
one is facially meritless,
7
and the remainder all rest
With the interest in electoral integrity either inappropriately linked to the original election, or unable to be served as it relates to that election, the only interest in integrity that remains concerns the overall procеss for choosing school committee candidates. The Board’s restriction on voters does not serve this interest.
Once the Board wiped the slate clean by nullifying the first election, what needed to be recreated was the “democratic process” surrounding the selection of school committee candidates, not the particular conditions surrounding the original election.
See Griffin,
The Board’s effort to characterize its order as merely a “time, place and manner” restriction blinks reality. The states’ authority to regulate elections stems from a recognition, embodied in the Constitution, that elections must be structured carefully to ensure that they are fair and honest, and so that “some sort of order, rather than chaos, is to accompany the democratic processes,”
Burdick,
— U.S. at-,
does not extinguish the State’s responsibility to observe the limits established by the First Amendment rights of the State’s citizens. The power to regulate the time, place, and manner of elections does not justify, without more, the abridgement of fundamental rights, such as the right to vote-
Tashjian v. Republican Party of Connecticut,
To put our analysis in traditional right-to-vote terms,
see Burdick,
— U.S. at-,
Although the Board cites numerous cases in support of its position, none involves an equivalent action. The long line of cases upholding ballot access requirements are patently inapplicable, as limiting candidates through reasonable advance requirements provides no justification for the retroactive restriction of the right to vote.
See, e.g., Munro v. Socialist Workers Party,
The Board’s most apposite precedent is a Rhode Island Supreme Court case,
Buonanno v. DiStefano,
The Supreme Court upheld the Board’s order, describing as “ingenious” the Board’s attempt to reconstruct thе election.
Id.
at 771. As the district court in this case noted, however, the Supreme Court made only scant reference to the portion of the Board’s decision limiting the special election to those who previously had voted,
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and, in fact, it appears likely that the petitioner did not challenge that aspect of the Board’s ruling.
Indeed, an earlier Rhode Island case more factually analogous to the present case suggests that the state’s high court views full voter participation as the appropriate procedure when a completely new election is held. In
Whitman v. Mott,
It bears repeating that “[t]he right to vote is one of the most important and cherished constitutional rights,”
Leaks v. Board of Elections of the City of New York,
The judgment of the district court is therefore AFFIRMED.
Notes
.We issued an order affirming the district court's judgment immediately after oral argument in this case on September 16, 1994, notifying the parties that an opinion would follow.
. The curative primary election originally was scheduled for July 19, 1994. After this lawsuit was filed, the Board agreed to reschedule the election to October 4, 1994.
. Plaintiffs also alleged state causes of action, which we, like the district court, need not reach.
. No challenge has been made to the Board’s decision to limit the ballot to those who were candidates in the original primary, and our opinion does not address that issue.
. Nor is the ability to vote in the general election a satisfactory alternative for those voters not allоwed to vote in the primary, as the candidate of their choice may have been excluded in the preliminary election from which they were barred.
. The seven interests are as follows:
(1) preserving the integrity of the electoral process, (2) enhancing confidence of the electors in election results, (3) recreating the election to fashion a remedy that would generate a valid expression оf the will of the voters who participated in the June 7, 1994 originally scheduled election, (4) encourage better voter participation in elections by informing voters that they will only get one opportunity to vote in each election, (5) avoiding the debasement and disillusion of those votes that were cast in the original election which would occur if the election were not recreated as provided in the Board's Decision, (6) not punishing those voters who took the time and made the effort to participate in the original election by diluting their votes, and (7) avoiding the patent unfairness that could result to those candidates and their supporters that seemingly prevailed in the original June 7, 1994 primary.
.We share the district court's view that there is no substance in the assеrted interest in "encour-ag[ing] better participation in elections by informing voters that they will only get one oppor
. It is, of course, well established that states may restrict the voting privilege through residency and other registration requirements. The crucial distinction here is that the plaintiffs have satisfied the state’s standard voting requirements.
. Quoting from
Anderson,
A court considering a challenge to a state election law must weigh “the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the rights protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments that the plaintiff seeks to _ vindicate" against "the precise interests put forward by the State as justifications for the burden imposed by its rule,” taking into consideration "the extent to which those interests make it necessary to burden the plaintiff's rights.”
Under this standard, the rigorousness of our inquiry into the propriety of a state election law depends upon the extent to which a challenged regulation burdens First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Thus, as we have recognized when those rights are subjected to "severe” restrictions, the regulation must be "narrowly drawn to advance a state interest of compelling importance." ... But when a state election law provision imposes only "reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions” upon the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of voters, "the State's important regulatory interests are generally sufficient to justify” the restrictions.
. The Board claims that these cases are relevant in light of the Supreme Court's statement that " ‘the rights of voters and the rights of candidates do not lend themselves to neat separation,”'
Burdick,
- U.S. at -,
. The court recognized that practical difficulties concerning voter turnout are involved in holding a new election, but noted that "[a]t least the new election gave to the voters who had taken the pains to go to the polls a second chance to express their choice about whom they desired to serve in the council at-large positions.” Id. at 771. The court then stated that "[t]he practical difficulties are far outweighed by the value served by this remedy.” Id.
. In Griffin, the district court found that the invalidation of absentee and shut-in ballots in a party primary for a Providence city council seat was unconstitutional. In ordering a new election open to all qualified voters, the court stated:
Although a new election cannot replicate the conditions of the March 29 election, each qualified voter will have a full opportunity to cast a ballot, and to have that ballot counted. The Constitutiоn demands no less, and the Court can do no more.
. Leales also involved a primaiy election that was invalidated. The election board had ordered a new election limited only to those voters eligible to participate in the first election. The Court of Appeals reversed in a brief memorandum decision, ordering that all voters eligible at the time of the special election be allowed to vote.
