OPINION OF THE COURT
Appellant Steven Biener, a Delaware citizen who sought nomination as the Democratic Party’s candidate for the United States House of Representatives (“the House”), appeals the District Court’s grant of summary judgment against him. Biener and Carol Greenway, a registered voter who is a Biener supporter, sued the Democratic Party of the State of Delaware (“the Party”) and Frank Calió, Delaware’s state commissioner for elections, alleging that the $8000 filing fee for the 2002 Democratic primary was unconstitutional. The District Court rejected Biener’s arguments under the Qualifications, Equal Protection, and Due Process Clauses and granted summary judgment on behalf of the Party and Calió.
The Delaware statute provides a filing fee exception for indigent candidates who are unable to pay a fee. Biener challenges the lack of a ballot access alternative for non-indigent candidates. He asserts that he should have a choice not to pay the fee. We conclude that the availability of a choice is outcome determinative for Biener’s Qualifications and Equal Protection Clause claims. Those claims fail. Additionally, we conclude that there is no due process violation. We will therefore affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Unlike general elections, which are held by the state to select government officeholders, primary elections are conducted by the state on behalf of and as a convenience to political parties to assist them in selecting their candidates for office. Under Delaware law, individual political parties share responsibility with the state for election primaries. Political parties are authorized to set the filing fee amount, so long as it does not exceed 1% of the total salary for the term of office the candidate seeks. 15 DeLCode § 3103(a)-(c). In 2002, the Party set the filing fee for candidacy to the House at $3000.
When a party opts to impose a filing fee on candidates, Delaware law provides only one exception. 15 Del.Code § 3103(d)-(e). Candidates who demonstrate they are indigent by virtue of qualification for federal benefits may, in lieu of a filing fee, access the primary ballot by obtaining signatures on a petition. Id.
Biener sought to be included on the ballot for the 2002 Democratic primary as *210 a candidate for the House. He ran on an anti-election spending and anti-special interest platform, and did not solicit money for his campaign. Biener submitted the necessary paperwork to the state and the Party, but was informed that because he is non-indigent he needed to remit the $3000 filing fee or would be left off the Democratic primary ballot.
Biener filed suit against Calió seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. Calió filed an unopposed motion to join the Party as a defendant, and that motion was granted. The District Court denied Biener relief, stating that Biener had not shown a likelihood of success on any of his claims.
Once his complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief was rejected, Biener paid the $3000 filing fee. He then amended his complaint to seek a refund of the fee, which constituted two-thirds of the entire amount expended on his campaign. After paying the fee, Biener was included on the Democratic primary ballot and received 48% of the votes but did not win the Democratic nomination.
Biener’s suit alleged that the filing fee requirement is unconstitutional on three grounds: (1) it adds an impermissible wealth requirement to the qualifications for House membership, (2) it denies equal protection to non-indigent candidates who would like to seek office without paying a filing fee, and (3) it .violates the Due Process Clause because it inappropriately delegates state power to political parties. Calió and the Party made a motion for summary judgment, which the District Court granted on all three grounds.
II. DISCUSSION
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, since this is an appeal of a final decision of a federal district court. We exercise plenary review over all jurisdictional questions, including whether a plaintiff has standing to assert a particular claim.
See Gen. Instrument Corp. of Del. v. Nu-Tek Elec. & Mfg., Inc.,
A. STANDING
As a threshold matter, we must consider whether Biener has standing to make his claims. Our decision here is informed by our recent opinion in
Belitskus v. Pizzingrilli,
Biener, by paying the $3000 filing fee in protest, depleted two-thirds of his campaign funds. This is an injury in fact, which is clearly traceable to the filing fee
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set by the Party and Calió. The injury also can be redressed by a favorable decision in this court. Biener thus has standing to challenge the filing fee on his own behalf.
See AT&T Communications of N.J., Inc. v. Verizon N.J., Inc., 270 F.3d
162, 170 (3d Cir.2001) (reciting the three elements of a case or controversy for purposes of standing: injury, causation, and redressability);
see also Belitskus,
Biener also purports to make claims on behalf of indigent or near-indigent individuals. For example, Biener alleges that Delaware’s alternative to filing fees for indigent candidates is illusory because so few people qualify as indigent under the statutory definition. Biener does not contend, however, that he is in the group of near-indigent individuals who are allegedly prevented from availing themselves of this ballot-access alternative. Because he is not a member of that group nor does he possess a “close relationship” worthy of allowing him to act as a third-party, Biener lacks standing to make this claim.
See Pa. Psychiatric Soc’y v. Green Spring Health Servs.,
B. QUALIFICATIONS CLAUSE
The District Court held that Delaware’s filing fee for the Democratic primary does not violate the Qualifications Clause by improperly adding a wealth requirement to the qualifications for House membership. The Qualifications Clause of the United States Constitution states that “No Person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the Age of twenty five Years, and been seven Years a Citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.” U.S. CONST, art. I, § 2, cl. 2. Supreme Court precedent establishes that states have no power to add to these age, citizenship, and residency requirements.
U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton,
Biener’s Qualifications Clause claim is based in large part on
Thornton,
in which the Supreme Court found a term-limitation statute unconstitutional as an impermissible attempt to add to the qualifications for office established by the Constitution.
Id.
at 837-38,
Thornton
and the “impressive and uniform body of judicial decisions” cited therein where courts have struck down laws on the basis that they improperly added qualifications to those found in the Qualifications Clause focus on qualifications that were inherent in the candidate.
See, e.g., Thornton,
In a recent case before this Court, we rejected a Qualifications Clause challenge to the Hatch Act because “[t]he Act allows a citizen a choice.”
Merle v. United States,
Finally, we disagree with Biener’s contention that
Thornton
capsized existing precedent upholding states’ rights to require filing fees.
See Fowler,
C. EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE
Next, we address whether the District Court erred when it granted summary judgment for Appellees Calió and the Party on the Equal Protection Clause claim. Like the District Coux-t, we hold that there is no equal protection violation. Equal protection jurisprudence mandates a ballot-access alternative for those
unable
to pay a filing fee. Delaware law complies with this precedent by providing an alternative for indigent candidates. Here, Biener alleges only an
unwillingness,
not an inability, to pay. In its histoiy, the Supreme Court has considered only two election filing fee cases, both of which were decided on equal protection grounds. In 1972, the Supi-eme Court struck down an election primary filing fee whei'e it was an “absolute prerequisite” to participation.
Bullock v. Carter,
The
Bullock
court “closely scrutinized” the filing fee, looking at whether the fee was reasonably necessary to the accomplishment of legitimate state objectives.
Id.
at 144,
A few years later, in
Lubin v. Panish,
an indigent candidate brought a class-action suit to prevent California from enforcing its filing fee.
More recently, we considered the constitutionality of Pennsylvania’s election filing fees. Because the ruling occurred after briefs were filed in this case, we sought comment from the parties on the applicability of
Belitskus,
The issue here is whether the filing fee violated the Equal Protection Clause by extending alternate means of ballot access only to indigent candidates. 1 The parties agree that Biener cannot avail himself of Delaware’s alternate means of accessing the ballot-receiving the requisite number of signatures on a campaign petition-because he is not indigent or even near-indigent. Biener’s claim is that Delaware’s filing fee is unconstitutional because *214 it lacks an equivalent alternative for non-indigent candidates. 2
Biener urges us to find Delaware’s filing fee unconstitutional under
Bullock
and
Lu-bin.
But Biener’s reliance on
Bullock
and
Lubin
is misplaced because the candidates in both cases were indigent.
See Bullock,
Because Biener is not claiming indigence,
Bullock, Lubin,
and
Belitskus,
while not determinative, are informative on the Equal Protection analysis. “In determining whether or not a state law violates the Equal Protection Clause, we must consider the facts and circumstances behind the law, the interests which the State claims to be protecting, and the interests of those who are disadvantaged by the classification.”
Williams v. Rhodes,
Our first inquiry in an equal protection challenge is the appropriate level of scrutiny.
See Reform Party of Allegheny County v. Allegheny County Dep’t of Elections,
In
Belitskus,
we followed the flexible standard set forth in
Anderson v. Cele-brezze
for determining the appropriate level of scrutiny in ballot access cases.
Rather than apply
Anderson,
we proceed on a traditional equal protection
*215
analysis, whereby only suspect classes and fundamental rights receive intermediate or strict scrutiny. The right to run for office has not been deemed a fundamental right.
Bullock,
Having established that the appropriate test is rational review, the question becomes whether the filing fee meets that standard.
See, e.g., Romer v. Evans,
In concluding that Biener has suffered no equal protection violation here, we follow the conclusion reached by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Adams.
Voters’ rights are not infringed where a candidate chooses not to run because he is unwilling to comply with reasonable state requirements. They are no more affected by a candidate’s unwillingness to pay a reasonable filing fee than they are when he refuses to comply with financial disclosure laws, or, for that matter, a reasonable petitioning requirement.
Id. We quite agree. The availability of choice is fatal to Biener’s equal protection claim.
D. DUE PROCESS CLAUSE
Next, Biener alleges an improper delegation of power under the Due Process Clause. Biener argues that because Delaware allows political parties to set and retain filing fees, 15 Del.Code
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§ 3103 is unconstitutional.
4
We will affirm the District Court, because there is no due process violation where, as here, the state limits the private party’s discretion and the private party operates within the established limitations. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that “no State shall ... deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.” The Clause “was intended to prevent government from abusing its power, or employing it as an instrument of oppression.”
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
Generally, the Fourteenth Amendment protects individuals only against government action, unless the state has delegated authority to a private party, thereby making the actor a “state actor” and implicating the Due Process Clause.
See Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n v. Tarkanian,
In this case, the District Court held that Delaware’s limitation on the filing fee amount is a sufficient limitation on the Party’s authority to prevent the delegation from running afoul of the Due Process Clause. We agree. Delaware delegates to political parties the authority to set the filing fee for election primaries, so long as the fee does not exceed 1% of the total salary for the term of office the candidate seeks. 15 DeLCode § 3103. The State also allocates 100% of the fee to the Party for it to keep, or choose to rebate to the candidate in whole or in part. Effectively, the State of Delaware has created a means of revenue production for the Party, but caps the profitability by imposing an upper *217 limit. 5 Contrary to Biener’s contention that the Party “controls the price of admission to the electoral process,” it is the state that sets the only price that matters to potential candidates who generally pay the filing fee out of campaign coffers-the maximum price.
We have not found, nor has Biener asserted, any instance where a federal appellate court deemed a state delegation unconstitutional under the Due Process Clause for any reason but a lack of standards allowing exercise of the authority on a whim or caprice. There is no evidence that the Party could exercise its ability to set filing fees selfishly, arbitrarily, or based on will or caprice.
See Roberge,
III. CONCLUSION
In sum, Delaware’s filing fee is constitutional under the Qualifications, Equal Protection, and Due Process Clauses. We will affirm the District Court’s summary judgment order.
Notes
. Biener does not challenge the reasonableness of the $3000 filing fee.
. Biener makes an argument that Delaware’s definition of indigence is useless because so few people qualify for the alternative means of ballot access. See 15 Del.Code § 3101(e). As discussed supra, Biener lacks standing to make this argument, as he does not purport to be in the class of near-indigent persons who are excluded.
. Even if we were to apply the Anderson balancing test, our conclusion that we would use a rational basis test would remain unchanged.
. Delaware's authority to set filing fees itself is not at issue. Nor is there a contention that the Party has exceeded the scope of authority delegated to it by the state.
. What use the Party puts filing fee proceeds to is irrelevant to our analysis. We consider only whether the delegation of authority by the State of Delaware is facially impermissible.
