Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge KAREN LeCRAFT HENDERSON.
Circuit Judge:
David H. Marlin appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics (Board). Marlin brought this action alleging the Board’s enforcement of polling place regulations to prohibit him from wearing a campaign sticker into his polling place on election day violates the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. We agree with the district court that the Board’s enforcement reflects reasonable, viewpoint-neutral regulation of polling place speech and therefore does not violate the First Amendment. *718 Accordingly we affirm the district court’s summary judgment.
I.
The material facts are not in dispute. On September 15, 1998 Marlin, a resident and registered voter of the District of Columbia (District), went to his polling place to vote in a primary election while wearing a campaign sticker in support of mayoral candidate Anthony Williams. When Marlin attempted to turn in his completed ballot, an election worker informed him he “could not cast his ballot while wearing the sticker.” Affidavit of David H. Marlin ¶ 10. After a second election worker accepted Marlin’s ballot, the first worker told Marlin he would not be permitted to vote in the general election if he was wearing “any sticker, button, emblem, or clothing that showed support for a candidate.” Id. After the primary Marlin and his counsel contacted the Board, which told Marlin’s counsel that the District’s election regulations, promulgated by the Board, 1 prohibited voters from wearing political paraphernalia inside a polling place but that, if Marlin insisted on wearing a campaign sticker, he would be permitted to vote curbside at the general election. Marlin wore a sticker and voted curbside on November 3,1998.
Meanwhile, on October 23, 1998 Marlin filed this action in the district court challenging the Board’s enforcement of the regulations. In a memorandum opinion and order filed September 8, 1999 the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Board. Marlin appealed.
II.
Marlin challenges two District election regulations. The first provides:
No partisan or nonpartisan political activity, or any other activity which, in the judgment of the Precinct Captain, may directly or indirectly interfere with the orderly conduct of the election, shall be permitted in, on, or within a reasonable distance outside the building used as a polling or vote counting place.
3 D.C.M.R. § 708.4. The second defines “political activity” to “include without limitation, any activity intended to persuade a person to vote for or against any candidate or measure or to desist from voting.” 3 D.C.M.R. § 708.8. Marlin contends the Board’s enforcement of these regulations to prevent him from wearing a political sticker when voting inside the polling place is an unjustified restriction of his right to free expression under the First Amendment. 2 The district court held that the political activity ban is a reasonable viewpoint-neutral regulation of a non-public forum and therefore does not violate the First Amendment. We agree.
The United States Supreme Court has
identified three types of fora: the traditional public forum, the public forum created by government designation, and the nonpublic forum. Traditional public fora are those places which “by long tradition or by government fiat have been devoted to assembly and debate.” [Perry Educ. Assn. v. Perry Local Educators’ Assn.,460 U.S. 37 , 45,103 S.Ct. 948 ,74 L.Ed.2d 794 (1983)]. Public streets and parks fall into this category. See Hague v. CIO,307 U.S. 496 , 515,59 S.Ct. 954 , 963,83 L.Ed. 1423 (1939). In addition to traditional public fora, a public forum may be created by government designation of a place or channel of communication for use by the public at large for assembly and speech, for use by certain speakers, or for the discussion of certain subjects. Perry Education Assn., supra,460 U.S. at 45 and 46, n. 7, 103 *719 S.Ct. at 955, n. 7. Of course, the government “is not required to indefinitely retain the open character of the facility.” Id. at 46,103 S.Ct. at 955 .
Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund,
The forum here, the interior of a polling place, is neither a traditional public forum nor a government-designated one. It is not available for general public discourse of any sort. The only expressive activity involved is each voter’s communication of his own elective choice and this has long been carried out privately — by secret ballot in a restricted space.
See Burson v. Freeman,
Having concluded that polling places are non-public fora, we further conclude that the Board’s enforcement of the challenged election regulations constitutes reasonable viewpoint-neutral regulation of expression within polling places. In
Burson v. Freeman,
Marlin does not dispute that the regulations, which apply to all political activity, are viewpoint neutral. Nor does he question the validity of the interests identified by the Board, namely protecting “the orderly conduct of elections” by “creating a neutral zone within the polling place, preventing altercations over hot-button issues, intimidation of voters,
eleventh hour
smear campaigns and the like,” Brief of Appellee at 20-21 (emphasis original)— which interests parallel those endorsed in
Burson,
namely protecting “the right of [Tennessee’s] citizens to vote freely for the candidates of them choice” and safeguarding “the right to vote in an election conducted with integrity and reliability,”
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Board is authorized by statute to promulgate regulations governing conduct of elections. See D.C.Code Ann. § 1-1324.
. Although section 708.4 broadly prohibits political activity “in, on, or within a reasonable distance outside” a polling place, Marlin challenges the regulation only as applied, that is, to prevent him from wearing the sticker inside the polling place. In addition, the Board's counsel assured the district court that its policy is to enforce the ban only “inside the polling place.” JA 102.
. Although Marlin argues that public forum analysis does not apply to polling places because they are not "proprietary” to the government,
see
Brief of Appellant at 9-12, Supreme Court precedent establishes that the public forum analysis is appropriate.
See, e.g., Burson v. Freeman,
. The plurality in
Burson
applied the more exacting public forum test because it conclud
*720
ed the area
outside
the polling place was a public forum, noting the Court had characterized as a “quintessential public forum” "those places 'which by long tradition or by government fiat have been devoted to assembly and debate,' such as parks, streets, and sidewalks."
. Marlin attempts to distinguish this case from
Burson
on the ground the challenge there was facial while his is as applied. That a challenge is as applied, however, does not alter the level of scrutiny applied in a nonpublic forum — to wit reasonableness.
See, e.g., United States v. Kokinda,
