Most major American cities have some mechanism — a filing fee, a signature requirement, or both — to limit the number of mayoral candidates on the election ballot. In Chicago, however, where it regularly appears that money and politics go hand and hand, there is no filing fee for mayoral candidates. On the other hand, candidates must gather signatures from 12,500 registered voters over a 90-day period in order to become ballot-eligible. Jay Stone, Frederick White, Frank Coconate, Denise Denison, Bill “Doc” Walls, and Howard Ray (“Plaintiffs”) claim Chicago’s signature requirement violates several of their constitutional rights. Chicago’s Board of Election Commissioners argues the signature requirement is essential to keeping the ballot from becoming a phone book.
Plaintiffs brought their dispute with the Election Board to federal court, seeking a declaratory judgment that the signature requirement is unconstitutional. In December 2010, Plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction prohibiting the Board from enforcing the requirement in the municipal election on February 22, 2011. The district court denied the injunction, and Plaintiffs appealed that denial. Because
“[F]ederal courts are without power to decide questions that cannot affect the rights of litigants in the case before them.”
North Carolina v. Rice,
To be sure, there is an exception to the mootness doctrine for challenges to actions that are “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
S. Pac. Terminal Co. v. Interstate Commerce Comm’n,
This is an interlocutory appeal, asking us only to review the denial of an injunction that no federal court could now grant. We have no jurisdiction to evaluate the appeal, so it is Dismissed.
