MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The problem posed by this case was presented on April 23, 1986. Subject to appeal, the attention of this court to it should be completed with this ruling. It raises this question: Is the Illinois statute establishing the filing deadline for persons seeking to run as independent candidates in the general election to state and county offices in this state unconstitutional?
The principal plaintiff who brought this question to this court is the former United States Senator from Illinois, Adlai E. Stevenson. Mr. Stevenson, who unsuccessfully ran for governor of Illinois in the campaign of 1982 on the democratic ticket, began again a campaign for that office by filing his papers as a democratic nominee for governor in December of 1985. A then relatively unknown person named Mark Fairchild also filed to run for lieutenant-governor in the democratic primary. Both Mr. Stevenson and Mr. Fairchild were nominated in the primary held on April 14, 1986. Mr. Stevenson, soon thereafter, determined that he would not run on the ballot with Mr. Fairchild because of his opposition to certain political and other views he discovered to have been espoused by Mr. Fairchild. In the general election in Illinois, the party candidates for governor and lieutenant-governor are listed as a team, with each voter casting one vote for the team.
After the nomination Mr. Stevenson formally resigned his position as the selected candidate for governor on the democratic ticket. Thereafter he publicly announced *549 his desire to run for governor as an independent candidate in the November election. But under the Illinois Election Code, his filing as an independent candidate had to have been performed back in December of 1985. The Election Code provides no other filing date. This provision of the Code, he says in the instant case, discriminates against him in violation of his freedom of association under the First Amendment, and in violation of his right to equal protection of the laws (freedom from a discriminatory classification) under the Fourteenth Amendment. By this suit he seeks to avoid this provision of the election code. He seeks to be able to file as an independent candidate at this time.
The proper defendant here is the Illinois Board of Elections, the official body vested by Illinois election laws with the responsibility of administering the Illinois election laws. Mr. Stevenson has been joined as plaintiffs by two voters who believe that their rights as voters also are injured by the filing deadline in question, and he is joined also by a prospective independent candidate for Congress who had neither been nominated in the primary nor listed as an independent candidate.
The defendant Board of Elections has also been joined by the Commissioners themselves. Then by a special order of this Court entered on May 2, 1986, the democratic nominee for lieutenant-governor, Mr. Fairchild, was allowed to intervene as another defendant.
The first preliminary task of this court, as in any other case, is to determine its jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter. The defendants all claim that this court lacks jurisdiction because of the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution of the United States which confers, they say, immunity upon the state from suit in federal court. The Eleventh Amendment provides that:
The judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state.
And this amendment has long been interpreted to mean that a state is immune from suit in federal court brought by one of its own citizens as well.
Ex parte Young,
Research discloses, however, that there are many exceptions to this literal statement, and that by a long line of consistent decisions of both the Supreme Court and inferior courts, a citizen’s challenge to a state statute on the grounds that it is, either on its face or in its enforcement, in violation of the Constitution of the United States is not barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
Ray v. Atlantic Richfield Co.,
The second preliminary task is to determine whether Mr. Stevenson and/or his co-plaintiffs have standing to sue. This task asks whether or not a case or controversy has matured to the point where the plaintiffs have a judicially recognized right to bring the suit. The defendants in this case all suggest that the plaintiffs have no standing because they have not tendered at this late date their petitions before the board and had them rejected. But this gesture of formality is unnecessary. The duties of the board are ministerial; the language of the statute simple. The statute does not confer upon the board the power to accept the declarations of independent candidacy beyond the statutory deadline, and to require the defendant to go through the gesture of refusing the declarations for independent candidacy before the plaintiffs have the standing to raise the question of the constitutionality in
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the first place, is to require a futile and useless act. Mr. Stevenson has been nominated in the democratic primary, he has publicly and officially resigned from that candidacy, and he has publicly announced his purpose to run as an independent candidate. Even the defendants, if true to their pledge before this Court not to delay this Court’s decision, should not justly ask for anything more. Similar situations have been found sufficient to justify standing to sue.
Sporhase v. Nebraska,
Consider now the central question presented in this case. The general problem of different requirements for different types of access to the ballot has been reviewed and is not new to judicial attention. In
Williams v. Rhodes,
In
Bullock v. Carter,
Still earlier, in
Jenness v. Fortson,
In
Storer v. Brown,
Finally, in
Anderson v. Celebrezze,
In examining the injury resulting to the election system’s filing deadline, the Court’s primary concern lay not with the candidate, but with the voters who chose to associate together and who desired to cast their votes effectively.
Id.
at 806,
The state identified three interests to justify its early filing deadline for independent presidential candidates: voter education, equal treatment for partisan and independent candidates, and political stability.
Id.
at 796,
Because that deadline did not materially advance the state’s asserted interest, and because it denied Anderson any access to the ballot, thus effectively denying the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of the voters who wished to vote for him, the Court concluded that the early filing date *552 statute for independent candidates unnecessarily burdened the rights asserted by the plaintiff, and held the statute unconstitutional.
In the instant case, Mr. Stevenson and the other plaintiffs contend that the outcome in the
Anderson
case should control the outcome here. However, as the Supreme Court stated in
Anderson,
constitutional challenges to state election laws “cannot be resolved by any litmus-paper test.”
Id.
at 789,
The Illinois Election Code provides a potential candidate with three avenues for obtaining access to the ballot: 1) nomination by an established political party; 2) independent candidacy, and 3) formation of a new political party. In addition, as in Ohio, a candidate may also make a “declaration-of-write-in-candidacy,” and he then becomes eligible to receive write-in votes which would be counted on his or her behalf. The filing deadline for a candidate seeking nomination by an established political party is identical to that for an independent candidate. Filing is allowed between 92 and 99 days prior to the date of the primary elections. A new political party candidate must submit his slate and file between 92 and 99 days at any time prior to the general election. In order for a voter to write in a candidate’s name, that candidate must have filed a declaration of intent to run as a write-in candidate not later than the Friday immediately preceding the November general election.
In order for a candidate to run in the November election as a member of an established political party, he must have filed his nomination papers by the December deadline and must have won that party’s primary. An established political party candidate who has lost in the primary may not run in the November general election as an independent candidate because his filing date has passed, and Section 10-2 prevents his running as a new party candidate. His only recourse is to be elected as a write-in candidate. This case presents for the very first time, as far as case law on elections reveals, the situation in which a candidate proposes to run in the November general election, who was nominated in his party’s primary, but then resigned from the ticket. Such candidate proposes to run, not as a member of a newly-formed party nor as a write-in candidate, either of which is possible under the Illinois Code, but as an independent candidate. This recourse is not available to him under the present applicable filing requirement of the Illinois Election Code.
A person seeking at this time to form a new political party need not and may not file before 99 days prior to the November general election. Such candidate, if seeking to run for governor, must include in his nomination petition a complete list of candidates of this new party for all of the offices to be filled in the state election. As stated above, a candidate seeking to campaign for the governorship as a write-in need only file his declaration on or before the Friday immediately preceding the November general election.
*553
It is in the context of this election scheme that the Court in this case is called upon to compare the relative benefits and inequities to the plaintiffs on the one hand, with the elective responsibilities of the state on the other. Plaintiffs who sue as voters are not disenfranchised by Section 10-3 of the Election Code because their candidates as yet have access to the ballot. In
Rosario v. Rockefeller,
Because the prospective candidates before this Court have existing ballot access measures available to them, the magnitude of their injury is to be reflected only in the difference between being able to run as an independent on the one hand, and running as a new political party candidate on the other. The difference does reflect measurable burdens on the candidates but, unlike Anderson, the plaintiffs here still have opportunities to appear on the ballot, though those opportunities are less desirable to them than running independent candidacies.
In support of the independent filing deadline, the state correctly notes that it has a substantial and legitimate interest in regulating its election procedures.
Storer v. Brown,
The Supreme Court went further in
Storer
and recognized that the general election ballot should be reserved for major struggles and should not provide a forum for continuing intra-party feuds.
Finally, the
Anderson
guideline requires the Court to determine the extent to which the state’s interests make it necessary to burden the plaintiffs’ rights. The rights asserted are the plaintiffs’ associational freedoms and equal protection. Because the filing deadline does not bar the candidates’ access to the ballot, neither is the plaintiffs’ associational freedom impaired to the extent presented in
Anderson.
While there is some question whether the disaffiliation function of the filing deadline might be more narrowly tailored to the asserted state interest, it is no more onerous than the statute upheld by the Supreme Court in
Jenness.
The plaintiffs’ equal protection claim rests on the separate filing deadlines required of independent candidates and newly formed parties. The plaintiffs argue that independent candidates should be treated as new parties for the purpose of establishing a filing deadline. The Supreme Court in
Storer
recognized, however, that independent candidates and new party candidates are dissimilar and do not represent interchangeable rights.
Storer,
at 745-46,
Furthermore, the political function fulfilled by the two candidacies is different. The relative freedom to run as an independent in Illinois requires reaching an early decision to seek running status. This burden exists to protect the state’s goal of maintaining a ballot access with integrity. But once this deadline passes, the balance of state interest shifts to that of a guardian of political stability. A relatively more burdensome option is allowed to the new party candidate. This burden in turn is balanced by the later filing date. This new party mechanism provides the flexibility to allow the system to adjust for the changing circumstances from which political opportunities arise throughout the election process.
Anderson, supra,
at 791,
Finally and in summary, the Court finds it has subject-matter jurisdiction in that the Eleventh Amendment of the United States Constitution is not a bar to this Court’s considering the matter of the constitution *555 ality of Section 10-3 of the Illinois Election Code. The Court finds that plaintiffs have standing to bring this case and that there is a sufficient case and controversy setting, based on the facts alleged in the complaint and stipulated to by the parties. In this respect, the Court concludes that to require the plaintiffs to tender their petitions and be denied access to the ballot as independent candidates is unnecessary as a futile and formalistic gesture.
The Court finds that the case of John B. Anderson v. Celebrezze is substantially and fundamentally different from the case now before the Court — primarily because it involved a candidate in a presidential election — whereas this case is limited to the State of Illinois. However, the Court finds that the Supreme Court in the Anderson case laid down the considerations and guidelines to be followed by lower courts in deciding challenges to election laws — particularly with regard to the perennial problems of access of candidates to the voters through the ballot — and the problem of the deadline for filing declarations of candidacy. The Court follows Anderson v. Celebrezze, not as to its decision in the election in Ohio, but as to its teaching on how to measure the competing interests of the state in maintaining a fair and democratic election procedure, and the constitutional rights of voters and candidates alike to freedom of association under the First Amendment, and Equal Protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment,
In following the Supreme Court’s guidelines in this case, the Court concludes that the statute in question — Section 10-3 of the Election Code — strikes a fair and reasonable balance between these two competing interests. The Court is not unmindful of the special, even unique, circumstances presented by this case. Mr. Stevenson is not before the Court as a candidate defeated in a party primary; he is not a “sore loser” but is before the court as a candidate constrained by the Illinois State Constitution to run with a person whose views he finds intolerable, should Mr. Stevenson have chosen to remain on the democratic ticket. This singular problem presented here, though substantial, is still not serious enough to strike down the statute, particularly in light of the availability of equally palatable means of access to the ballot. Mr. Stevenson’s problem was not created by the statute, but by circumstances which, to be corrected, would need to be addressed by the state legislature, by the political parties, or by the candidates themselves.
The judicial precedent established by a long list of cases culminating in the Anderson decision convinces the Court that the statute challenged here is not unconstitutional. The plaintiffs’ rights in this case are not burdened to the extent of those plaintiffs in Bullock, supra, Williams, supra, or Anderson, supra. The defendants’ interests in this case are more substantial than the defendants’ interests asserted in those cases, and are similar in weight to those asserted in Storer, supra, and Jenness, supra. Section 10-3 of the Illinois Revised Code is not unconstitutional.
In light of all of the foregoing, I enter the following determinations and orders:
1. I have subject-matter jurisdiction in that the Eleventh Amendment of the United States Constitution is not a bar to this action;
2. The plaintiffs have standing to bring this case, and there is sufficient case and controversy setting, based upon the facts alleged in the complaint and in the stipulation of facts, and I conclude that any further steps that might be required to be taken by the plaintiffs are a formalistic gesture and do not bar this action;
3. That though the facts in the Anderson case are substantially different from those here, the Supreme Court guidelines are to be followed;
4. That Section 10-3 of the Election Code strikes a fair and reasonable balance between the competing interests under the circumstances and is not unconstitutional on its face or as applied;
5. That the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment should be and by the same hereby is denied; and that the motions by *556 the defendants should be and by the same hereby is allowed;
6. That all other issues raised by the parties and not addressed herein are moot and, subject to appeal, that hereupon the case should be dismissed.
