Plaintiffs, a group of prospective political candidates, petition circulators, and voters, appeal from the May 23, 2008, order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Garaufis, J.) awarding summary judgment to the Board of Elections in the City of New York and upholding the State’s “Party Witness Rule” (“the Rule”). The Rule, contained in New York Election Law § 6-132, limits who a candidate for a political party’s nomination can use to circulate so-called “designating petitions,” which allow the candidate to appear on the party’s primary ballot. Unless the circulator is a notary public or commissioner of deeds, the Party Witness Rule restricts designating petition circulators to “enrolled voter[s] of the same political party as the voters qualified to sign the petition,” N.Y. Elec. Law § 6-132(2), the party in whose primary the candidate seeks to run. Because Plaintiffs are without a right to have nonparty members participate in a political party’s nomination process, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
I. Background
New York enacted the Party Witness Rule in the early 1950s, apparently in response to incidents of “party raiding,” whereby members of one party would actively participate in the primary of a rival party in the hope of influencing that party’s candidate nomination and thus improving their own chances in the general election. (See Governor’s Bill Jacket, N.Y. Laws of 1951, Ch. 351, pp. 12-13, Ex. to Pis.’ Mem. of Law in Supp. of Mot. for Summ. J., Dist. Ct. Dk. No. 39.) The Rule operates as a restriction on the class of persons a potential candidate can use to circulate so-called “designating petitions,” which allow the candidate to appear on a party’s primary ballot. 1 Subject to an exception for notaries public and commissioners of deeds, see N.Y. Elec. Law § 6-132(3), the only people allowed to circulate designating petitions are registered voters who are enrolled in the party from which the candidate is seeking nomination, id. at § 6-132(2). 2 These petition circulators are known as “subscribing witnesses.”
Plaintiffs consist principally of two groups. The first, Phillip J. Smallman and John G. Serpico, are former unsuccessful *295 candidates for Civil Court Judge in Kings County. They would like to run again in a party primary but, in connection with this effort, they want to use non-party member subscribing witnesses. These are the “candidate plaintiffs.” The other group, Jemel Johnson, Kenneth Bartholomew, and Lori S. Maslow, are individuals who desire to serve as subscribing witnesses in the run-up to primaries for political parties to which they do not belong. Johnson and Bartholemew have attempted to serve in this capacity in the past, but, because of the Party Witness Rule, the signatures they collected were invalidated. These are the “subscribing witness plaintiffs.” Additionally, in their complaint, Plaintiffs claim that Maslow desires to vote in a party primary election for candidates that have used non-member subscribing witnesses. (Am.Compl.15, ¶ 83, Dist.Ct.Dk. No. 14.)
In the district court, Plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that the Party Witness Rule violated their constitutional rights protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. They requested an injunction preventing the defendant New York City Board of Elections from enforcing the Rule. They claimed that the Rule restrained their ability to speak freely and to associate with others for political purposes and that the notary public exception in § 6-132(2) deprived the subscribing witness plaintiffs of equal protection under the law. Not challenged were New York Election Law §§ 6-140 and 6-142 that allow candidates to secure “independent nominations” to appear on the general election ballot, bypassing the party system entirely. Anyone may serve as a subscribing witness to an independent nomination petition so long as that person is a “duly qualified voter of the State of New York.” Id. § 6-140(l)(b).
Both sides moved for summary judgment and the district court granted judgment for the Board. In so doing, it relied heavily on the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
New York State Board of Elections v. Lopez Torres, 552
U.S. 196,
II. Discussion
The material facts of this case are not in dispute.
3
Instead, the parties raise purely legal questions concerning the scope of the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. We review
de novo
the district court’s resolution of these issues by summary
*296
judgment.
See, e.g., Green Party of Conn. v. Garfield,
All election laws impose at least some burden on the expressive and associational rights protected by the First Amendment.
Burdick v. Takushi,
The Party Witness Rule imposes little or no burden on Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights. Although Plaintiffs claim that the Rule operates as a restraint on political speech, at bottom they assert an associational right to have non-party members participate in party primary elections. Because political parties have a strong associational right to exclude nonmembers from their candidate nomination process, Plaintiffs have no constitutional right pursuant to which such participation may be effected.
The Supreme Court has emphasized—with increasing firmness—that the First Amendment guarantees a political party great leeway in governing its own affairs.
See Lopez Torres,
A political party’s associational right to exclude forecloses the possibility that non-party members have an independent First Amendment right to participate in party affairs.
Id.
at 583-84,
Here, Plaintiffs seek to open the political parties’ candidate nomination process to subscribing witnesses from outside of the parties’ membership. If this claim is based on their own associational rights
(see
Pls.-Appellants’ Br. 35), it fails. The subscribing witness plaintiffs, as non-members, are in no position to assert the parties’ associational rights, and are without any right of their own to exert influence over the nomination process.
See Lopez Torres,
To the extent that Plaintiffs’ claim is based on the candidate plaintiffs’ access to the ballot and voter plaintiffs’ coadúnate right to vote
(see
Pls.-Appellants’ Br. 35^40),
5
it also fails. Ballot access restrictions that unduly “limit the field of candidates from which voters might choose” may be unconstitutional.
Anderson v. Celebrezze,
The candidate plaintiffs in this case have ample access to the ballot both in the primary and general elections. New York Election Law §§ 6-140 and 6-142 provide for independent access to the general election ballot upon collection of a certain number of signatures. In
Lopez Torres,
the Supreme Court considered these very provisions and stated that the ballot access provided by them “easily pass[es] muster” under the relevant precedent.
6
Above all else, Plaintiffs attempt to transform their associational claim into a free speech claim by arguing that the circulation of designating petitions is “interactive political speech” that New York may only restrain subject to strict scrutiny. For support they rely on
Buckley, 525
U.S. at 186-87,
As Plaintiffs have not demonstrated any non-trivial burden to their First Amendment rights, we need not closely analyze New York’s justification for the Party Witness Rule. We only note that the State has a legitimate interest in protecting its political parties from party raiding,
see Rosario,
*299 III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is AFFIRMED. 8
Notes
. In New York, candidates for most party nominations need a certain number of party member signatures to compete in the party primary. See N.Y. Elec. Law § 6-136. It is on the designating petitions that these signatures are collected. Id. § 6-118.
. In relevant part, New York Election Law § 6-132(2) reads: “There shall be appended at the bottom of each sheet [of the designating petition] a signed statement of a witness who is a duly qualified voter of the state and an enrolled voter of the same political party as the voters qualified to sign the petition....”
. Plaintiffs appear to challenge the Party Witness Rule as applied, and the parties do disagree over the admissibility and accuracy of certain affidavits submitted by Plaintiffs. Fully credited, however, these affidavits contain nothing that might affect the outcome of this case, and, therefore, do not give rise to any issue of material fact.
See Holtz v. Rockefeller & Co.,
. Our decision in
Lerman v. Board of Elections,
. In ballot access cases, the Supreme Court has stated that "the rights of voters and the rights of candidates do not lend themselves to neat separation.”
Burdick,
. Neither we nor the Court in
Lopez Torres
have an opportunity to decide whether the requirement contained in § 6-140 that subscribing witnesses be "duly qualified voter[s]” violates potential candidates’ right to free speech.
Cf. Buckley v. Am. Constitutional Law Found., Inc.,
. For example, we would not countenance a claim that a state law legitimately excluding non-members from a political party’s nominating convention restrains core political speech simply because the non-members cannot make political speeches inside the convention hall.
. Although the district court did not address Plaintiffs’ Equal Protection argument, our review is
de novo
and we may affirm based on “any ground appearing in the record.”
Freedom Holdings, Inc. v. Cuomo,
