Wisconsin judges can list political
party affiliation but cannot endorse partisan candidates or personally
solicit campaign contributions
By Joe
Forward, Legal Writer, State
Bar of Wisconsin
June 15, 2010 – The U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit on June 14 held that a Wisconsin judge
or judicial candidate may announce political party membership, but
cannot endorse partisan candidates or personally solicit campaign
contributions.
In Siefert
v. Alexander et al., No. 09-1713, the court addressed the free
speech rights of elected judges and judicial candidates under
Wisconsin’s Code of Judicial Conduct after a challenge by
Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge John Siefert.
Judge Siefert sought to list his
affiliation with the Democratic Party, endorse partisan candidates for
office and solicit contributions for his upcoming 2011
campaign.
Provisions of Wisconsin’s Code of
Judicial Conduct – Supreme Court Rules 60.06(2)(b)1, 60.06(2)(b)4,
and 60.06(4) – prohibit a judge from engaging in these
activities.
In June of 2008, Judge Siefert
challenged the constitutionality of the provisions on free speech
grounds by filing suit against the Wisconsin Judicial Commission in U.S.
District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. That court held
that all three provisions were unconstitutional.
The Judicial Commission appealed. The
State Bar of Wisconsin urged appeal, and considered filing an amicus
brief to voice strong support for an independent judiciary and
continuing support for existing regulations as established by the
Judicial Commission, but did not.
The 7th Circuit Court
of Appeals – in an opinion written by Judge John Daniel Tinder
– agreed that SCR 60.06(2)(b)1, which prohibits a judge or
judicial candidate from listing political party membership, is
unconstitutional.
But the court held that prohibiting the
endorsement of party candidates or personally soliciting campaign
contributions under SCR 60.06(2)(b)4 and SCR 60.06(4) is
constitutional.
SCR 60.06(2)(b)1 –
party membership
SCR 60.06(2)(b)1 prohibits a judge or
candidate for judicial office from being a member of any political
party. Siefert sought to list his affiliation with the Democratic
Party.
In determining the constitutionality of
60.06(2)(b)1, the appeals court analyzed Republican Party of Minn. V.
White (White I), 536 U.S. 765 (2002). In White I, the court
struck down a rule that prohibited judges and judicial candidates from
announcing their views on disputed legal and political
issues.
Siefert argued that under White
I, the Judicial Commission’s party membership rule must meet a
strict scrutiny test. The Judicial Commission argued that a less
stringent standard applied.
But the court stated that “the
partisan affiliation ban acts to prohibit [Siefert’s] speech on
both his political views and his qualifications for office. Therefore,
the clause is a content-based restriction on speech subject to strict
scrutiny.”
To survive strict scrutiny, the rule
“must be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state
interest,” the court explained.
The court concluded that under White
I, the state does not have a compelling state interest in preventing
state candidates “from announcing their views on legal or
political issues.”
Thus, the appeals court affirmed the
district court judgment that Wisconsin’s party affiliation rule
unconstitutionally infringed upon Siefert’s free speech
rights.
SCR 60.06(2)(b)4 – endorsement
of partisan candidates
SCR 60.06(2)(b)4 prohibits judges and
judicial candidates from publicly endorsing or speaking on behalf of any
partisan candidate or platform. Siefert sought to endorse candidates in
a partisan election.
Siefert argued that, like party
membership, “the choice to endorse another candidate is simply a
means of expressing his political views” and thus strict scrutiny
applies. But the court concluded that a rule forbidding public
endorsement is not the same as an impermissible rule against party
affiliation.
“An endorsement is a different
form of speech,” the court noted. Thus, the court explained, a
balancing approach, not a strict scrutiny test, “is the
appropriate method of evaluating the endorsement rule.”
The court applied Pickering v. Bd.
of Ed. of Twp. High Sch. Dist. 205, Will County, Ill., 391 U.S. 563
(1968) in determining “the balance between the state’s
interest and the judge’s.”
The court held: “Given that
Wisconsin’s interest in preventing its judges’ participation
in politics unrelated to their campaigns is justified based on its
obligations under the Due Process Clause, as well on its obligation to
prevent the appearance of bias from creeping into its judiciary, and
that the endorsement restriction does not infringe on a judge’s
ability to inform the electorate of his qualifications and beliefs, the
regulation is permissible.”
The court noted that its holding is
limited to bans on endorsements in partisan elections. It does not apply
to nonpartisan elections, the court explained.
Thus, the appeals court reversed the
district court judgment in holding that Wisconsin’s endorsement
rule is constitutional.
SCR 60.06(4) – personal
solicitation of campaign contributions
SCR 60.06(4) prohibits judges or
judicial candidates from personally soliciting or accepting campaign
contributions. Siefert sought to solicit contributions for his 2011
campaign.
As a campaign finance regulation, the
court explained, “it is reviewed under the framework set forth in
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976).” Under Buckley,
“restrictions on spending by candidates and parties are reviewed
with strict scrutiny, while restrictions on contributions are reviewed
under less rigorous ‘closely drawn’
scrutiny.”
The court concluded that the
solicitation ban “is drawn closely enough to the state’s
interest in preserving impartiality and preventing corruption to be
constitutional” and “does not impair more speech than is
necessary.”
The court also noted that a less
restrictive means of restricting personal solicitation of contributions
is not available. The reality of judicial elections, the court wrote, is
that “judicial campaigns are often largely funded by lawyers, many
of whom will appear before the candidate who wins.”
Thus, the appeals court reversed the
district court judgment in holding that Wisconsin’s personal
solicitation rule is constitutional.
Judge Rovner dissent
Judge Ilana Rovner dissented with
respect to the endorsement ban. While noting that “endorsements of
candidates in political elections are troubling and have the potential
to compromise judicial impartiality,” she thought strict scrutiny
applied, not a balancing test.
“Laws and regulations that
restrict speech on the basis of content are subject to the high hurdle
of the strict scrutiny test,” Rovner wrote. “There could be
no clearer example of a restriction that is both content-based and that
burdens speech regarding qualifications for office.”
Under a strict scrutiny test, Judge
Rovner concluded, “Wisconsin has failed to demonstrate that its
endorsement ban is narrowly tailored to prevent the harm it
asserts.”