The Appellants are the Libertarian Party of Georgia, members of the Libertarian Party who want to run for election to the United States House of Representatives in several Georgia districts, and voters from these districts who intend to vote for the Libertarian Party candidates. The Appellants challenge Georgia’s requirement in O.C.G.A. á 21 — 2—170(b) (Supp.2002) that a candidate from a political body may appear on an election ballot if the candidate obtains signatures in a nominating petition from at least 5% of the registered voters. 1 The main issue in this case is whether this 5% signature requirement creates a new qualification for holding federal office in violation of the Qualifications Clause of the United States Constitution.
After review and oral argument, we agree with the district court that Georgia’s 5% signature requirement in § 21-2-170(b) merely regulates the manner of holding elections and does not impose on candidates, or constitute, a qualification for office in violation of the Qualifications Clause. As the district court aptly found, the signature requirement “imposes no substantive qualification on a class of potential candidates for office; rather, it merely requires that the potential candidate demonstrate a substantial basis of support” from the community. We also conclude that this 5% signature requirement does not violate any other constitutional provision.
DISCUSSION
A. Georgia Election Law
Under Georgia law, a political party is any political organization whose candidate received 20% of the vote cast in the state in the immediately preceding Gubernatorial or Presidential election. O.C.G.A. § 21-2-2(25). A candidate may appear on the election ballot if he or she is nominated in a primary conducted by a political party. O.C.G.A. § 21-2-130(1) (Supp.2002).
However, the name of an independent candidate or a candidate of a political body may appear on the election ballot if he or she submits a nomination petition signed by a specified percentage of voters depending on the type of election being conducted. O.C.G.A. § 21-2-170(a) & (b) (Supp.2002). The Libertarian Party of Georgia concedes that it is classified as a political body for purposes of O.C.G.A. § 21-2-2(23), which means that it is any political organization other than a political party. Where a candidate of a political body is seeking statewide public office, the petition must be signed by a number of voters equal to 1% of the total number of registered voters that were eligible to vote
A nomination petition of a candidate for any [non-statewide] office shall be signed by a number of voters equal to 5 percent of the total number of registered voters eligible to vote in the last election for the filling of the office the candidate is seeking and the signers of such petition shall be registered and eligible to vote in the election at which such candidate seeks to be elected.
O.C.G.A. § 21-2-170(b) (Supp.2002). It is this 5% requirement that Appellants challenge in this case.
Appellants do not challenge the 1% requirement for statewide elections, which requires them to obtain approximately 39,-000 signatures. 2 Instead, Appellants challenge only the 5% requirement for congressional offices, which their complaint alleges requires them to collect approximately 14,846 valid and verifiable signatures of elections in a single Congressional district. Appellants’ complaint asserts that no Libertarian Party candidate has ever been able to petition for ballot access in a Congressional race since 1943. 3
B. Jenness v. Fortson
In support of their challenges to this requirement, Appellants first acknowledge the decision in
Jenness v. Fortson,
After acknowledging
Jenness,
the Appellants argue in this case that Georgia’s new notarization requirement and its new congressional districts have changed the Georgia system so much that
Jenness
no longer applies. We disagree. In upholding the validity of the Georgia system over thirty years ago in
Jenness,
the Supreme Court noted that “Georgia impose[d] no suffocating restrictions whatever upon the
A voter may sign a petition even though he has signed others, and a voter who has signed the petition of a nonparty candidate is free thereafter to participate in a party primary. The signer of a petition is not required to state that he intends to vote for that candidate at the election. A person who has previously voted in a party primary is fully eligible to sign a petition, and so, on the other hand is a person who was not even registered at the time of a previous election.
Id.
at 438-39,
Under the current Georgia system, it is still true that no signature on a nominating petition need be notarized. The new notarization requirement to which the Appellants referred provides that an individual circulating a petition sheet submit a sworn affidavit before a notary public attesting that, among other things, “each signer manually signed his or her own name with full knowledge of the contents of the nomination petition.” O.C.G.A. § 21-2-170(d)(2) (Supp.2002). The notarization requirement places no restriction upon the ability of a voter to sign a petition.
The Appellants’ complaint also alleges that the 5% requirement is no longer acceptable because petitioning experience shows that voters cannot identify correctly their respective congressional districts, especially after reapportionment, thereby requiring petition circulators to acquire surplus signatures. Even accepting Appellants’ allegations, we conclude that, like the notarization requirement, reapportionment hás not imposed any “suffocating restrictions” upon the free circulation of nominating petitions. Reapportionment arguably may lead to some voter confusion and may place an extra burden on candidates to be sure that they have obtained the requisite 5%. Even so, this does not maké the 5% requirement unduly burdensome for independent candidates. In Georgia, as
Jenness
notes, petition cir-culators have ample time to obtain signatures — about six months.
Appellants also stress that no Libertarian Party candidate has ever been able to satisfy the 5% requirement for ballot access. But Jenness directly addressed the 5% figure, stating as follows:
The 5% figure is, to be sure, apparently somewhat higher than the percentage of support required to be shown in many States as a condition for ballot position, but this is balanced by the fact that Georgia has imposed no arbitrary restrictions whatever upon the eligibility of any registered voter to sign as many nominating petitions as he wishes. Georgia in this case has insulated not a single potential voter from the appeal of new political voices within its borders.
Id.
at 442,
The fact is, of course, that from the point of view of one who aspires to elective public office in Georgia, alternative routes are available to getting his name printed on the ballot. He may enter the primary of a political party, or he may circulate nominating petitions either as an independent candidate or under the sponsorship of a political organization. , We cannot see how Georgia has violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by making available these two alternative paths, neither of which can be assumed to be inherently more burdensome than the other.
Id.
at 440-41,
C. Qualifications and Elections Clauses
We -recognize that
Jenness
was premised on the First and Fourteenth Amendments- to the Constitution, not the Qualifications Clause, which is the focus of Appellants’ challenge.
See id.
at 434,
The Qualifications Clause provides that “[n]o Person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the Age of twenty five Years, and been seven Years a Citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 2, cl. 2. States may not impose additional qualifications for election to the House of Representatives beyond those contained in the Qualifications Clause.
Term Limits,
At the same time, under the Elections Clause, States have the authority to regulate “[t]he Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives.” U.S. Const. art. I, § 4, cl. 1. States may enact “numerous requirements as to procedure and safeguards which experience shows are necessary in order to enforce the fundamental right involved.”
Term Limits,
The Supreme Court discussed the Qualifications and Elections Clauses at length in
Term Limits,
where it- invalidated Arkansas’s term-limits amendment, which barred
In
Term Limits,
the Supreme Court did not fashion a precise definition of qualification in answering the petitioners’ argument. The Supreme Court struck down the term-limits amendment using the petitioners’ narrow definition of qualification.
See id.
at 829,
When the district court dismissed the Appellants’ challenge to Georgia’s 5% requirement, it applied a two-part test in evaluating whether the 5% requirement violates the Qualifications Clause. The district court first inquired whether the statute creates an absolute bar to candidates who otherwise would qualify for office. After concluding that it did not, the district court then quoted from
Term Limits
and analyzed whether the statute “has the likely effect of handicapping an otherwise qualified class of candidates and has the sole purpose of creating additional qualifications indirectly.”
Term Limits,
We need not decide whether Term Limits provides an exhaustive definition of qualification applicable to all Qualifications Clauses challenges. Instead, Storer and Term Limits identify certain types of ballot access restrictions that are election procedures and not substantive qualifications, and we conclude that Georgia’s 5% requirement is likewise an election procedure and not a substantive qualification.
For example, in
Storer,
the Supreme Court rejected a challenge to a California Elections Code requirement that independent candidates not be affiliated with a political party one year prior to the preceding primary.
Similarly, in
Term Limits,
the Supreme Court observed that the California Elections Code provision in
Storer
was constitutional because it “regulated election
procedure
[ ] and did not even arguably impose any substantive qualification.”
For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Appellants’ complaint.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Appellants appeal the district court's dismissal of their claim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
. The 39,000 figure is based upon the total number of registered eligible voters in 1998, which was the year of the "last election for the filling of [statewide] offlce[s].” O.C.G.A. § 21-2-170 (Supp.2002).
. The Appellees dispute and refute this allegation, but in our Rule 12(b)(6) posture, we must assume these allegations to be true.
. We also reject as frivolous Appellants' claim that Georgia’s 5% requirement is similar to the challenged provision in
Cook v. Gralike,
"DISREGARDED VOTERS' INSTRUCTION ON TERM LIMITS” be printed on all primary and general ballots adjacent to the name of a Senator or Representative who fails to take any one of eight legislative acts in support of [a term-limits amendment]. [Another section] provides that the statement "DECLINED TO PLEDGE TO SUPPORT TERM LIMITS” be printed on all primary and general election ballots next to the name of every nonincumbent congressional candidate who refuses to take a "Term Limit” pledge that commits the candidate, if elected, to performing the legislative acts [in support of the amendment].
Id.
at 514-15,
