Plaintiffs-Appellants appeal from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Charles P. Sifton, Judge), granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint. At issue in this litigation is an amendment to the Charter of the City of *590 New York, entitled Local Law 51, which was passed by the City Council and signed into law by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg on November 3, 2008. It provides that Members of the City Council, the Mayor, Public Advocate, Comptroller and Borough Presidents are eligible to serve a maximum of three consecutive terms in office. It amends sections 1337 and 1338 of the City Charter, which previously provided for a maximum of two consecutive terms for these officials and which were enacted by a city-wide referendum in 1993.
The individual plaintiffs include the current Comptroller and Public Advocate of New York City, several current members of the New York City Council who voted against the legislation at issue in this case, several individuals who are alleged to “have developed concrete plans” to run for City Council seats in the November 2009 election, several individuals who are alleged to have expended time and money in favor of the two public referenda on term limits which are also at issue in this case, and “voters from all walks of life — and all five boroughs of this great City — who ... voted to impose term limits” in these two referenda. The plaintiffs also include three organizations — New York Public Interest Research Group, Inc., U.S. Term Limits and Responsible New York — which were referred to by the District Court as “good-government groups.”
The individual defendants are the current Mayor of New York City, the Speaker of the City Council and the current head of the New York City Board of Elections. The institutional defendants are the New York City Council, the Board of Elections and the City of New York itself.
The gravamen of plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint is that defendants violated federal, State and City law by amending existing term limit legislation enacted by referendum, thereby extending themselves the opportunity to run for an additional term in office. Plaintiffs assert several causes of action, including violations of the United States and New York State Constitutions, the New York Municipal Home Rule Law and the City Charter’s conflict of interest provisions. The District Court dismissed plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint in its entirety on summary judgment.
On appeal, appellants advance four principal arguments. First, they argue that defendants violated their First Amendment rights because City voters will now be less likely to participate in the referendum process, and thus engage in less First Amendment speech, if laws enacted by referenda can be amended by City Council legislation. Second, they argue that defendants violated their substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution because the sole purpose of Local Law 51 is to extend defendants’ own political careers by entrenching incumbents. Third, they argue that defendants violated New York Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b), which they contend requires a mandatory referendum to enact the provisions of Local Law 51. Finally, they argue that defendants violated the City Charter’s conflict of interest provisions by enacting legislation conferring upon themselves a political benefit. Because we hold that the enactment of Local Law 51 did not run afoul of any of these provisions, we affirm the District Court’s judgment.
BACKGROUND
I. New York State’s Referendum Scheme
As a general matter, this case touches upon the City Council’s and Mayor’s authority to enact local laws amending the City Charter. Cities in the State of New *591 York are given broad power to enact local laws, including those amending a city charter, as long as they “relat[e] to its property, affairs or government” and are “not inconsistent with the provisions of th[e] [state] constitution or any general law.” N.Y. Const., Art. IX, § 2; see also N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 10(i )(i)-(ii). This includes local laws relating to “[t]he powers, duties, qualifications, number, mode of selection and removal, terms of office, compensation, hours of work, protection, welfare and safety of its officers and employees.” N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 10GXÜ).
A city may enact such laws by a majority vote of its legislative body and the approval of its mayor, and, in the case of a mayor’s veto, the legislative body may override the mayor’s veto with a two-thirds vote. See id. §§ 20-21. 1 Moreover, sections 36 and 37 of the New York Municipal Home Rule Law allow voters to enact such laws directly by means of a referendum. See id. at §§ 36, 37. Such a referendum may be initiated directly by voters through a process commonly referred to as a voter initiative. See id. § 37. Generally, if qualified voters file with the City Clerk a petition containing a certain number of signatures requesting that a proposed local law amending the City Charter be put to referendum, the proposed local law will appear on the ballot at the next general election. See id. A referendum proposing a local law amending the City Charter may also be initiated by a charter commission. See id. § 36. A charter commission may be created by a voters’ petition, the City Council or the Mayor. See id. § 36(2)-(4).
Notwithstanding these provisions, the New York Court of Appeals has made clear that “[djirect legislation in cities must always rest on some constitutional or statutory grant of power. Government by representation is still the rule. Direct action by the people is the exception.”
McCabe v. Voorhis,
II. 1993 Voter Initiative and 1996 Referendum
In November 1993, City voters put a referendum on the ballot by voter initiative proposing term limits for certain elected City officials, which was ultimately adopted by a vote of more than 59%. It provided:
CHAPTER 50 TERM LIMITS 17
§ 1137. Public Policy. It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the city of New York to limit to not more than eight consecutive years the time elected officials can serve as mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president and council member so that elected representatives are “citizen representatives” who are responsive to the needs of the people and are not career politicians.
§ 1138. Term Limits. Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary contained in this charter, no person shall be eligible to be elected to or serve in the office of mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president or council member if that person had previously held such office for two or more full consecutive terms (including in the case of council member at least one four-year term), unless one full term or more has elapsed since that person last held such office; provided, however, that in calculating the number of consecutive terms a *592 person has served, only terms commencing on or after January 1, 1994 shall be counted.
N.Y. City Charter §§ 1137-38 (N.Y. Legal Publ’g Corp. 2001) (repealed Nov. 3, 2008) (hereinafter, the “1993 Voter Initiative”).
In 1996, the City Council put a referendum on the ballot seeking to increase the term limits applicable to Council Members from two to three consecutive terms (“1996 Referendum”). City voters rejected the 1996 Referendum by a margin of approximately 54% to 46%.
III. 2008 Term Limits Amendment
More than a decade later, on October 2, 2008, Mayor Bloomberg announced that he intended to work with the Speaker of the City Council, Christine C. Quinn, to introduce legislation to extend the City’s term limits set forth in sections 1137 and 1138 of the City Charter from two consecutive terms to three and then seek re-election. The Mayor emphasized that the change in law would allow voters to elect experienced leadership in a time of unprecedented fiscal crisis. Thus, on October 7, 2008, City Council Members, at the Mayor’s request, introduced bill No. 845-A, which, if signed into law, would amend sections 1137 and 1138 of the City Charter to change the term limits from no more than two consecutive terms to no more than three such terms.
Plaintiffs claim that the Mayor was aware of his intentions to ask the City Council to pass legislation extending term limits as early as 2007, 2 but delayed his announcement until October 2008 so that voters could not put the issue of term limits on the ballot through a voter initiative prior to the November 2009 election. Under section 37 of New York Municipal Home Rule Law, if qualified voters were to have filed a petition following the introduction of the bill in October 2008 putting the term limits issue to a referendum, it would appear on the November 2009 election ballot at the earliest. See N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 37(6)-(7). Even if successful, such a voter initiative would not affect those made eligible for reelection in November 2009 as a result of the Mayor’s proposed amendment.
In addition, plaintiffs emphasize the reported discussions between the Mayor and Ronald Lauder. Specifically, The New York Times reported that Mr. Lauder initially vowed to “vigorously oppose” the plan outlined by Mayor Bloomberg, but he “backed down” after the Mayor promised him a seat on a charter commission that the Mayor agreed to convene in 2010 to put the term limits issue back on the ballot for referendum. Michael Barbara & Kareem Fahim, Lauder Opposes Mayor on Permanent Change to Term Limits, N.Y. Times, Oct. 6, 2008, at A21 (available at J.A. 353-54). Plaintiffs claim that this agreement is reflected in the following provision of the bill:
This local law shall take effect immediately and shall apply to elections held on or after the date of its enactment, provided that this local law shall be deemed repealed upon the effective date *593 of a lawful and valid proposal to amend the charter to set term limits at two, rather than three, full consecutive terms, as such terms were in force and effect prior to the enactment of this local law, where such proposal has been submitted for the approval of the qualified electors of the city and approved by a majority of such electors voting thereon.
See S.A. 67-68. Plaintiffs argue that “[t]his alteration of the Term-Limits Bill made clear that the Bill’s true purpose was to afford a third term in office to currently term-limited City officials only; afterward, the voters would decide the term limits applicable to subsequent generations of City officials.” See Brief for Plaintiffs-Appellants William C. Thompson, Jr., et al. (“Brief for Appellants”) at 11. Plaintiffs invoke a New York Times blog post reporting that Mr. Lauder stated, “ T believe very strongly that the mayor should get the extra term and the City Council should get a third term. That is part of the deal. But I never spoke about the first-term council members.’ ” 3 Michael Barbara, Lauder Puts New Hurdle in Mayor’s Path, N.Y. Times City Room, Oct. 21, 2008, http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/10/ 21/lauder-puts-a-new-hurdle-inmayors-path/16 (available at J.A. 360-61).
When the bill was introduced into the City Council, Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum and City Council Members Bill de Blasio and Letitia James, who are plaintiffs and appellants in this action, requested the City’s Conflicts of Interest Board to issue an advisory opinion as to whether Council Members would violate the City Charter’s conflict of interest provisions by voting on the bill. The Board ruled that no violation would occur. It reasoned that the conflict of interest provisions prohibit Members from voting on proposed legislation that would confer a personal benefit, but that an extension of term limits was a public benefit relating to their roles as public officials.
Council Members de Blasio and James subsequently filed a petition in New York State Supreme Court, New York County (Jacqueline W. Silbermann, Justice), seeking a temporary restraining order enjoining Council Members from voting on the bill on the ground that it would violate the City Charter’s conflict of interest provisions. The court denied the petition, holding that no irreparable harm would occur to petitioners because they could, inter alia, abstain from voting on the bill and that “granting the TRO would be an undue interference by one branch of government with another at this stage of the legislative process, and, thus, the matter is not now justiciable.” DeBlasio v. Conflicts of Interest Board of the City of New York, No. 1141289/08 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Oct. 22, 2008) (TRO Hearing).
On October 23, 2008, the City Council voted 29 to 22 to enact Local Law 51, amending the City’s term limits law to three consecutive terms. Of the fifty-one sitting Members who voted on the Bill, thirty-five would have been prohibited from running for reelection under the term *594 limits enacted in 1993. Of those thirty-five Members, twenty-three voted to enact Local Law 51.
Mayor Bloomberg signed the bill into law on November 3, 2008. Local Law 51 provides, in relevant part:
§ 1137. Public policy. It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the city of New York to limit the time elected officials can serve as mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president and council member so that elected representatives are “citizen representatives” who are responsive to the needs of the people and are not career politicians. It is further declared that this policy is most appropriately served by limiting the time such officials can serve to not more than three full consecutive terms.
§ 1138. Term limits. Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary contained in this charter, no person shall be eligible to be elected to or serve in the office of mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president or council member if that person had previously held such office for three or more full consecutive terms, unless one full term or more has elapsed since that person last held such office; provided, however, that in calculating the number of consecutive terms a person has served, only terms commencing on or after January 1,1994 shall be counted.
Local Law No. 51 (Nov. 3, 2008). Immediately prior to signing the bill, Mayor Bloomberg expressed his commitment to convene a charter commission in 2010 to put the term limits issue back on the ballot for referendum.
IV. This Litigation
Plaintiffs commenced this action on November 10, 2008 and filed an Amended Complaint on November 17, 2008. Their Amended Complaint alleges that defendants violated: (1) plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights by amending the 1993 Voter Initiative through City Council legislation, thereby discouraging voters from participating in the referendum process in the future; (2) plaintiffs’ substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment by passing legislation with the sole purpose of extending their own political careers and entrenching incumbents; (3) State and City law mandating a referendum to enact legislation regarding term limits; and (4) the City Charter’s conflict of interest provisions by enacting legislation that enabled certain Members of the City Council and the Mayor to run for reelection and retain positions of seniority, thus conferring personal benefits at public expense. 4
On December 12, 2008, defendants moved to dismiss the Amended Complaint and the parties cross-moved for summary judgment. On January 5, 2009, the District Court heard oral argument. On January 13, 2009, the District Court denied plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and granted summary judgment to defendants, entering judgment shortly thereafter. On January 22, 2009, appellants timely filed a notice of appeal from the District Court’s Memorandum and Order. 5
*595 DISCUSSION
“We review an award of summary judgment
de novo,
and we will uphold the judgment only if the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the party against whom it is entered, demonstrates that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that the judgment was warranted as a matter of law.”
Barfield v. N.Y. City Health & Hosp. Corp.,
I. The First Amendment
In their Amended Complaint, plaintiffs allege that defendants violated their First Amendment rights by enacting Local Law 51. They claim that they as well as other voters in the City will be less likely to participate in the referendum process in the future, and thus engage in less First Amendment speech, if laws enacted by referenda can be amended or repealed by City Council legislation. Applying the First Amendment balancing test first set forth in
Anderson v. Celebrezze,
Here, appellants claim that the District Court used the correct analytical framework but misapplied it. They emphasize that the record contains evidence showing that those who participated in the 1993 and 1996 referenda process have no intention of doing so in the future if the law ultimately enacted and maintained thereby can simply be amended by City Council legislation. In essence, they argue that Local Law 51 “decreases [their speech’s] effectiveness” and, as a result, their speech is chilled. See Brief for Appellants at 22. They contend, moreover, that the “timing [of Local Law 51] exacerbated these already-significant burdens by directly frustrating the timely exercise of New York City voters’ acknowledged right to put the term limits issue to a third citywide vote prior to this November’s election.” See id. at 25. They allege that the sole purpose of Local Law 51 was to “entrench” incumbents and, as such, their First Amendment interests outweigh the interests of the City. See id. at 26-31. Appellees, for their part, claim that the objective of Local Law 51 was to provide the City’s citizens the *596 opportunity to vote for experienced public officials in a time of financial crisis. Appellants contend, however, that Local Law 51 was not necessary to achieve this objective because the Mayor or the City Council could have timely put the issue of term limits to a referendum prior to the November 2009 election. 6 See generally N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 36.
We agree, however, with appellees’ further argument that Local Law 51 does not implicate plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights and, therefore, we need not decide whether the District Court erred in determining that the City’s interests outweighed plaintiffs’ First Amendment interests. No balancing is necessary because plaintiffs do not have a viable First Amendment claim in the first place.
A. Plaintiffs Have Not Identified a Burden on Their First Amendment Rights
The logical starting point is to identify precisely what plaintiffs are claiming it is that violates their First Amendment right to free speech. There is no doubt that New York law permits the City Council to amend a law previously enacted by referendum, as the New York Court of Appeals has so held.
See Caruso v. City of N.Y.,
[T]he laws proposed and enacted by the people under an initiative provision are subject to the same constitutional, statutory and charter limitations as those passed by the Legislature and are entitled to no greater sanctity or dignity. Inasmuch as a legislative body may modify or abolish its predecessor’s acts subject only to its own discretion, it likewise should be able, in the absence of an express regulation or restriction, to amend or repeal an enactment by the electorate, its co-ordinate unit, and vice versa.
Id. at 900 (internal citations omitted). 7
Although we are clearly bound to follow
Caruso
as a matter of New York State law,
see Van Buskirk v. N.Y. Times Co.,
The First Amendment provides that “Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress
of
grievances.” U.S. Const., amend. I. The Fourteenth Amendment makes that prohibition applicable to the State and City of New York.
See Thornhill v. Alabama,
Although it is self-evident that the referendum can serve “[a]s a basic instrument of democratic government,”
City of Eastlake v. Forest City Enters., Inc.,
Nonetheless, as the Supreme Court has recognized, if a state chooses to confer the right of referendum to its citizens, it is “obligated to do so in a manner consistent with the Constitution.”
Meyer,
The Supreme Court, in
Meyer v. Grant
and
Buckley v. American Constitutional
*598
Law Foundation, Inc., 525
U.S. 182,
The circulation of an initiative petition of necessity involves both the expression of a desire for political change and a discussion of the merits of the proposed change. Although a petition circulator may not have to persuade potential signatories that a particular proposal should prevail to capture their signatures, he or she will at least have to persuade them that the matter is one deserving of the public scrutiny and debate that would attend its consideration by the whole electorate. This will in almost every case involve an explanation of the nature of the proposal and why its advocates support it. Thus, the circulation of a petition involves the type of interactive communication concerning political change that is appropriately described as “core political speech.”
Id.
at 421-22,
The Court went on to say that the refusal to permit the plaintiffs to pay petition circulators restricted protected speech in two ways:
First, it limits the number of voices who will convey appellees’ message and the hours they can speak and, therefore, limits the size of the audience they can reach. Second, it makes it less likely that appellees will garner the number of signatures necessary to place the matter on the ballot, thus limiting their ability to make the matter the focus of statewide discussion.
Id.
at 422-23,
In
Buckley,
the Supreme Court held unconstitutional under the First Amendment each of the following three conditions that Colorado placed on the ballot-initiative process: “(1) the requirement that initiative-petition circulators be registered voters; (2) the requirement that they wear an identification badge bearing the[ir] ... name; and (3) the requirement that proponents of an initiative report the names and addresses of all paid circulators and the amount paid to each circulator.”
Both
Meyer
and
Buckley
“involved an unconstitutional regulation of speech that happened to occur in the context of an ... initiative scheme.”
Save Palisade FruitLands,
However, Meyer and Buckley do not guarantee a right to legislate by referendum, much less a right protecting a law enacted by referendum from amendment or repeal by a legislative body. As explained by the Tenth Circuit en banc:
Although the First Amendment protects political speech incident to an initiative campaign, it does not protect the right to make law, by initiative or otherwise .... The distinction is between laws that regulate or restrict the communicative conduct of persons advocating a position in a referendum, which warrant strict scrutiny, and laws that determine the process by which legislation is enacted, which do not.
Id.
at 1099-1100 (citation omitted);
see also Biddulph v. Mortham,
Here, plaintiffs are not in any way restricted from engaging in First Amendment activity as the referenda proponents were in
Meyer
and
Buckley.
In fact, plaintiffs emphasize that they were free to exercise their First Amendment rights in connection with the 1993 and 1996 referenda in an attempt to highlight the time and cost they expended on those efforts. Plaintiffs remain free to do so in connection with referenda or otherwise now and in the future. Plaintiffs’ claim is simply that their First Amendment rights are violated by Local Law 51 because City voters will be less likely in the future to engage in the referendum process if a law enacted by that process can be amended or repealed through City Council legislation.
9
This claim implicates no First Amendment right.
Cf. Smith v. Ark. State Highway
*600
Employees,
We find instructive the Tenth Circuit’s en banc decision in Initiative & Referendum Inst. It addressed whether an amendment to the Utah Constitution authorizing referenda violated the First Amendment by singling out initiatives regarding wildlife management by requiring a supermajority for their adoption. See id. at 1086. The plaintiffs, including six wildlife and animal advocacy groups, argued that by raising the bar for wildlife initiatives, this provision imposed a “chilling effect” on the exercise of their First Amendment rights because it made it more difficult to pass such initiatives. See id. The Tenth Circuit rejected their argument, writing:
Under the Plaintiffs’ theory, every structural feature of government that makes some political outcomes less likely than others — and thereby discourages some speakers from engaging in protected speech — violates the First Amendment. Constitutions and rules of procedure routinely make legislation, and thus advocacy, on certain subjects more difficult by requiring a supermajority vote to enact bills on certain subjects .... [citing examples] These provisions presumably have the “inevitable effect” of reducing the total “quantum of speech” by discouraging advocates of nuclear power plants, general banking laws, or unauthorized state flags from bothering to seek legislation or initiatives embodying their views. Yet if it violates the First Amendment to remove certain issues from the vicissitudes of ordinary democratic politics, constitutions themselves are unconstitutional. Indeed, the Plaintiffs’ theory would have the ironic effect of rendering the relief they seek in this litigation unconstitutional under the First Amendment: if it is unconstitutional to amend the Utah constitution to require a supermajority to approve a wildlife initiative, those who favor such an amendment would be less likely to engage in advocacy in its favor.
No doubt the Plaintiffs are sincere in their many sworn statements that they find the heightened threshold for wildlife initiatives dispiriting, and feel “marginalized” or “silenced” in the wake of Proposition 5. Their constitutional claim begins, however, from a basic misunderstanding. The First Amendment ensures that all points of view may be heard; it does not ensure that all points of view are equally likely to prevail.
Id. at 1100-01 (internal citations omitted).
We believe that the Tenth Circuit’s analysis is sound and equally applicable here. That is, while the plaintiffs in Initiative & Referendum Inst, claimed that their First Amendment rights were chilled because Utah’s super-majority requirement made it more difficult to pass wildlife referenda, plaintiffs here claim that their First *601 Amendment rights are chilled because New York State law puts referenda and City Council legislation on equal footing, permitting the latter to supersede the former (and vice versa). As such, like in Initiative & Referendum Inst., there is no restriction on plaintiffs’ speech.
Other courts have addressed analogous circumstances and come to similar conclusions that reinforce our holding that no First Amendment right is implicated in this ease. For example,
Pony Lake School District 30 v. State Committee for Reorganization of School Districts,
Although plaintiffs primarily rely on Meyer and Buckley to support their position, neither case is applicable to initiative or referendum processes that do not restrict political communication or association. Neither do they apply to legislation which is not intended to regulate these procedures.
[The act] does not impose any restrictions or conditions on plaintiffs’ right to communicate with voters about the political change they seek. Nor does [the act] attempt to regulate the circulation of initiative or referendum petitions. Rather, plaintiffs’ assertion that their right to free speech has been diminished is based entirely upon their claim that unless [the act] is suspended until the referendum vote, the ability of those opposed to [it] to persuade voters to reject it will be more difficult. Plaintiffs’ claim is not based upon any actual restrictions on their right to communicate with voters.
Given the conditions the people of Nebraska have imposed on their power to suspend an act’s operation pending a referendum election, the “difficulty,” as described by plaintiffs, can be avoided only by this court’s expanding the scope of the referendum power itself. As discussed, the U.S. Constitution does not guarantee a right of referendum, and to expand this right would be to ignore the clear and unambiguous procedure set out by the people in article III, § 3, of the state Constitution. This we shall not do.
Id.
(internal citations omitted);
see also Marijuana Policy Project v. United States,
As our Sister Circuits (and the Nebraska Supreme Court) have recognized, plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights are not implicated by referendum schemes
per se
(and certainly not by the City Council’s amendment of a law previously enacted by a referendum), but by the regulation of advocacy within the referenda process,
i.e.,
petition circulating, discourse and all other protected forms of advocacy. Even if plaintiffs are correct that the enactment of Local Law 51 will make it more difficult for plaintiffs to organize voter initiatives and referenda in the future, “the difficulty of the process alone is insufficient to implicate the First Amendment, as long as the communication of ideas associated with the [referendum process] is not affected.”
Dobrovolny v. Moore,
Here, no such effect exists. Nothing is preventing plaintiffs from engaging in First Amendment speech regarding term limits, whether within the referendum context or not. While we appreciate the practical reality that City voters will not be able to stop certain elected officials from seeking a third term in office through a voter initiative because the process would take until at least the November 2009 election,
see supra
p. 592, this temporal fact does not amount to a First Amendment violation.
See, e.g., Save Palisade Fruit-Lands v. Todd,
B. Balancing Under Anderson v. Celebrezze is Unnecessary
Appellants argue, however, that Local Law 51 is entitled to First Amendment scrutiny under
Anderson v. Celebrezze,
To clarify this point, it is necessary to briefly discuss
Anderson,
its progeny and the cases cited by appellants in their briefs. In
Anderson,
the Supreme Court addressed the First Amendment validity of Ohio’s early filing deadline, which required an independent candidate for the President of the United States to file his or her paperwork by March 20 in order to be on the general election ballot for November 1980.
See
Constitutional challenges to specific provisions of a State’s election laws ... cannot be resolved by any “litmus-paper test” that will separate valid from invalid restrictions. Instead, a court must resolve such a challenge by an analytical process that parallels its work in ordinary litigation. It must first consider the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the rights protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments that the plaintiff seeks to vindicate. It then must identify and evaluate the precise interests put forward by the State as justifications for the burden imposed by its rule. In passing judgment,, the Court must not only determine the legitimacy and strength of each of those interests, it also must consider the extent to which those interests make it necessary to burden the plaintiffs rights. Only after weighing all these factors is the reviewing court in a position to decide whether the challenged provision is unconstitutional.
Id.
at 789,
A burden that falls unequally on new or small political parties or on independent candidates impinges, by its very nature, on associational choices protected by the First Amendment. It discriminates against those candidates and — of particular importance — against those voters whose political preferences lie outside the existing political parties. By limiting the opportunities of independent-minded voters to associate in the electoral arena to enhance their political effectiveness as a group, such restrictions threaten to reduce diversity and competition in the marketplace of ideas. Historically political figures outside the two major parties have been fertile sources of new ideas and new programs; many of their challenges to the status quo have in time made their way into the political mainstream. In short, the primary values protected by the First Amendment — “a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open” — are served when election campaigns are not monopolized by the existing political parties.... The Ohio filing deadline challenged in this case does more than burden the associational rights of independent voters and candidates. It places a significant state-imposed restriction on a nationwide electoral process.
Id.
at 794-95,
We recently had occasion to apply the
Anderson
balancing test in
Price v. New York State Board of Elections,
In an attempt to convince us to apply the
Anderson
balancing test to Local Law 51, appellants seize on our recent reaffirmation that “[ajll election laws will invariably impose some burden upon individual voters.”
Price,
Finally, in footnote five of their Brief and throughout their Reply Brief, appellants argue that their First Amendment rights are violated because the extension of term limits “burdens both voters in their ability to effectively support would-be challengers to entrenched incumbents and challengers in their ability to mount effective campaigns.” Brief for Appellants at 24 n. 5. Thus, in order to trigger First Amendment scrutiny, appellants argue that Local Law 51 affects the “eligibility of candidates.” Reply Brief for Plaintiffs-Appellants William C. Thompson, Jr.,
et al.
(“Reply Brief for Appellants”) at 5 (citing
Anderson,
Notwithstanding appellants’ protestations to the contrary, this argument necessarily focuses on the substantive impact that the extension of term limits has on the political landscape.
See
Reply Brief for Appellants at 5 (“As a matter of law, the Term-Limits Amendment, by regulating eligibility requirements for office, necessarily burdens First Amendment activity to at least some degree.”). But they ultimately concede, and the law is clear, that they have no First Amendment right to term limits.
See id.
at 5.
Cf. U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton,
Faced with these insurmountable problems, appellants quickly switch gears and argue that the First Amendment “burdens [do not] flow[ ] from the substance of the Term-Limits Amendment itself. Rather, they are all the direct result of the process by which that law was enacted and, more specifically, of [defendants’] calculated disregard for the voice of City voters.” See Reply Brief for Appellants at 7. In particular, they argue, defendants’ “eleventh-hour undoing of the 1993 and 1996 Referenda has discouraged referenda-related speech, impaired its future effectiveness, and directly frustrated the present exercise of New York City voters’ acknowledged right to put the term-limits issue to a third citywide vote.” Id. Thus, appellants transform the very essence of their claim as they arrive at different junctures of the First Amendment analysis.
We are not persuaded by these efforts. At bottom, plaintiffs challenge New York’s
*606
equal treatment of law enacted by referendum and law enacted by a legislative body. Such a scheme, however, does not run afoul of the First Amendment.
11
Any chilling of plaintiffs’ First Amendment activity is self-imposed and thus “incidental ] and constitutionally insignificant.”
Cohen v. Cowles Media Co.,
II. Substantive Due Process
Appellants argue next that Local Law 51 violates their substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Specifically, they argue that because the purpose of Local Law 51 was an “incumbency re-employment program” to allow “those in power to have the opportunity to remain in power,” rational-basis review is not applicable. See Brief for Appellants at 36, 38, 40.
The law in this Circuit is clear that “[w]here, as here, a statute neither interferes with a fundamental right nor singles out a suspect classification, ‘we will invalidate [that statute] on substantive due process grounds only when a plaintiff can demonstrate that there is no rational relationship between the legislation and a legitimate legislative purpose.’ ”
Maloney v. Cuomo,
To avoid rationality review, appellants argue that it “is deeply inappropriate for legislation that threatens to distort or manipulate regular democratic processes, such as ‘when [incumbent] state legislators are passing laws dealing with their own reelection prospects.’ ”
See
Brief for Appellants at 36 (alteration in original). For this proposition, they rely on a dissenting opinion from the Fourth Circuit’s denial of a petition for rehearing
en banc, see Miller v. Cunningham,
*607
Although we need not heed a dissent from the Fourth Circuit’s denial of a petition for rehearing
en banc,
we have satisfied ourselves that it is irrelevant to this appeal. In his dissent, Judge Wilkinson addresses a Virginia election law entitling an incumbent state legislator to select the method of nomination for his own seat, to which he was himself eligible to seek reelection.
See Miller,
[TJhere is certainly nothing unconstitutional per se about incumbents shaping the electoral process to their advantage. This is merely a feature of American politics. The Framers were surely aware of the desire of those who hold elective office to retain elective office, yet they were clearly comfortable giving incumbents the authority to write election law. Judicial intervention into the electoral process, merely for the purpose of rooting out self-interested political behavior, would therefore be a[ ] “substantial” incursion into textually and traditionally legislative prerogatives.
Id. at 102.
The First Circuit opinion in
Bonas
is equally unhelpful to plaintiffs, as it involves nothing more than the interpretation of state election law. In
Bonas,
the voters of North Smithfield, Rhode Island passed a 1998 referendum switching municipal elections from odd-numbered to even-numbered years starting in the year 2002.
See
Here, our evaluation of whether such widespread disenfranchisement has occurred starts — and ends — with a question of state law: Do state and local rules mandate an election in North Smithfield for the offices of town council and school committee in the fall of 2001? [If] such an election is required ... the Town’s refusal to hold it would work a total and complete disenfranchisement of the electorate, and therefore would constitute a violation of due process (in addition to being a violation of state law).
Id. at 75. The court ultimately concluded that “the language of the referendum requires that the odd-year election cycle continue undisturbed until the year 2002.” Id. at 77. Thus, Bonas holds only that incumbents cannot sua sponte do away with an election when state law mandates it. This has nothing to do with the issues presented on this appeal.
Let us be clear. It is indisputable that, as a result of Local Law 51, several Mem *608 bers of the City Council who voted for it and were ineligible to run for reelection under the previous term limits law will now be able to seek reelection in the City’s November 2009 election. Some, perhaps even many, of these incumbents may be elected to a third term. Nevertheless, Local Law 51 neither interferes with a fundamental right nor singles out a suspect classification. Accordingly, it is subject to rationality review.
Here, the City’s purported reason for enacting Local Law 51 is to provide the voters with an opportunity to elect experienced public officials in a time of financial crisis. It is beyond dispute that extending New York City’s term limits to three consecutive terms is rationally related to that legitimate objective. The fact that defendants also may have been motivated by political reasons — the desire to remain in office and in positions of seniority — is inconsequential under our substantive due process analysis.
See Beatie,
Finally, plaintiffs make much of the fact that the Mayor and various Council Members have stated that they intend to put the issue of term limits to referendum after the next election cycle in an effort to return the law to a maximum of two consecutive terms. Plaintiffs state that this “one time only deal” violates due process. However, Local Law 51 does not contain a sunset provision; rather, it states that it:
shall be deemed repealed upon the effective date of a lawful and valid proposal to amend the charter to set term limits at two, rather than three, full consecutive terms, as such limits were in force and effect prior to the enactment of this local law, where such proposal has been submitted for the approval of the qualified electors of the city and approved by the majority of such electors voting thereon.
See
S.A. 67-68. Of course, the fact that this law may be repealed by a referendum makes it no different than any other law amending the City Charter. We fully agree with the District Court’s statement that terming Local Law 51 a “one-time only” measure “does not change [the Due Process] analysis.”
Molinari v. Bloom-berg,
In conclusion, Local Law 51 does not violate plaintiffs’ substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
III. New York State Referendum Law
Plaintiffs argued before the District Court that under Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b), (e) and (f), the substance of Local Law 51 could be enacted only by referendum. These subsections provide, in relevant part:
Except as otherwise provided by or under authority of a state statute, a local law shall be subject to mandatory referendum if it:
b. In the case of a city, town or village, changes the membership or composition of the legislative body or increases or decreases the number of votes which any member is entitled to cast.
e. Abolishes an elective office, or changes the method of nominating, electing or removing an elective officer, or changes the term of an elective office, *609 or reduces the salary of an elective officer during his term of office,
f. Abolishes, transfers or curtails any power of an elective officer ....
N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 23(2) (emphasis added). Plaintiffs advanced this challenge under the parallel provisions of the New York City Charter as well. 14
On appeal, however, appellants have abandoned their arguments with respect to subdivisions (e) and (f), as well as New York City Charter § 38,
15
and argue here only that Local Law 51 “changes the membership ... of the legislative body,” as provided under Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b).
16
As noted at the outset, the New York Court of Appeals has made clear that local governments have broad power to enact local laws, and direct democracy in New York is the exception, not the rule.
See McCabe v. Voorhis,
*610 Appellants argue that Local Law 51 “changes the membership of’ the City Council because it will inevitably result in the reelection of many incumbents in November 2009 who were ineligible to seek reelection under the previous term limit law. The parties do not dispute that the incumbent reelection rate in New York City is approximately 98%. Appellees offer two responses to this argument. First, they contend that the phrase “membership” refers to structural changes in the legislative body, not changes in the identity of the individuals who constitute it. For example, they claim that an increase or decrease in the number of seats in the City Council would constitute a “change[]” in “membership.” Second, they argue that the law in question must directly cause the “ehange[ ] in membership” to trigger section 23(2)(b). They contend that Local Law 51 merely permits certain incumbents to run for reelection who were term limited under the previous law, but it is the voters who will cause the “change[]” in “membership” by voting for particular candidates in the November 2009 election. New York State’s jurisprudence in this area makes clear that appellees are correct in both respects.
There is no case law interpreting Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b), which went into effect on January 1, 1964. There is case law, however, interpreting its predecessor, City Home Rule Law § 15(1), which provided, in relevant part, “Except as otherwise provided by or under authority of an act of the legislature, a local law shall be subject to mandatory referendum if it ... [cjhanges the form or composition of the local legislative body....” N.Y. City Home Rule Law § 15(1) (repealed Jan. 1, 1964) (McKinney’s 1952) (emphasis added). The only notable difference between City Home Rule Law § 15 and Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b) is that the former uses the word “form” where the latter uses “membership.”
It is clear, however, that the New York State Legislature did not intend to make a substantive change in the meaning of the provision by virtue of this revision. The passage of New York Municipal Home Rule Law in 1964 consolidated several separate statutes that defined the powers of different types of municipalities. Specifically, it replaced “the City Home Rule Law, the Village Home Rule Law, articles 6 and 6A of the County Law (containing general grants of local law powers to counties) and §§ 51-a though 51-f of the Town Law (containing general grants of local law powers to suburban towns).” N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 58 (note). The New York Office for Local Government was assigned the task of drafting the Municipal Home Rule Law. Its stated purpose in drafting the law was to “assure uniformity” in governance among the various types of municipalities and to make it “easier to effectuate” “future amendments and revisions of law ... since only one law would have to be amended rather than four.” See Purpose and Scope of Mun. Home Rule Law, Memorandum of N.Y. Office for Local Gov’t, reprinted in 35C McKinney’s Consol. Laws of N.Y., at XI, XIII-XIV (1994); see also Analysis of the Mun. Home Rule Law, Memorandum of N.Y. Office for Local Gov’t (enacted by L.1963, c. 843), reprinted in 35C McKinney’s Con-sol. Laws of NY, at XV-XXIII (1994).
Furthermore, the Municipal Home Rule Law states that it was not intended:
to abolish or curtail any rights, privileges, powers or jurisdiction heretofore conferred upon or delegated to any local government or to any board, body or officer thereof, unless a contrary intention is clearly manifest from the express provisions of this chapter or by necessary intendment therefrom, or to re *611 strict the powers of the legislature to pass laws regulating matters other than the property, affairs or government of local governments as distinguished from matters relating to their property, affairs or government.
N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 50(3).
With particular' respect to section 23 of the Municipal Home Rule Law, New York’s Office for Local Government stated:
Section 23 is based on City Home Rule Law, section 15, with some clarification in the first subdivision----With respect to matters subject to mandatory referendum, the subjects are as they appear in the City Home Rule Law provision, except that changes are made to adjust the section to the fact that it also applies to counties, towns and villages.
Analysis of the Mun. Home Rule Law, 35C McKinney’s Consol. Laws of N.Y., at XXI; see also Home Rule Handbook, N.Y. Office for Local Gov’t, Memorandum, Constitutional Amendment Re Home Rule and Related Legislation, May 1963, at J.A. 813-15 (“The procedure for adoption of local laws, the specification of types of local laws subject to referenda (mandatory or permissive), the restriction and prohibitions against the adoption of local laws would be substantially as they now are in the City Home Rule Law.”).
We conclude, therefore, that the New York State Legislature did not intend a substantive change by replacing the word “form” as used in section 15 of the City Home Rule Law with “membership” as used in section 23(2)(b) of the Municipal Home Rule Law.
See, e.g., In re Estate of Horchler,
It necessarily follows that case law interpreting the former is persuasive as to the proper interpretation of the latter. These cases demonstrate that a law that has the effect of changing
who
constitutes a legislative body, as plaintiffs allege Local Law 51 will do, does not “change[ ] the form or composition of the legislative body.” In
Neils v. City of Yonkers,
In
Mehiel v. County Board of Legislators,
We find Neils and Mehiel especially instructive because redistricting has as much potential to change the individual members of a legislative body as does a change in term limits. Nevertheless, both courts decided that redistricting does not “change[ ] the form or composition” of the relevant body. This ease law leads us to conclude that Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b) refers to structural changes, and not changes in the identity of the individual members who comprise the legislative body.
We also find persuasive the District Court’s discussion of the term “membership” as used in the Optional County Government Law, a New York State statute enacted around the same time as the Municipal Home Rule Law. This statute, enacted in 1961 but since repealed, provided in relevant part:
If such city elects to withdraw from the jurisdiction of its civil service commission and adopt the county civil service administration, the membership of the county civil service commission shall, on the date on which such change of form of administration by the city becomes effective, be increased to five members, all of whom shall be appointed by the county manager, and not more than three of whom shall at the same time be adherents of the same political party.
Chapter 565 (the Optional County Government Law § 1008) (1961), reprinted in Laws of N.Y., 184th Session, 1961, Vol. 2, at 1787 (emphasis added). As aptly noted by the District Court:
It is unlikely that the legislature radically revised its understanding of the term “membership” between 1961 and 1963. Hence, the 1963 legislature, which passed the Municipal Home Rule Law, conceived of the term “membership” as referring to structural characteristics, including the number of persons in the legislative body.
Molinari v. Bloomberg,
We also find persuasive the relatively recent New York Court of Appeals decision in
Mayor of City of New York v. Council of City of New York,
The Court rejected the Mayor’s challenge, reasoning:
The requirement of a referendum for legislation that “curtails any power of an elective officer” must be read as applying only to legislation that impairs a power conferred on the officer as part of the framework of local government. For example, a local law limiting the *613 power of New York City’s Mayor to appoint commissioners, or to prepare a budget, or to create or abolish positions within his executive office would require a referendum (see NY. City Charter §§ 6, 8[f]; § 225[a]). But, as a general rule, a law that merely regulates the operations of city government, in collective bargaining or in some other area, is not a curtailment of an officer’s power.
So here, the Mayor’s power in the New York City governmental structure is unimpaired. A local law prescribing a procedural rule for collective bargaining is not an encroachment on the May- or’s role in City government. The limitation on his freedom to act is merely a consequence of legislative policymaking. By contrast, the cases the Mayor relies on all involved limitations on an elected officer’s structural authority.
Id. at 711 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added). Thus, the New York Court of Appeal’s analysis clearly emphasizes Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)’s concern with structural changes made by law, as opposed to an incidental consequence of a law.
Based on these authorities, we agree with appellees that the term “membership” as used in Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b) refers to the structural characteristics of the legislative body. A structural change to the “membership” might occur, for example, where a law directly increases or decreases the number of seats in the legislative body. 17 Local Law 51, however, affects only an incumbent’s eligibility to seek reelection.
Even assuming,
arguendo,
that the term “membership” as used in the statute refers to the specific individuals constituting a legislative body, as appellants suggest, Local Law 51 does not trigger Municipal Home Rule Law § 22(2)(b) because it does not directly change the membership; rather, the election results in November 2009 will cause this change.
See Lane v. Johnson,
In Lane, the Village of Peekskill, which was part of the Town of Cortlandt, decided to form its own city, the City of Peekskill. It drafted a charter with that effect, which provided, inter alia, for the election of two supervisors who were defined thereunder as “City officers.” See id. at 710-11. Under New York law at the time, “[t]he supervisors of the cities ... in each county, when lawfully convened, [were also] the board of supervisors of the county.” See *614 id. at 711 (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, when the two supervisors were elected as Peekskill “City officers,” they also became members of the Board of Supervisors of the county, thereby increasing the number of supervisors on the county Board. See id. The plaintiffs argued that the Peekskill charter violated New York law prohibiting any law “which ... changes the form or composition of the elective body of such county ... without adoption by the electors of such county....” See id. The Court of Appeals rejected the argument, writing:
[The City of Peeskill] has not by the special or local law ... changed in any manner any provision of law which fixes the form of county government of Westchester or the form or composition of any elective body. It has merely exercised its power to incorporate a city[;] and by force of the provisions of the general law which determines the form or composition of the Board of Supervisors, city officers become members of the Board of Supervisors and thus the number of members of the Board of Supervisors is increased.
Id. at 712.
As in Lane, Local Law 51 is not what works the change in the membership of the City Council. Rather, any effect caused by Local Law 51, although real, is indirect. The change will be caused by the November 2009 election results. Local Law 51 affects only certain candidates’ eligibility to seek reeleetion. It is of no moment that a number of formerly term-limited Council members will likely — indeed, almost certainly — win reeleetion because of the opportunity afforded them by Local Law 51. The City’s argument in this regard appears to us to be unassailable: “If merely changing the likelihood that particular individuals will serve in the future constitutes ‘changing’ the Council’s membership or composition, then a host of other legislation with similar spillover effects — campaign finance changes, for one example — would also need voter approval.” Brief for Defendants-Appellees Michael R. Bloomberg, et al. at 4. This conclusion is consistent not only with Lane but also with the redistricting decisions in Neils and Mehiel. Clearly redistricting is likely to have the ultimate effect of changing who will run and sit in a legislative body, but New York courts have held it does not require a referendum.
For all the reasons discussed, we hold that section 23(2)(b) of New York Municipal Home Rule Law does not require a referendum to enact Local Law 51. We decline appellants’ invitation to certify the interpretation of this provision to the New York Court of Appeals. “Despite our discretionary authority to certify, certification is an exceptional procedure, to which we resort only in appropriate circumstances.”
McGrath v. Toys “R” Us, Inc.,
.These circumstances are not present here. We are confident as to how the New York Court of Appeals would rule on this issue in light of the presumption of representative democracy in New York, the plain meaning of the statute, its legislative history, the holdings in Neils and Mehiel, the meaning of the term “membership” as used in the Optional County Government Law § 1008 and the New York Court of *615 Appeals decisions in Mayor of City of New York v. Council of City of New York and Lane v. Johnson. Conversely, there is a complete absence of authority suggesting that the New York Court of Appeals would hold that section 23(2)(b) is triggered by Local Law 51. 18 Accordingly, we perceive no benefit from certifying this question to the New York Court of Appeals because we are in a position to conclude with sufficient certainty what it would hold. That is, New York Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b) does not require a referendum to enact Local Law 51.
IV. Conñict of Interest
Finally, plaintiffs allege that defendants violated the conflicts of interest provisions set forth in Chapter 68 of the City Charter, § 2604(b)(2), (3), as well as Conflicts Board Rule l-13(d) (“Rule l-13(d)”).
The provisions provide, in relevant part:
2. No public servant shall engage in any business, transaction or private employment, or have any financial or other private interest, direct or indirect, which is in conflict with the proper discharge of his or her official duties.
3. No public servant shall use or attempt to use his or her position as a public servant to obtain any financial gain, contract, license, privilege or other private or personal advantage, direct or indirect, for the public servant or any person or firm associated with the public servant.
City Charter § 2604(b)(2)-(3) (N.Y. Legal Publ’g Corp.2001). Rule 1 — 13(d) provides that “[i]t shall be a violation of City Charter § 2604(b)(2) for a public servant to intentionally or knowingly! ] ... aid, induce or cause another public servant to engage in conduct that violates any provision of City Charter § 2604.” N.Y. Board of Conflicts Rule 1 — 13(d), available at http://www.nyc.gov/html/conflicts/ downloads/pdf3/Rules% 20Amendments% 20by% 20Rule% 20Number/l_13.pdf.
Prior to voting on Local Law 51, Council Members de Blasio and James and Public Advocate Gotbaum filed an inquiry with the City of New York Conflicts of Interest Board (the “Board”), requesting an advisory opinion as to whether Council Members and the Public Advocate would violate these provisions by voting on the bill. On October 15, 2008, the Board issued Adviso *616 ry Opinion No.2008-3 (“Advisory Opinion”), holding that Members of the City Council would not violate the conflict rules by voting on Local Law 51. Specifically, it held:
[I]t is the Board’s view that their official actions in participating in a legislative process that might yield them this arguable benefit [of an extra term] would not confer upon them any “private or personal advantage” within the meaning of Charter Section 2604(b)(3), nor would it constitute a “private interest” in conflict with the proper discharge of their official duties in violation of Charter Section 2604(b)(2).
Id.
at 773. The Board concluded that “it is squarely
within
the proper discharge of Council Members’ official duties as legislators (and, in Ms. Gotbaum’s case, as an elected official whose duties include presiding over the Council) for them to vote upon, and otherwise participate in the legislative process regarding, a bill lawfully pending before the Council.”
Id.
It wrote, “while term-limited elected officials may have a personal political interest in the Bill’s outcome, that interest does not fall within the ‘definable and crucial subset’ of Chapter 68 that would disqualify them from participating in consideration and possible enactment of the proposed legislation.”
Id.
The Board also cited
Golden v. New York City Council,
Displeased with the Board’s conclusions, plaintiffs assert three causes of action in their Amended Complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that defendants violated City Charter § 2604(b)(2) and (3) and Rule l-13(d) by proposing and/or voting upon Local Law 51, and that the Law is therefore invalid. They allege that defendants violated the conflict provisions by voting on legislation that resulted in pecuniary benefits, including six-figure salaries, substantial benefits package and additional annual financial allowances. They also allege that defendants will gain an “increase in the political cache wrought by additional years spent in the public eye, which unquestionably serves to increase future political and employment prospects for these public servants.” See id. at 111, 112 (Pis. Am.Complt.1ffl 317, 322). With respect to Mayor Bloomberg, plaintiffs allege that “[t]he Mayor’s political dealings to guarantee the passage and enactment of the Term-Limits Amendment, including, but not limited to, his deal with Ronald Lauder and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, also involved the use of his position to confer upon himself other direct and indirect forms of ‘financial gain’ and ‘private or personal advantage.’.” Id. at 112 (Pls.Am. Complt-¶ 323).
The District Court held that a private right of action existed under Chapter 68 of the Charter, but dismissed plaintiffs’ claims essentially for the reasons stated by
*617
the Board in its Advisory Opinion.
See Molinari v. Bloomberg,
Assuming, without deciding, that a private right of action exists under Chapter 68 of the City Charter, we hold that the District Court properly dismissed plaintiffs’ claims under City Charter § 2604(b)(2) and (3) and Rule l-13(d). First, we note that the District Court properly deferred to the Board’s conclusions.
See DiLucia v. Mandelker,
The cases and Board opinions cited by appellants make this clear. In each one, the interest served by the public servant’s official actions resulting in a conflict was a personal, private interest, not an interest in the terms and conditions of his or her public office. 19 Appellants rely heavily upon Advisory Opinion, 95-24 (Oct. 30, 1995), but that opinion is inapposite. It *618 advises only that Council Members may use City employees and resources in conducting non-partisan voter registration drives, as long as no partisan political activity is conducted during the drives which would promote the interests of a particular Council Member, elected official or candidate for elective office. The Board opined that “if the voter registration drives were to be used to promote the political campaign of Council Members or others, it would constitute a conflict of interest for the Council Members to ask their aides to participate in such drives.... ” J.A. 619.
Appellants cite this opinion for the proposition that City Council Members can violate the City Charter’s conflict of interest provisions when engaging in purely political activity. As is clear, this opinion relates to the use of public monies for private campaigns and has nothing at all to do with the present case.
Plaintiffs stress that Local Law 51 is particularly egregious because it provides a one-time benefit to those who voted for it. However, as noted supra, Local Law 51 does not contain a sunset provision; it merely states that it can be repealed by a subsequent referendum.
Finally, plaintiffs rehash their allegations regarding Mayor Bloomberg’s communications with Mr. Lauder. However, as the District Court stated, even if these allegations were true, they would not establish a violation of Chapter 68. “The Mayor’s alleged ‘benefit’ was a former opponent’s support for a piece of legislation, not a personal or financial reward in his private capacity.”
Molinari,
Accordingly, the District Court properly dismissed plaintiffs’ claims under City law alleging that defendants had a conflict of interest in violation of sections 2604(b)(2) and (3) of the City Charter and Rule 1-13(d).
CONCLUSION
Local Law 51 has no doubt stirred controversy. Some feel that it disregards the will of the people as expressed by the 1993 Voter Initiative and 1996 Referendum. That may be a justifiable reaction. But it is not the role of this Court to interject itself into city politics. We shall only adjudicate the constitutional and legal claims properly before us, which we have analyzed exhaustively.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the District Court’s judgment granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint.
Notes
. There is one exception at issue here, which will be discussed in Part III of this Opinion, namely, New York Municipal Home Rule Law § 23, which sets forth certain types of local laws that are "subject to mandatory referendum,” N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 23, including those that "change[ ] the membership ... of the legislative body,” see id. § 23(2)(b).
. Plaintiffs point to a New York Times article, which reports that the Mayor’s "unofficial emissaries’’ “began approaching” term-limits proponent and "Millionaire” Ronald Lauder two years ago "to persuade him not to fight a one-time extension of term limits.” Sam Roberts & Eric Konigsberg, Enigmatic Billionaire Is Drawn Back to the Term Limits Fray, N.Y. Times, Oct. 9, 2008, at A1 (available at J.A. 281-83). They also cite a New York Post report indicating that the Mayor’s staff conducted polling no later than the beginning of June 2008 to explore whether voters would support a change to the City’s term limits, which showed "little sentiment” among voters for such a change. David Seifman, Mike’s Poll Sizing Up “3rd Term”, N.Y. Post, June 4, 2008, at 11 (available at J.A. 790).
. Plaintiffs make many allegations about the supposed apostasy of Ronald Lauder's support for Local Law 51 in light of his former support for term limits in New York City, which took the form of large cash contributions to the pro-term limits position in the 1993 and 1996 referenda. Mr. Lauder is said to have "struck a deal” with Mayor Bloom-berg pursuant to which he changed his position in return for the Mayor’s promise to name him to the city commission which would seek to place the term limits issue on the ballot in 2010. But we think it important to note that Mr. Lauder is a private citizen who is free to change his political positions as he wishes. There is no allegation that he performed any illegal act and he is not a party to this action.
. Plaintiffs also asserted claims under the provision of the New York State Constitution that is analogous to the First Amendment. The District Court held that these claims failed for the same reasons that plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims were subject to summary judgment. Although appellants do not appear to have made a direct statement that they have abandoned their state constitutional claims on this appeal, we agree with the appellees that they have in fact done so. The argument will therefore be treated by this Court as having been waived.
. On January 16, 2009, the City filed its request for administrative pre-clearance pursuant to section 5 of the Voting Rights Act with
*595
the Department of Justice ("DOJ”).
See
42 U.S.C. § 1973c; 28 C.F.R. § 51.1
et seq.
On March 17, 2009, the DOJ issued its pre-clearance letter, stating that it "does not interpose any objection to the specified changes [in Local Law 51,]" but its failure to object "does not bar subsequent litigation to enjoin the enforcement of the changes.” Because the District Court's judgment was entered prior to the DOJ's pre-clearance letter, it was without jurisdiction to do so.
See, e.g., McDaniel v. Sanchez,
. The Mayor and the City Council each has authority to create a charter commission, which could theoretically put an issue on the ballot for referendum at a special election as early as sixty days after the proposed legislation is filed with the city clerk. See N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 36(2), (4), (5)(b).
. Appellants appear to argue in a footnote that
Caruso
is distinguishable because it did not address “whether that power allows a wholly self-interested legislature to completely eviscerate a referendum that was explicitly intended to constrain that body’s own power.”
See
Brief for Appellants at 48-49 n. 15. This is simply a recast of plaintiffs’ conflict of interest argument, which we address
infra,
Part IV. Appellants also appear to argue that
Caruso
is inapposite because the term limits law enacted by the 1993 Voter Initiative expressly stated that it was the "public policy” of New York City not to permit an elected official to serve more than eight consecutive years. We fail to see how
Caruso
is limited to those laws that do not affect the City's "public policy.” It is clear that that the New York Court of Appeals did not intend to limit the import of
Camso
in this respect: the issue presented was "whether the Council may amend or repeal a local law enacted by voter initiative.”
See Caruso,
. As to the former, the Court concluded that it was "adequately protected by the requirement that no initiative proposal may be placed on the ballot unless the required number of signatures has been obtained.”
Meyer,
. It would be remiss not to mention the fact that the 1993 Voter Initiative imposed the previous term limits on elected officials in New York City for over fifteen years — even withstanding the 1996 Referendum — thereby underscoring the significant effect that City voters have had on the electoral process.
.
See, e.g., Crawford v. Marion County Election Bd., -
U.S. -,
. Although plaintiffs in fact criticize the City's procedures for holding referenda because "[cjitizens seeking a vote by referendum ... face an arduous task to merely appear on the ballot, let alone to persuade fellow voters of the desirability of their position,” J.A. 54 (Pls.Am.CompltA 65), they make no legal challenge to that process in the instant suit.
. Appellants do not appear to argue that laws enacted by referenda cannot be subsequently amended or repealed by a legislative body without contravening the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Assuming, arguendo, that they do raise such an argument, it must be rejected because there is no fundamental right to pass law by referendum at all. See supra p. 597.
.
Cf. U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton,
. New York City Charter § 38 provides, in relevant part, that a referendum is required for the passage of a local law that: "Abolishes or changes the form or composition of the council[,] ... changes the term of an elective officer, or [a]bolishes, transfers or curtails any power of an elective officer.” N.Y. City Charter § 38 (N.Y. Legal Publ'g Corp. 2001).
. They make no argument in their opening brief with respect to subdivisions (e) or (f) of section 23(2) of the New York Municipal Home Rule Law or New York City Charter § 38, except for noting in a footnote that if we were to certify the question regarding section 23(2)(b) to the New York Court of Appeals, we should certify the questions regarding the former provisions as well.
See
Brief for Appellants at 48 n. 15. Moreover, appellants offer no response in their Reply Brief to appellees’ argument that their claims under subdivisions (e) and (f) and New York City Charter § 38 are abandoned. Appellants merely reassert their request for certification.
See
Reply Brief for Appellants at 20-21. In short, they make no argument whatsoever regarding their claims under subdivisions (e) or (f) or New York City Charter § 38. Accordingly, such claims are deemed abandoned.
See, e.g., United States v. Restrepo,
. By pursuing only a claim under Municipal Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b), appellants have necessarily abandoned their argument that extending term limits for the Mayor, Comptroller and Borough Presidents requires a referendum under state law because section 23(2)(b) does not apply to executive officials. See N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 23(2)(b) (applying only to those laws that "change[] the membership or composition of the legislative body ....”) (emphasis added). Accordingly, appellants' argument relates only to City Council Members and the Public Advocate. See N.Y. City Charter §§ 21-22 ("There shall be a council which shall be the legislative body of the city.... The council shall consist of the public advocate and of fifty-one other members termed council members.”).
. We note that City Charter § 22 provides that "the size of the council ... may be increased by local law without approval” by the electors in a referendum.
See
N.Y. City Charter §§ 22, 38 (N.Y. Legal Publ'g Corp.2001). On its face, this seems to conflict with section 23(2)(b), though appellants do not raise this argument. We need not resolve this conflict. We note, however, by its express terms section 22 is subject to state law.
See
N.Y. City Charter § 22
("Consistent with state law,
the size of the council and the number of districts from which council members are elected may be increased by local law without approval pursuant to section thirty-eight.”) (emphasis added);
see also id.
§ 28 (“The council in addition to all enumerated powers shall have power to adopt local laws which it deems appropriate,
which are not inconsistent with the
provisions of this charter or with the constitution or
laws of
the United States or
this state,
for the good rule and government of the city;”) (emphasis added);
see also
N.Y. Mun. Home Rule Law § 10 (enumerating powers and limits of local government). Moreover, the New York Court of Appeals has long held that a city charter cannot be "inconsistent with [the] laws of the State.”
People v. Lewis,
. Appellants rely exclusively on
Forti v. New York State Ethics Commission,
.
See Baker v. Marley,
