Laurel D. McClellan Kingman County Attorney 349 N. Main P.O. Box 113 Kingman, Kansas 67068
Dear Mr. McClellan:
As Kingman county attorney you request our opinion on the legality of a county employee policy which applies to certain non-elected employees of Kingman county.
The county policy in question states:
"All employees of Kingman county have the right to vote and discuss politics and are encouraged to do so. No non-elected county employees shall be permitted to actively seek election to an elected county office unless that employee takes an unpaid leave of absence from his/her county employment. Such leave of absence shall be required at the time said non-elected employee files for said office or from the time said non-elected employee announces his/her candidacy or openly campaigns for said office. Said employee may be reinstated to his/her original employment only after the completion of the contested election and only upon the consent of the County Commissioners and the department head of the employee's former department. This provision shall not apply to non-elected employees seeking a county office in which no incumbent is seeking election. `Incumbent' is defined as a person holding an elected county office, whether the office was obtained by election or appointment."
K.S.A.
You inform us that there are presently two county employees who wish to run for an elected office other than the one in which they are now employed. You ask that we address whether the county policy in question violates any constitutional rights, specifically the rights to due process and freedom of speech. We note that the state has a similar restriction on certain of its employees seeking elective office. K.S.A. 75-3925.
Due process of law is guaranteed under the
"A general guide was furnished by the Roth court which characterized the type of property interest encompassed within the due process clause as follows: `. . . To have a property interest in a benefit, a person clearly must have more than an abstract need or desire for it. He must have more than a unilateral expectation of it. He must, instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it.' . . . Kansas law clearly establishes the incumbent to a public office enjoys no property or vested interest in public office." Id. at 811.
It follows that if an incumbent possesses no property or vested interest in his or her office, neither would a prospective candidate for the same position. In Clements the Supreme Court found that the "resign-to-run" provision of the Texas constitution (which required that holders of certain offices automatically resign their positions if they became candidates for any elected office unless the unexpired portion of their current term less than one year) did not violate the United State's constitution and could be upheld. Thus, the government may place some restrictions upon persons who currently work for the government and wish to run for an elected position, if such restrictions reasonably serve a legitimate governmental interest.
Courts have upheld some fairly severe limitations upon political activity by public employees. United States Civil Service Commission v.National Association of Letter Carriers,
"[C]onstitutionally forbid federal employees from engaging in plainly identifiable acts of political management and political campaigning, such as organizing a political party or club; actively participating in fund-raising activities for a partisan candidate or political party; becoming a partisan candidate for, or campaigning for, an elective public office; actively managing the campaign of a partisan candidate for public office; initiating or circulating a partisan nominating petition or soliciting votes for a partisan candidate for public office; or serving as a delegate, alternate, or proxy to a political party convention." Clements, supra at 2885.
Based on the above-cited authorities, we do not believe the county policy in question violates the due process clause.
You also question whether the county policy violates free speech rights. The
"Not all public employee speech is protected. . . . Only that speech which both lies within the general protection of the
first amendment (e.g., is not obscene) and is `upon a matter of public concern' may be entitled to that particular protection. . . . Public employee speech not on matters of `public concern' simply enjoys no protection against public employer disciplinary action. . . . As to such speech, the state's interest as public employer in managing its personnel and internal operations is sufficiently weighty that the public employee'sfirst amendment rights in the speech are no greater than would be those of a private employee." Berger v. Battaglia,779 F.2d 992 ,998 (4th Cir. 1985), cert. denied,476 U.S. 1159 ,106 S. Ct. 2278 ,90 L. Ed. 2d 720 (1986).
Thus, governmental employers may place some restrictions upon employees speech. See also Waters v. Churchill, 511 U.S. ___,
However, there are limits upon a governmental employer's ability to restrict political activities and speech by their employees. A number of jurisdictions have held as unconstitutionally overbroad provisions which restrict nonpartisan as well as partisan political activity. See
51 A.L.R. 4th 702, 741 (1987). See also Morial v. Judiciary Comm'n ofState of Louisiana,
The Kingman county policy in question does not prohibit employees from discussing politics. In fact, it encourages interest in such matters. Rather, the policy requires that county employees who wish to run for a contested county office conduct their political campaigns while in the private sector. This county restriction appears to only apply if an employee chooses to run in a partisan race. Thus we do not believe it unconstitutionally deprives county employees of their free speech rights.
The county resolution in question does not prohibit Kingman county employees from speaking about political matters or running for elective office. Rather, the policy in question requires that such employee candidates take an unpaid leave of absence. The employee may be reinstated when the election is over. The policy is inapplicable if the election in question does not involve an incumbent. Current office holders are not subject to this policy, (perhaps because county board of commissioners' lack of personnel policy authority over the person of another elected county officer). You do not state what purpose the policy in question seeks to promote or what community good is furthered by these restrictions. However, it is not difficult to articulate the possible intent of the county.
We believe this personnel policy may be defensible if it promotes a legitimate public interest in as narrow a manner as possible. The federal Hatch act requires that certain federal employees either refrain from running for elective office or resign from employment. Likewise K.S.A. 75-3925 imposes a similar requirement upon specific Kansas state employees.
Thus, in keeping with case law concerning similar types of restrictions by other governmental employers, it is our opinion that the county policy in question does not violate county employees' due process or free speech rights. A county may adopt a general employee policy that applies to certain non-elected employees of a county and requires that they take an unpaid leave of absence during the time they are a candidate running for county office. Such a policy can only be imposed upon those employees subject to the personnel policy authority of a county board of commissioners, should be as narrowly drawn as possible and must rationally promote a legitimate government interest.
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Theresa Marcel Nuckolls Assistant Attorney General
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