William Crist appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Brieant, J.) dismissing his action against the Commission on Presidential Debates (“CPD”) and its director. He challenges the CPD’s policy of limiting participation in the United States presidential debates it sponsors to candidates who have demonstrated a particular measure of popularity, alleging that the policy violates Crist’s right as a voter to free speech under the First Amendment because (as the district court has characterized his claim), “he cannot hear the third party candidates who may have much to contribute to an otherwise banal discussion.” Crist v. Braun, 00 Civ. 7186(CLB) (S.D.N.Y. Jan 23, 2001).
The CPD is a private, non-profit corporation formed by the Democratic and Republican parties for the purpose of sponsoring presidential debates.
See Buchanan v. Federal Election Comm’n,
The district court dismissed Crist’s action on the grounds (a) that his “asserted injury as a voter ... is too abstract and attenuated to meet the standing requirements,” and (b) that, “even if [the] plaintiff had standing to assert a claim, he fails to establish that defendants are state actors subject to the prohibitions of the Constitution.” Crist, 00 Civ. 7186(CLB).
DISCUSSION
The United State Constitution requires that anyone seeking to invoke federal jurisdiction over his complaint have standing to do so. “The Constitution confines the judicial power of the federal courts to deciding cases or controversies.”
Fulani v. Bentsen,
All of the doctrines that cluster about Article III — not only standing but mootness, ripeness, political question, and the like- — -relate in part, and in different though overlapping ways, to an idea, which is more than an intuition but less than a rigorous and explicit theory, about the constitutional and prudential limits to the powers of an unelected, unrepresentative judiciary in our kind of government.... The Art. Ill doctrine that requires a litigant to have ‘standing’ to invoke the power of a federal court is perhaps the most important of these doctrines. In essence the question of standing is whether the litigant is entitled to have the court decide the merits of the dispute or of particular issues. Standing doctrine embraces several judicially self-imposed limits on the exercise of federal jurisdiction, such as the general prohibition on a litigant’s raisinganother person’s legal rights, the rule barring adjudication of generalized grievances more appropriately addressed in the representative branches, and the requirement that a plaintiffs complaint fall within the zone of interests protected by the law invoked.
Allen,
“To have standing, a plaintiff must ‘[1] allege personal injury [2] fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct and [3] likely to be redressed by the requested relief.’ ”
Fulani,
Several other Circuit Courts have also concluded that a voter fails to present an injury-in-fact when the alleged harm is abstract and widely shared or is only derivative of a harm experienced by a candidate. Thus, in
Becker v. Federal Election Commission,
[T]he harm done to the general public by [the] corruption of the political process [alleged by the Nader supporters] is not a sufficiently concrete, personalized injury to establish standing.... [The Nader supporters’] concern for corruption of the political process is not only widely shared, but is also of an abstract and indefinite nature, comparable to the common concern for obedience to law.
Id.
(emphasis added; internal citation and quotation marks omitted). And in
Gottlieb v. Federal Election Commission,
We agree with the district court and our sister Circuit Courts, and we therefore affirm the dismissal of Crist’s action for lack of standing.
