OPINION AND ORDER
This is a civil action for injunctive and declaratory relief brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiffs challenge as unconstitutional several provisions of Wisconsin’s new campaign finance law. Presently before the court is defendants’ motion to abstain or, alternatively, to stay these proceedings. The parties have also briefed plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings. However, because the parties have asked that defendants’ abstention motion be decided on an expedited basis, this opinion addresses only the abstention issue. Plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings will be addressed in a separate opinion.
Defendants argue that this court should abstain from considering the merits of plaintiffs’ claims for several reasons, but principally because of the existence of a parallel proceeding involving the new campaign finance law that is pending before the Supreme Court of Wisconsin. I conclude that a decision by this court on plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge to Wisconsin’s campaign finance law would not interfere with any ongoing state proceedings and that defendants have not shown the existence of other exceptional circumstances warranting abstention. In addition, I conclude that a declaratory judgment on plaintiffs’ claims is not improper under the circumstances. Because there is no reason to deny plaintiffs the ability to litigate their claims in the forum of their choosing, defendants’ motion to abstain will be denied.
*891 For the sole purpose of deciding defendants’ motion, I find from the pleadings and the parties’ submissions that the facts are as follows.
FACTS
On July 26, 2002, Governor Scott McCal-lum signed into law a state budget bill, 2001 Wis. -Act 109, which contained a variety of amendments to Wisconsin’s campaign finance law. The day the bill was signed, plaintiffs filed this lawsuit, challenging several of the new law’s provisions as inconsistent with the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
In a non-statutory provision of the bill, the Wisconsin legislature
directed] the attorney general to promptly commence an action seeking a declaratory judgment that [various provisions of the new campaign finance law] are constitutional. The legislature directs the attorney general to petition for leave to commence the action as an original action before the Wisconsin supreme court.
In accordance with this provision, on the same day that the amendments to Wisconsin’s campaign finance law were signed into law and plaintiffs filed their constitutional challenge in this court to some of the new law’s provisions, the Wisconsin attorney general filed a petition for leave to commence an original action in the state supreme court seeking a declaratory judgment on the constitutionality of the new law. (It is worth noting that the attorney general asked the supreme court to declare several of the new law’s provisions unconstitutional, which would have the effect of invalidating the new campaign finance law in its entirety as a result of the legislature’s decision to include a sweeping non-severability clause in the bill.) On September 10, 2002, defendants filed a motion to intervene in the state supreme court action. Plaintiffs followed suit on September 18, 2002. On September 26, 2002, the court granted the motions to intervene. The court has yet to rule on the attorney general’s petition for leave to file an original action in that court. In the event the petition is denied, the campaign finance law “directs the attorney general to commence the action in the circuit court for Dane County.”
OPINION
Defendants ask this court to abstain from considering -plaintiffs’ constitutional claims under the doctrines announced in
Younger v. Harris,
A. Younger Abstention
The United States Supreme Court has stated repeatedly that “the federal courts have a ‘virtually unflagging obligation’ to exercise their jurisdiction.”
Deakins v. Monaghan,
At first blush, defendants’ motion appears to survive all three hurdles. As to the first
Younger
requirement, on the same day this case was filed, the Wisconsin attorney general filed a petition for leave to commence an original action in the Supreme Court of Wisconsin seeking a declaratory judgment on the new campaign finance law’s constitutionality. All the parties to this case were subsequently allowed to intervene in the state court proceeding. Although the court has yet to decide whether to grant the petition for original jurisdiction, the legislature has directed the attorney general to commence the action in a state trial court if the petition is denied. Hence, the requirement for an ongoing state judicial proceeding appears to be satisfied. The second
Younger
requirement appears unproblematic because the proceedings in question implicate Wisconsin’s important and legitimate interest in insuring the integrity of its political and election processes.
See
Wis. Stat. § 11.001(1) (“The legislature therefore finds that the state has a compelling interest in designing a system for fully disclosing contributions and disbursements made on behalf of every candidate for public office, and in placing reasonable limitations on such activities.”);
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce v. State of Wisconsin Elections Board,
However, defendants’ apparent satisfaction of the three-part
Younger
test is deceiving. In a unanimous en banc opinion, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit noted recently that the three-part
Younger
test tends to lead unwary courts and litigants astray in assessing the merits of abstention motions.
Green v. City of Tucson,
New Orleans Public Service
involved a challenge to the New Orleans city council’s refusal to approve a rate increase sought by a utility company to cover costs it had been ordered to pay by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to cover its share of a nuclear reactor construction project. The city council declined to grant the full increase because it determined that the utility company was negligent in failing to diversify its energy supply portfolio and to properly oversee the reactor project. In response, the company filed a petition for review of the council’s order in Louisiana state court
and
a § 1983 suit seeking declaratory and injunctive relief in federal district court. The district court abstained, relying in part on
Younger,
because of the pending state court proceedings. The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed.
Id.
at 353-58,
In an opinion by Justice Scalia, the Supreme Court reversed. According to the Court, the key question was “whether the Louisiana court action is the type of proceeding to which
Younger
applies.”
Id.
at 367,
Although our concern for comity and federalism has led us to expand the protection of Younger beyond state criminal prosecutions, to civil enforcement proceedings, and even to civil proceedings involving certain orders that are uniquely in furtherance of the state courts’ ability to perform their judicial functions, it has never been suggested that Younger requires abstention in deference to a state judicial proceeding reviewing legislative or executive action. Such a broad abstention requirement would make a mockery of the rule that only exceptional circumstances justify a federal court’s refusal to decide a case in deference to the States.
Id.
at 367-68,
The instant case is clearly controlled by
New Orleans Public Service.
Plaintiffs challenge several provisions of Wisconsin’s new campaign finance law, which is the product of legislative action that was completed when the governor signed into law the state budget bill on July 26, 2002. Although the legislature directed the state attorney general to seek a declaratory judgment on the new law’s constitutionality in state court, it would not be a fair characterization to say that any state court assessment of the law’s constitutionality would be an extension of the legislative process.
See New Orleans Public Service,
Defendants rely heavily on this court’s decision in
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce,
Because I conclude that a decision by this court on plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge to Wisconsin’s campaign finance law would not “interfere” with any ongoing state proceedings within the meaning of Younger, I will deny defendants’ motion for abstention on the basis of that doctrine.
B. Colorado River Abstention
In
Colorado River,
Defendants have not demonstrated that this case presents the exceptional circumstances necessary to justify a stay or dismissal under
Colorado River.
Even assuming that by itself a petition for leave to commence an original action in state supreme court constitutes a genuinely parallel proceeding, the balance of considerations does not weigh in defendants’ favor. There is no indication that this court is an inconvenient forum for any party. In addition, although this suit was filed the same day as the attorney general’s petition, the state supreme court has not yet decided whether to grant the petition and, therefore, has yet to exercise jurisdiction over any case involving the constitutional claims at issue here. Moreover, the parties in this case have engaged in limited discovery and have fully briefed plaintiffs’ motion .for judgment on the pleadings.
See id.
at 21,
C. Declaratory Judgment Act
Finally, I note also that defendants maintain that under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a), this court has discretion to determine “whether and when to entertain an action under the ... Act, even when the suit satisfies subject matter jurisdictional prerequisites.”
Wilton v. Seven Falls Co.,
In summary, I conclude that a decision by this court on plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge to Wisconsin’s campaign finance law would not “interfere” with any ongoing state proceedings within the meaning of Younger. I conclude also that defendants have not shown the existence of exceptional circumstances warranting abstention under the doctrine announced in.- Colorado River or that a declaratory judgment on plaintiffs’ claims is improper under the circumstances. Accordingly, defendants’ motion to abstain from deciding plaintiffs’ constitutional claims or, alternatively, to stay these proceedings will be denied.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that defendants’ motion to abstain or, alternatively, to stay these proceedings is DENIED.
