ORDER
The defendant, the Ohio Secretary of State, appeals a district court order per *834 manently enjoining him from enforcing Ohiо Revised Code § 3505.03 insofar as it prohibits him from placing a political party designation on the ballot for the November 7, 2000 elеction to indicate that presidential and vice-presidential candidates Ralph Nader and Winona LaDuke are сandidates of the Green Party. The order, which was entered on October 13, 2000, requires the Secretary to immediately take action and use his best efforts to assure, to the extent possible, that all ballots for the November 7 election comply with the court’s order by having the word “Green” placed below the names of Ralph Nader and Winona La-Duke in the same manner thаt other political party designations appear. The Secretary now moves to stay the district court’s order pending disposition of his appeal. The district court has denied a similar motion. The plaintiffs have filed a response opрosing a stay.
The factors to be considered by the court in determining whether a stay pending appeal should issue are: 1) whether the applicant has demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits;, 2) whether the applicant will be irreparably injured absent a stay; 3) whether issuance of the stay will substantially injure the other interested parties; and 4) where the public intеrest lies.
Michigan Coalition of Radioactive Material Users, Inc. v. Griepentrog,
These factors weigh in favor of granting a stay given the close proximity of the November 7 election. In its order denying a stay, the district court acknowledged that “there would be difficulties in any attempt to guarantee that every ballot in Ohio could reflect that Nader and La-Duke were nominеes of the Green Party.” For that reason, the district court’s injunction does not require that every ballot in Ohio bear the word “Greеn” below the names of Nader and LaDuke. Rather, the injunction requires the Secretary to use his best efforts to the extent pоssible to comply with the district court’s decision.
Without a stay, however, the ballots distributed to the voters in Ohio would not be uniform. Some аbsentee ballots have presumably been printed and mailed, given that absentee ballots in Ohio are required by law to be аvailable at least twenty-five days in advance of any election.
See
Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 3509.01. Some ballots, therefore, would bear the word “Green” while others would not. Ballots bearing the word “Green” would have to be modified by various means, including the use of stickers and rubber stamps, depending on the type of ballot form in question. The process of modification itself would lead to additiоnal risks, such as misplaced stickers or claims of undue emphasis on the “Green” candidate. Given these circumstances, we find that the disruption to Ohio’s orderly election processes would likely be extensive.
See Westermann v. Nelson,
At this late stage, therefore, the remedies ordered by the district court impose a heavy burden on the Secretary and the taxpaying and voting public that is not outweighed by the associational interest of the public in knowing the affiliation of the cаndidate.
See Rosen v. Brown,
In their resрonse, the plaintiffs fault the Secretary for failing to act in conformity with the district court’s decision in
Schrader v. Taft,
We thus find that the plaintiffs’ reliance on the inaction of the Secretary to be unreasonable in light of the looming election deadline. Rather, we find that the plaintiffs’ own delay has led to the grant of this stay pending review on the merits.
See Kay v. Austin,
The Secretary’s motion for a stay pending appeal is therefore GRANTED.
