Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SCALIA.
This сase presents the question whether we have jurisdiction to review the substance or procedure of a determination by the House of Representatives that one of two contestants was lawfully elected to that body. Jurisdiction is contested on the basis of the Elections Clause of the Constitution, Article I, section 5, clause 1, which provides that “[e]ach House shall be the *446 Judge of the Elections, Returns and Qualifications of its own Members.”
I
This litigation grows out of one of the closest congressional elections in history. Initial returns in November 1984 showed that Democrat Frank McCloskey had won the House seat in the Eighth Congressional District of Indiana by 72 votes. After corrections to the returns, the count showed that his opponent, Republican Richard McIntyre, had won by 34 votes. On December 13, 1984 the Secretary of State of Indiana certified that McIntyre had won. A subsequent recount supervised by the state courts and completed January 22, 1985 showed that McIntyre had won by 418 votes. Before this recount could be completed, however, the House of Representatives assembled. On January 3, by a party-line vote, the House declined to seat McIntyre and appointed a Task Force of the House Administration Committee to investigate the election. The Task Force decided to conduct its own recount and to employ its own rules rather than those of Indiana state election law. Its report, issued April 29, concluded that McCloskey had won by four votes out of the more than 230,000 votes cast. H.R.Rep. No. 58, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 2 (1985). On May 1, again by a party-line vote, the House seated McCloskey.
In this suit, the latest of several based on aspects of the disputed election, 1 a group of registered Republicans residing in Indiana, Maryland, and Virginia named the United States, the House of Representatives, three Democratic House leaders, and three House employees as defendants. The plaintiffs, proceeding pro se, alleged that the refusal to seat McIntyre violated their rights of free speech and association, their first amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances, their rights under the due process clause and the tenth amendment, along with several other constitutional provisions 2 and the Federal Contested Election Act, Pub.L. No. 91-138, 83 Stat. 284 (1969) (codified at 2 U.S.C. §§ 381-396 (1982)). They requested an injunction seating McIntyre with full seniority rights retroactive to January 3, 1985, a declaration that the House proceedings pursuant to the election investigation and the seating of McCloskey are void, and monetary damages.
The District Court dismissed the suit with prejudice as “the classic political question which is inappropriate for judicial review.” Civil Action No. 85-1053, slip op. at 5 (D.D.C. Aug. 22, 1985) (Memorandum Order). On the subsequent appeal to this court, we denied the appellants’ motions for summary reversal and expedition and directed the appellants to show cause why the decision of the District Court should not be summarily affirmed. The appellants have now responded to that order, and the appellees have submitted a reply.
II
Summary affirmance is appropriate where the merits of an appeal “are so clear as to justify expedited action.”
Walker v. Washington,
It is difficult to imagine a clearer case of “textually demonstrable constitutional commitment” of an issue to another branch of government to the exclusion of the courts,
see Baker v. Carr,
The history of the Elections Clause is entirely consistent with its plain exclusion of judicial jurisdiction. In the formative years of the American republic, it was “the uniform practice of England and America” for legislatures to be the final judges of the elections and qualifications of their members. I J. Story, Cоmmentaries on the Constitution § 833, at 605 (5th ed. 1905) (hereinafter “J. Story”). See also M. Clarke, Parliamentary Privilege in the American Colonies 145 (Da Capo Press reprint ed. 1971); C. Warren, The Making op the Constitution 423-24 (2d ed. 1937). There was no opposition to the Elections Clause in the Federal Constitutional Convention, see I G. Curtis, Constitutional History of the United States 483 (Da Capo Press reprint ed. 1974); C. Warren, supra, at 419, and the minor opposition in the ratification debates focused upon the clause’s removal of final authority not from the courts, but from the state legislatures, where the Articles of Confederation had vested an analogous power. See Articles of Confederation, Article V, reprinted in Documents Illustrative op the Formation of the Union op the American States, H. Doc. No. 398, 69th Cong., 1st Sess. 28-29 (1927). See also IIM. Jensen, Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution 426-28 (Statement of Robert Whitehill in Pennsylvania Convention), 446 (Statement of William Findley in Pennsylvania Convention) (1976) (hereinafter “Documentary History”). It is noteworthy that none of the responses to the opposition mentions the safeguard of judicial review. Such a safeguard was evidently unthinkable, since the determination of the legislative House was itself deemed to be a, judicial one. As Chancellor Kent expressed it:
[A]s each house acts in these cases [of judging the election return and qualification of its members] in a judicial character, its decisions, like the decisions of any other court of justice, ought to be regulated by known principles of law, and strictly adhered to, for the sake of uniformity and certainty.
I Kent’s Commentaries 248 (8th ed. 1854) (1st ed. N.Y.1826) (emphasis added). As far as we are aware, in none of the discussions of the clause did there appear a trace of suggestion that the power it conferred was not exclusive and final. The fragments of recorded discussion imply that many took for granted the legislative “right of judging of the return of their mеmbers,” II M. Farrand, the Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, at 241 (rev. ed. 1966) (Statement of Rufus King in Federal Convention), and viewed it as necessarily and naturally exclusive. See II Documentary History 448 (Statement of William Findley in Pennsylvania Convention), 537 (Statement of Thomas McKean in Pennsylvania Convention), 565-66 (Statement of James Wilson in Pennsylvania Convention).
In almost two centuries of numerous election contests resolved by the House and Senate, beginning in the very first Con *448 gress, see III L. De Pauw, Documentary History of the First Federal Congress 154-55, 179 (1977); I Hinds’ Precedents of the House of Representatives §§ 756-844 (1907) (hereinafter “Hinds’ Precedents”); II id. at §§ 845-1135; VI Cannon’s Precedents of the House of Representatives §§ 121-179 (1935); 2 Deschler’s Precedents of the House of Representatives 459-638 (1977); Senate Election, Expulsion and Censure Cases From 1789 to 1960, S. Doc. No. 71, 87th Cong., 2d Sess. 51, 61, 63, 64, 66, 67-68, 69-71, 85, 90,100-03, 109, 112,115, 116, 121-22,128-32, 138,139, 142, 145-47, 151-52 (1962), no court, as far as wе are aware, has ever undertaken to review the legislative judgment or (until the present litigation) even been asked to do so. The Supreme Court case law therefore consists of nothing but dicta on the subject, which in their entirety support the plain interpretation we have applied. In 1928, in an opinion denying the authority of a Senate committee investigating an election to sue in court to compel production of election records (rather than following the theretofore customary course of relying on the Senate’s own power to compel production of evidence), the Supreme Court said the following:
[The Senate] is the judge of the elections, returns and qualifications of its members. Art. I, § 5. It is fully empowered, and may determine such matters without the aid of the House оf Representatives or the Executive or Judicial Department.
Reed v. County Commissioners,
Generally, the Senate is a legislative body, exercising in connection with the House only the power to make laws. But it has had conferred upon it by the Constitution cеrtain powers which are not legislative but judicial in character. Among these is the power to judge of the elections, returns and qualifications of its own members. Art. I, § 5, cl. 1_ Exercise of the power necessarily involves the ascertainment of facts, the attendance of witnesses, the examination of such witnesses, with the power to compel them to answer pertinent questions, to determine the facts and apply the appropriate rules of law, and, finally, to render a judgment which is beyond the authority of any other tribunal to review.
Barry v. United States ex rel. Cunningham,
In any case,
Powell’s
parsimony is more than overcome by the Supreme Court’s most recent expression on the subject, which plainly endorses the interpretation we have set forth above.
Roudebush v. Hartke,
This claim is based upon the proposition, as stated in appellee Hartke’s brief, that the “basic issue” before the Court is “whether appellee Hartke or appellant Roudebush is entitled to the office of United States Senator from Indiana.” Since the Senate has now seated Hartke, and since this Court is without power to alter the Senate’s judgment [footnote citing and quoting Reed v. County Com missioners], it follows, the argument goes, that the cause is moot.
The difficulty with this argument is that it is based on an erroneous statement of the “basic issue.” Which candidate is entitled to be seated in the Senate is, to be sure, a nonjusticiable political question — a question that would not have been the business of this Court even before the Senate acted. [Footnote citing Powell v. McCormack.] The actual question before us, however, is a different one. It is whether an Indiana recount of the votes in the 1970 election is a valid exercise of the State’s power....
Id.
at 18-19,
We note that our holding is in accord with that of the Seventh Circuit, in a case arising out of the same election dispute at issue here. In
McIntyre v. Fallahay,
Because McCloskey has been seated, it is not possible for a federal court to opine on the propriety of that decision or award relief; the federal issues therefore no longer present a ease or controversy.
The House is not only “Judge” but also final arbiter. Its decision about which ballots count, and who won, are not reviewable in any court....
Nothing we say or do, nothing the state court says or does, could affect the outcome of this election. Because the dispute is not justiciable, it is inappropriate for a federal court even to intimate how Congress ought to have decided.
In my view, this court is without jurisdiction to remand the cases to the State courts because, aside from the question of mootness, the underlying eleсtion controversy is now a nonjusticiable political question. Once the House has asserted its exclusive jurisdiction under U.S. Const, art. I, § 5 to seat a particular candidate as a member of the House, no court in the land — State or federal — has jurisdiction to hear any dispute contesting the outcome of the election.
It is true, as the appellants point out, that this court has found no absolute prohibition of judicial review in the clause, adjacent to the Elections Clause, which states that “[e]ach House may determine the Rules of its Proceedings.” Art. I, § 5, cl. 2.
See Vander Jagt v. O’Neill,
While it is not our role to examine the wisdom of a disposition that appears so clearly in the text and history of the Constitution, we may observe that it makes eminent practical sense. The pressing legislative demands of contemporary government have if anything increasеd the need for quick, decisive resolution of election controversies. Adding a layer of judicial review, which would undoubtedly be resorted to on a regular basis, would frustrate this end. What is involved, it should be borne in mind, is not judicial resolution of a narrow issue of law, but review of an election recount, with all the fact-finding that that entails. If it be said that the relevant House is not the appropriate body to make the determination because of the possibility of improper political motivation, the response is that “[a]ll power may be abused if placed in unworthy hands. But it would be difficult ... to point out any other hands in which this power would be more safe, and at the same time equally effectual.”
Luther v. Borden,
If [the power to judge elections is] lodged in any other than the legislative body itself, its independence, its purity, and even its existence and action may be destroyed or put into imminent danger. No other body but itself can have the same motives to preserve and perpetuate these attributes; no other body can be so perpetually watchful to guard its own rights and privileges from infringement, to purify and vindicate its own character, and to preserve the rights and sustain the free choice of its constituents.
I J. Story § 833, at 604-05. While the party-line votes in the present case (not at all unusual in such disputes) suggest that Justice Story’s description of the purifying character of election-judging by the legislature may have been exaggerated, his basic point that institutional incentives make it safer to lodge the function there than anywhere else still stands. The major evil of interference by other branches of government is entirely avoided, while a substantial degree of responsibility is still provided by regular elections, the interim demands of public opinion, and the desire of each House to preserve its standing in relation to the other institutions of government.
Finally, we reject the appellants’ contention that the Federal Contested Election Act authorizes the present suit. That legislation establishes certain procedures (notiсe of contest, response, service, depositions, subpoenas, and briefs) by which an election contest with respect to a seat in the House of Representatives shall be conducted; and failure to observe those procedures is among the allegations of the complaint. It is doubtful, to begin with, whether — in this matter which the Constitution commits exclusively to the House’s judgment — the House’s allegеd failure to follow statutorily prescribed procedures can ever be the subject of judicial inquiry.
Cf. In re Voorhis,
Our holding today does not, of course, preclude all judicial challenges bearing any relationship to legislative resolution of disputed elections. It is conceivable, for example, that in investigating such a dispute a House might go beyond its constitutional power to compel witnesses. In that event, “a clear showing of such arbitrary and improvident use of the power as will constitute a denial of due process of law” would justify limited “judicial interference.”
Barry v. United States ex rel. Cunningham,
On this court’s own motion, the decision of the District Court is summarily affirmed.
Notes
.
See Indiana
v.
United States,
— U.S. -,
. C00 4* tOO-O «. G i — i ce I” coo o VO o -• O * S’
. Although the panel majority in
Vander Jagt
did not find review explicitly prohibited by the Constitution, it nonetheless refrained from review. Judicial interference in such a case, it found, was "a ‘startlingly unattractive’ idea, given our respect for a coequal branch of government."
