Plaintiffs-appellants Verena Rivera-Powell, who seeks to be a candidate for
*461
judge of the Civil Court of the City of New York, and voters who support her candidacy (the “voter-plaintiffs”) (collectively, “plaintiffs”) appeal from an October 4, 2006 order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Buchwald, J.),
Rivera-Powell v. N.Y. City Bd. of Elections,
No. 06-6843,
BACKGROUND
Rivera-Powell sought to become the Democratic party nominee for judge of the Civil Court of the City of New York in the 7th Municipal District. To be placed on a party’s primary ballot, New York law requires an individual to submit a “designating petition” meeting certain formal requirements. See N.Y. Elec. Law §§ 6-130 to -136 (McKinney 1998). A designating petition comprises “petition volumes” (bound groupings of sheets bearing the signatures of registered voters), each with an identification number, and a “cover sheet,” which contains a variety of information including the identification numbers of the petition volumes the candidate is claiming. See Board of Elections in the City of New York, Designating Petition and Opportunity to Ballot Petition Rules for the September 12, 2006 Primary Election, Rule C2 & Definitions (May 9, 2006), http://vote.nyc.ny .us./pdf/documents/boe/ 2006primaryelection /2006designatingot-brules.pdf (“Board Rules”). 2 A petition for an office elected by the voters of a municipal court district must contain no fewer than 1,500 signatures. New York State Board of Elections, Official Political Calendar 2006 (Mar.2006), http://www. elections.state.n y.us/NYS-BOE/law/2006_OFFICIAL_calendar.pdf; see also N.Y. Elec. Law § 6-136(2)(c) (McKinney 1998).
On Tuesday, July 11, 2006, Rivera-Powell filed her designating petition with the Board. Rivera-Powell’s petition volumes *462 consisted of so-called Popkin petitions, which collect signatures on behalf of more than one candidate; some signatures are eligible to support only one candidate, others to support more than one. 3 Her cover sheet claimed the six petition volumes with identification numbers ending in 206, 208, 210, 212, 214 and 216. Rivera-Powell estimated that the petition volumes contained roughly 3900 signatures; only some of these, however, were from individuals who resided in the proper district to support her candidacy.
On Thursday, July 13, 2006, a Popkin petition volume in the same numerical series and ending in 218 was filed with the Board. Petition volume 218, like volumes 206 through 216, listed Rivera-Powell’s name as one of the candidates it supported, though Rivera-Powell had not claimed volume 218 on her July 11 cover sheet. Under prior Board practices, if the Board received a petition volume without a designating cover sheet (a “stray” petition), it automatically removed the candidate from the ballot, notified the candidate of the stray petition and offered him or her an opportunity to claim the petition by filing an amended cover sheet. If the candidate filed the amended cover sheet or affirmatively disclaimed the petition, he or she would be reinstated and the stray petition either attributed to the candidacy or ignored, as the candidate had chosen. Two years ago, however, the Board “liberalized” its practices. Currently, the Board automatically attributes a stray petition to the named candidate’s application immediately upon receipt, while maintaining the candidate on the ballot. Within several days, the Board sends a letter to the candidate giving him or her three days in which affirmatively to claim the petition by filing an amended cover sheet; if the candidate affirmatively disclaims or does nothing, the Board does not attribute the petition to the candidate. The critical difference between the old and new practices is that currently, during the interval between the filing of the stray petition and the expiration of the three-day claim period, the Board’s public records attribute the stray petition volume to the candidate. Thus, when volume 218 was submitted on July 13, the Board immediately attributed it to Rivera-Powell, and consistent with normal practice updated its public records database to reflect that the most recent petition volume filed for Rivera-Powell’s candidacy was received July 13. On July 25, the Board sent her a letter informing her of the filing of volume 218, and giving her three business days in which to file an amended cover sheet if she wished to claim it. Because she did not respond within the specified period, the Board removed volume 218 “from any consideration of any matter relating to” her candidacy and updated the database accordingly.
Under New York Election Law section 6-154, a general objection must be filed “within three days after the filing of the petition ... to which objection is made.” 4 N.Y. Elec. Law § 6-154(2) (McKinney *463 1998). The Board Rules state more specifically that “[t]he last day for filing general objections shall be three days after the latest date on which any part of such petition or cover sheet was filed.” Board Rule Gl. On July 17, three days after the filing of petition volume 218 (excluding a Sunday, which otherwise would have been the third day), but six days after Rivera-Powell filed her original petition, Franklin Hess, a registered voter in the 7th Municipal District, filed a general objection to Rivera-Powell’s petition.
On August 3, the Board met to consider, inter alia, Hess’ challenge to Rivera-Powell’s candidacy. In response to Hess’ objection, the clerk of the Board had counted the signatures in the petition volumes Rivera-Powell claimed on her July 11 cover sheet (i.e., 206, 208, 210, 212, 214 and 216, but not 218) and found that she was 71 signatures short of the required 1,500 signatures. Rivera-Powell’s counsel was present at the meeting and objected that Hess’s challenge was untimely. Because Rivera-Powell neither claimed petition volume 218 on her original cover sheet nor filed an amended cover sheet to claim it, her counsel argued, her documentation was complete on July 11, and any objection to it had to be filed by July 14. 5 Hess’s counsel countered that Hess had reasonably relied on the information in the Board’s public records (which until July 28 indicated that July 13 was the last day that a part of Rivera-Powell’s petition, the stray petition, was filed) in order to calculate July 17 as the final date to file an objection.
In considering the timeliness question, Board Chairman Frederic Umane noted that the circumstances presented “an interesting conundrum because if we rule one way, one side is unfairly punished based on these Popkin [sic] type petitions and if we rule the other way the other side’s unfairly prejudiced.” In other words, if the Board ruled the objection timely, it could unfairly prejudice the candidate, who might have had nothing to do with the filing of the stray petition, but if it ruled the objection untimely, it could unfairly prejudice the objector, who had no way of knowing that the date reflected in the public record was not in fact the last day that a part of the candidate’s petition was filed. Umane also noted that either decision would open up the system to maneuvering — either by objectors, who could file petitions “on behalf of the candidate they’re going to be objecting to [in order] to extend they’re [sic] time by 3 days in order to be able to file objections,” or by candidates, who “could do the same thing — they could file an extra petition and giv[e] false hope to objectors” by making them think, “ah, I have an extra 3 days.” It appears from the record that the Commissioners believed the question of the objection’s validity to be pending before the New York Supreme Court, 6 and so, without explicitly resolving the “conundrum” Chairman Umane had identified, *464 they voted to approve the clerk’s report, thereby removing Rivera-Powell from the ballot.
To contest her removal, Rivera-Powell instituted a special action in New York Supreme Court pursuant to New York Election Law section 16-102, which provides for expedited “proceedings as to designations and nominations.” N.Y. Elec. Law § 16-102 (McKinney 1998). The court dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction, however,
Powell v. N.Y. City Bd. of Elections,
Index No. 1110989/06 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Aug. 9, 2006), because the complaint, though notarized, was not verified as New York Election Law section 16-102 requires. Rivera-Powell did not appeal the dismissal. Instead, on September 9, she brought this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. She subsequently amended her complaint by,
inter alia,
adding as plaintiffs voters who support her candidacy. After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the district court concluded that the Board’s action was “consistent with state law and well within the Board’s delegated authority,” and that as a result, Rivera-Powell’s due process, equal protection, and First Amendment claims “necessarily fall.”
Rivera-Powell,
DISCUSSION
Rivera-Powell argues that because neither her initial cover sheet nor any amended cover sheet ever claimed stray volume 218, that volume could not properly be considered part of her petition, which therefore had to be deemed complete as of July 11, 2006. As a result, any objections had to be filed by July 14, three days before Hess’s objection was filed, in order to be considered timely. In entertaining Hess’s untimely objection and removing her from the ballot, she argues, the Board acted contrary to New York election law, thereby depriving her of access to the ballot without procedural due process. She contends that this same unauthorized deprivation amounted to a denial of her and the voter-plaintiffs’ associational and voting rights in violation of the First Amendment. Finally, she alleges that the Board’s action was racially motivated, and so denied her equal protection of the laws. For the reasons to be discussed, we conclude that the plaintiffs — regardless of whether the Board’s action was consistent with state law, a question we do not reach- — have not stated any constitutional violation. We hold that because the state provided Rivera-Powell with a pre-depri-vation hearing and an adequate judicial procedure by which to challenge any alleged illegalities in the Board’s action, Rivera-Powell and her co-plaintiffs have failed to state violations of their procedural due process and First Amendment rights. We also find that their equal protection claim lacks merit because the only allegation of racial discrimination is conclusory.
I. Due Process Claim
The Due Process Clause does not protect against all deprivations of constitutionally protected interests in life, liberty, or property, “only against deprivations without due process of law.”
Parrott v. Taylor,
As we explained in
Hellenic American Neighborhood Action Committee v. City of New York (“HANAC’),
in evaluating what process satisfies the Due Process Clause, “the Supreme Court has distinguished between (a) claims based on established state procedures and (b) claims based on random, unauthorized acts by state employees.”
The distinction between random and unauthorized conduct and established state procedures, however,- is not clear-cut. In
Zinermon v. Burch,
the Court held that government actors’ conduct cannot be considered random and unauthorized within the meaning of
Parratt
if the state delegated to those actors “the power and authority to effect the very deprivation complained of ... [and] the concomitant duty to initiate the procedural safeguards set up by state law,” even if the act in question “was not ... sanctioned by state law.”
The Board argues that the present case is controlled by
HANAC,
which addressed a contractor’s claim that city officials had
de facto
debarred it from contracting with the City of New York “in flagrant violation” of the City Charter and city agency rules.
In light of our jurisprudence on the meaning of “random and unauthorized,” however, we are hesitant to accept the Board’s argument. As we clarified in
DiBlasio,
our determination in
HANAC
that the state action was random and unauthorized turned on the fact that the contracts officer who effected the deprivation did not have “final authority over significant matters.”
Ultimately, however, the question of how to classify the Board’s action is immaterial, and so we do not decide it. If we were to determine that the Board’s conduct was random and unauthorized, bringing it within
HANAC,
the existence of a meaningful post-deprivation remedy (which New York has provided in this case, as we discuss below) would automatically satisfy procedural due process.
See HANAC,
First, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
First, Rivera-Powell received at least some form of pre-deprivation hearing on August 3, when the Board considered Hess’s objection. Though the parties did not brief this issue, the record suggests that this hearing afforded her notice and an opportunity to be heard; indeed, Rivera-Powell’s attorney appeared at the hearing and voiced her position. Case law
*467
in analogous contexts suggests that such a hearing meets the essential requirements of due process.
See Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
II. First Amendment Claims
Having found that Rivera-Powell has not stated a valid due process claim, we turn to her argument that the Board’s action has infringed her and the voter-plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights to organize, access the ballot, and vote for the candidate of their choice.
See Anderson v. Celebrezze,
Under the facts of this case, however, Rivera-Powell’s First Amendment claim is virtually indistinguishable from her due process claim, in that she alleges no additional deprivation of her First Amendment interests independent from the deprivation that forms the basis of her due process claim. She does not challenge the state’s law restricting ballot access to those who garner a sufficient number of signatures
13
or the law specifying require
*469
ments for objections,
14
limitations that she appears to accept as reasonable.
See Burdick v. Takushi,
We note that a contrary holding would permit any plaintiff to obtain federal court review of even the most mundane election dispute merely by adding a First Amendment claim to his or her due process claim. We would thereby undermine our holding — one which we share with many other circuits
16
— that federal court intervention in “garden variety” election disputes is inappropriate.
Shannon v. Jacobowitz,
III. Equal Protection
Rivera-Powell further argues that the Board’s conduct denied her equal protection of the laws by denying her access to the ballot because of her race. She contends that the Board’s allegedly “severe departure” from the rules governing objections can only indicate a racially biased motive. She contends that the Board members had reason to know that she was African-American despite the fact that she was not present at the August 3 hearing, and that they were aware of her Latino surname. In order to establish such a constitutional violation, Rivera-Powell would have to show that the Board intentionally discriminated against her, either by adopting out of racial animus policies which are facially neutral but have a racially discriminatory effect, or by applying a facially neutral policy in a racially discriminatory manner.
See Hayden v. County of Nassau,
CONCLUSION
We have observed that “[o]nly in extraordinary circumstances will a challenge to a state ... election rise to the level of a constitutional deprivation.”
Shannon,
Because New York removed Rivera-Powell from the ballot pursuant to constitutionally adequate procedures, including judicial review of the Board’s allegedly unauthorized conduct, we find that she and her co-plaintiffs have stated no valid due process or First Amendment claims. We also reject her equal protection claim, which is based only on conclusory allegations. All three challenges would fail even if the Board’s consideration of the objection were inconsistent with New York *471 Election Law section 6-154 and the Board Rules, and so we do not reach the substantive question of whether its decision to remove Rivera-Powell from the ballot was authorized. The judgment of the district court dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint and denying their motion for a preliminary injunction is Affirmed.
Notes
. The Board maintains that it was not properly served a copy of the summons along with the plaintiffs’ complaint, in violation of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(c)(1), and as a result, the district court had no personal jurisdiction over it. The district court found otherwise and asserted personal jurisdiction,
Rivera-Powell,
. The term "petition” refers to the entirety of the documentation filed with the Board designating a candidate for office. See Board Rules at 1.
. The petitions are so named because they are authorized by the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division decision
Popkin v. Umane, 22
A.D.3d 613,
. A general objection merely identifies the petition to which it objects. Board Rule G. Within six days of filing the general objection, the objector must file a specification of objection, setting forth factual allegations supporting the objection or supplying reasons why particular signatures should be found invalid. Board Rule H.
. Rivera-Powell's counsel did not challenge the substance of the clerk’s report, for example, by arguing that certain eliminated signatures were in fact valid.
. Hess’s counsel stated at the August 3 meeting that ”[t]hese issues are before the Supreme Court.” It appears from the public record, see Rothman v. Gregor, 220 F.3d 81, 92 (2d Cir.2000) (stating that the court may take judicial notice of court documents), that Hess’s counsel must have been referring to the action Hess had already filed to challenge Rivera-Powell's candidacy, Hess v. N.Y. City Bd. of Elections, Index No. 110081/06 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. July 20, 2006), and not to Rivera-Powell’s own action, which she did not commence until the following day, see Docket, Powell v. N.Y. City Bd. of Elections, Index No. 1110989/06 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Aug. 9, 2006) (indicating that the index number was purchased August 4, 2006).
. We note that both of these situations address
intentional
deprivations of due process, not negligent ones. The Board argues that its action was merely negligent, and so cannot be found to violate due process.
See Daniels,
. Moreover, to the extent that the purpose of the Parratt-Hudson inquiry is to determine whether the government actor could have provided pre-deprivation process, that question must clearly be answered in the affirmative here, because the Board actually conducted a hearing before voting on Rivera-Powell’s candidacy.
. Rivera-Powell was clearly aware of this remedy, as she commenced — though ultimately did not pursue — such an action challenging the Board’s removal of her name from the ballot. The fact that Rivera-Powell failed properly to pursue the state court action, and that it is now too late to do so, does not affect our due process analysis: had she appealed the dismissal of her petition, the state courts would have had an opportunity to clarify when a verified petition is in fact required,
compare Rose v. Smith, 220
A.D.2d 922,
. Similarly, we need not address the question of when in the course of a candidate’s removal from the ballot the constitutional “deprivation” occurs — immediately after the Board’s vote, or only on election day, if the candidate has still not been reinstated. This influences whether section 16-102 proceedings should properly be considered “pre-de-privation” or "post-deprivation” remedies. However, the distinction is irrelevant because our holding (that the combination of a Board of Elections hearing and state court judicial review provide adequate process) does not depend on whether the state court review is considered pre-deprivation or post-deprivation.
.The Supreme Court has analyzed the rights of candidates and the rights of voters as a single inquiry in the First Amendment context,
see Cook v. Gralike,
. The general rule is that § 1983 claims, including First Amendment claims, do not require exhaustion of state remedies.
See Patsy v. Bd. of Regents,
. See N.Y. Elec. Law § 6-136(2)(c) (McKinney 1998) (establishing the number of signa *469 tures required for a New York City office "to be filled ... by all the voters of any municipal court district”).
. See N.Y. Elec. Law § 6-154.
. As the Supreme Court has recognized, candidates' and voters’ associational and voting rights are qualified ones.
See Burdick,
. See, e.g., Rossello-Gonzalez v. Calderon-Serra,
