                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
                               Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
                                      File Name: 16a0034p.06

                    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                  FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
                                    _________________


 OHIO COUNCIL 8 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE,            ┐
 COUNTY & MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO;                  │
 NADINE ALLEN; PETER J. CORRIGAN; MARTHA                 │
 GOOD; OHIO DEMOCRATIC PARTY,                            │
                           Plaintiffs-Appellants,        │
                                                          >      No. 14-3678
                                                         │
                                                         │
        v.
                                                         │
                                                         │
 JON HUSTED, in his official capacity as Secretary of    │
 State of the State of Ohio, et al.,                     │
                                 Defendants-Appellees.   │
                                                         ┘

                        Appeal from the United States District Court
                       for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
                      No. 1:10-cv-00504—Susan J. Dlott, District Judge.

                                    Argued: April 30, 2015

                             Decided and Filed: February 11, 2016

                  Before: MERRITT, BOGGS, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges.

                                      _________________

                                          COUNSEL

ARGUED: David Martin, UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SCHOOL OF LAW, Charlottesville,
Virginia, for Appellants. Renata Y. Staff, OFFICE OF THE OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL,
Columbus, Ohio, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: David Martin, Stephen L. Braga, UNIVERSITY
OF VIRGINIA SCHOOL OF LAW, Charlottesville, Virginia, Alphonse A. Gerhardstein,
Jennifer L. Branch, GERHARDSTEIN & BRANCH, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellants. Renata
Y. Staff, Ryan L. Richardson, OFFICE OF THE OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL, Columbus,
Ohio, for Appellees.




                                                1
No. 14-3678                 Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                      Page 2


                                       _________________

                                            OPINION

                                       _________________

       ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Ohio elects its state judges through a hybrid process. Judicial
candidates are first selected through partisan primary elections. On the general-election ballot,
however, their names show no partisan affiliation, even though judicial candidates may affiliate
with political parties throughout the entirety of their campaigns.        The plaintiffs—the Ohio
Democratic Party, three individuals who were candidates for state-court judgeships in the 2010
election, and a statewide labor organization—brought suit below challenging the
constitutionality of the Ohio law that precludes the inclusion of judicial candidate party
affiliations on the general-election ballot. While the plaintiffs argue that Ohio’s electoral system
burdens their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, the burden is minimal and is outweighed
by Ohio’s interest in minimizing partisanship in judicial elections. Consequently, the district
court correctly granted the Ohio Attorney General’s motion for summary judgment.

       Judicial candidates in Ohio must first compete in partisan primary elections in which they
are listed on their political party’s primary election ballot, known as an “office type ballot.”
Ohio Rev. Code § 3505.03. However, unlike their legislative and executive counterparts, the
winners of the judicial primary elections must then participate in a nonpartisan general election.
Ohio Rev. Code § 3501.01(J). Ohio Rev. Code § 3505.04—the statute which the plaintiffs
challenge—precludes judicial candidates from being associated with their political parties on the
general-election ballot:

       No name or designation of any political party nor any words, designations, or
       emblems descriptive of a candidate or his political affiliation, or indicative of the
       method by which such candidate was nominated or certified, shall be printed
       under or after any nonpartisan candidate’s name which is printed on the ballot.

       Although the general election must be nonpartisan in the sense that the ballot may not
contain judicial candidates’ party affiliations, judicial candidates are not restricted from
associating with political parties in other contexts. As they campaign for the general election,
judicial primary winners may continue to identify with their political parties, and political parties
No. 14-3678                    Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                            Page 3


may campaign and advertise on candidates’ behalf. Political parties may even communicate with
voters outside of polling places on the day of the general election and distribute sample ballots
identifying their preferred candidates, which voters may take with them into the voting booth.
Thus, judicial candidates in Ohio may affiliate with political parties—and in fact must do so in
the primaries—throughout the course of the general election. But they do not appear on the
general-election ballot with their party designations next to their names.

        Ohio’s justification for this two-tiered approach is that it wishes to minimize reliance on
political parties in judicial elections while still establishing a formal role for political parties in
the nomination process. Ohio explains that its system “leaves to political parties the right to
place candidates for judicial offices in nomination” while also “withdraw[ing] candidates for
judicial offices from partisan politics” in recognition of the fact that judges “can serve no party,
promulgate no partisan theories of government, encourage no partisan economic measures.”
State ex rel. Weinberger v. Miller, 99 N.E. 1078, 1085 (Ohio 1912). While Ohio has been
electing its judges under this system since 1851, id. at 1086, few other states employ a similar
method.1

        On July 28, 2010, the plaintiffs filed a complaint in the district court against various Ohio
state officials, alleging that § 3505.04 violates their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights to
freedom of expression and association. The plaintiffs also requested a temporary restraining
order and preliminary injunction that would permit judicial candidates to list their political party
affiliations on the 2010 general election ballot. The Ohio Attorney General later intervened to
defend the statute.

        At the hearing for the temporary restraining order, testimony established that many voters
are uninformed about judicial races.            Additionally, many voters abstain from voting in
nonpartisan judicial races despite having cast a vote in other races on the same ballot, a
phenomenon known as “voter drop off.” For example, in the 2008 general election, about one

        1
          We have identified only two other states that appear to have analogous hybrid systems. Michigan
candidates for supreme court are nominated at party conventions and then run in a nonpartisan general election,
and Arizona combines partisan primaries with nonpartisan general elections in its elections for superior court.
See National     Center     for     State    Courts,    Methods      of    Judicial    Election, available   at
http://www.judicialselection.us/judicial_selection/methods/selection_of_judges.cfm?state.
No. 14-3678                 Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                        Page 4


percent of voters failed to vote for President, but approximately thirty percent did not cast a vote
in a race for state Supreme Court Justice. Overall, voter drop off in Ohio judicial elections
ranged between 20–32% in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s. Evidence also established that voter
drop off is greater in nonpartisan judicial races than in other “low-information” partisan races—
that is, races in which voters are just as likely as in judicial races to be uninformed about the
candidates. An expert witness concluded that voter drop off in Ohio’s judicial races is therefore
caused at least in part by the elections’ nonpartisan nature.

       The district court denied the plaintiffs’ request for a temporary restraining order and
preliminary injunction. We affirmed the district court’s order. Ohio Council 8 Am. Fed’n of
State, Cty. & Mun. Emps., AFL-CIO v. Brunner, 462 F. App’x 557, 559 (6th Cir. 2012) (per
curiam). While the appeal of the denial of the preliminary injunction was still pending, Ohio
filed a motion for summary judgment in the district court. Following our affirmance of its order
denying the preliminary injunction, the district court granted Ohio’s motion for summary
judgment. Ohio Council 8 Am. Fed’n of State, Cty. & Mun. Emps., AFL-CIO v. Brunner, 24 F.
Supp. 3d 680, 683 (S.D. Ohio 2014).

       Employing the “flexible” Anderson-Burdick balancing test, the district court first
concluded that § 3505.04 does not impose a severe burden on the plaintiffs’ First and Fourteenth
Amendment rights. Brunner, 24 F. Supp. 3d at 686–98 (citing Anderson v. Celebrezze, 460 U.S.
780 (1983); Burdick v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428 (1992)). The district court then reasoned that any
burden that the statute does place on the plaintiffs is justified “if the statute serves an important
regulatory interest of the State.” Id. at 698. Ohio claimed as its only interest “minimizing
partisanship in judicial elections.”      Id.    The district court described Ohio’s “Solomonic
approach” to carrying out its stated interest as “half-hearted at best,” noting that Ohio “steeps the
judicial selection process in partisan politics everywhere but in the voting booth on election
day.” Id. at 699–701. Nonetheless, because the district court concluded that the burden that
§ 3505.04 places on the plaintiffs is not severe, the court held that Ohio’s interest in diminishing
reliance on political parties in judicial elections is legitimate and that it outweighs the plaintiffs’
interests in using the general-election ballot as a forum for their expressive and associative
activities. Id. at 701. The plaintiffs appeal.
No. 14-3678                   Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                     Page 5


       Although the 2010 election is long over, this case is not moot. The “capable of repetition
yet evading review” doctrine saves a case from mootness when “(1) the challenged action was in
its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration, and (2) there was a
reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subject to the same action
again.” Weinstein v. Bradford, 423 U.S. 147, 149 (1975) (per curiam). Challenges by former
candidates and their party sponsors are “typically capable of repetition because [a candidate]
‘retains the right to run for judicial office again,’” Platt v. Bd. of Comm’rs on Grievances
& Discipline of Ohio Supreme Court, 769 F.3d 447, 453 (6th Cir. 2014) (quoting Carey v.
Wolnitzek, 614 F.3d 189, 197 (6th Cir. 2010)), and because “it is likely that the [party] will once
again seek to place candidates on the . . . ballot.” Libertarian Party of Ohio v. Blackwell,
462 F.3d 579, 584–85 (6th Cir. 2006). The plaintiffs’ claims regarding the 2010 election evaded
review, yet are capable of repetition, because the former candidates may run again for judicial
office in Ohio, the Ohio Democratic Party will likely seek to again place judicial candidates on
the general-election ballot, and the members of the statewide labor organization will again vote
in Ohio judicial elections.

       Section 3505.04 is constitutional because at most it minimally burdens the plaintiffs’
rights to freedom of expression and association, and because the state’s interest is sufficient to
outweigh that minimal burden. Supreme Court precedent requires that we apply just such a
balancing test, often referred to as the Anderson-Burdick test. A court considering a challenge to
a state election law must weigh “the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the rights
protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments that the plaintiff seeks to vindicate” against
“the precise interests put forward by the State as justifications for the burden imposed by its
rule,” taking into consideration “the extent to which those interests make it necessary to burden
the plaintiff’s rights.” Anderson, 460 U.S. at 789; see also Tashjian v. Republican Party of
Conn., 479 U.S. 208, 213–14 (1986). “[T]he rigorousness of our inquiry into the propriety of a
state election law depends upon the extent to which a challenged regulation burdens First and
Fourteenth Amendment rights.”          Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434.         If a state imposes “severe
restrictions” on constitutional rights, then the state law must pass strict scrutiny to survive,
meaning that it must be “narrowly drawn to advance a state interest of compelling importance.”
Id. (quoting Norman v. Reed, 502 U.S. 279, 289 (1992)). If, however, the regulations are
No. 14-3678                   Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                     Page 6


minimally burdensome and nondiscriminatory, a less-searching examination closer to rational
basis applies, Green Party of Tenn. v. Hargett, 767 F.3d 533, 546 (6th Cir. 2014), and “the
State’s important regulatory interests are generally sufficient to justify the restrictions.” Burdick,
504 U.S. at 434 (internal quotation marks omitted). Further, if the regulation falls somewhere in
between the two extremes, “the burden on the plaintiffs [is weighed] against the state’s asserted
interest and chosen means of pursuing it.” Green Party of Tenn., 767 F.3d at 546.

          The burden on the plaintiffs’ First and Fourteenth Amendment rights is minimal because
political parties and judicial candidates remain free to provide, and voters remain free to receive,
a plethora of information regarding whether a given candidate affiliates with or is endorsed by a
particular political party. The plaintiffs contend that § 3505.04 burdens a political party’s right
to champion its nominees and educate voters, leading to large amounts of voter drop off; judicial
candidates’ right to express their qualifications and associate with their political parties; and
voters’ rights to associate, receive information, and cast meaningful votes. While the plaintiffs’
asserted interests are not trivial, the expansive ability of the plaintiffs to exercise their
associational and expressive rights in other ways during the general election demonstrates that
any burdens that § 3505.04 places on their constitutional rights are minimal.

          First, § 3505.04 only minimally burdens a political party’s rights because a political party
has no First Amendment right to designate its nominee on the general-election ballot and because
a party has many other opportunities to champion its nominee and educate voters. The Supreme
Court has twice concluded that political parties do not have a First Amendment right to party
designation of their nominees on a ballot. Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State Republican Party,
552 U.S. 442, 453 n.7 (2008); Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party, 520 U.S. 351, 362–63
(1997).     In Timmons, a minor political party challenged Minnesota’s “fusion ban,” which
prohibited an individual from appearing on the ballot as the candidate of more than one party.
520 U.S. at 354. The Court reasoned that although the fusion ban “prevents the New Party from
using the ballot to communicate to the public that it supports a particular candidate who is
already another party’s candidate,” the New Party’s constitutional rights were not severely
burdened, because political parties do not have a right to use the ballot to convey a particularized
message. Id. at 362–63. The Court further explained that “[b]allots serve primarily to elect
No. 14-3678                       Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                                   Page 7


candidates, not as forums for political expression.” Id. at 363. Likewise, in Washington State
Grange, the Court reaffirmed its holding in Timmons. 552 U.S. at 453 n.7 (citing Timmons,
520 U.S. at 362–63). The Court upheld a Washington initiative permitting candidates to identify
themselves on the ballot by their party preference regardless of whether they were endorsed by,
or were even members of, that party. Id. at 447. In doing so, the Court explained that it was
“unexceptionable” that political parties in Washington could no longer indicate their nominees
on the ballot, reiterating that “[t]he First Amendment does not give political parties a right to
have their nominees designated as such on the ballot.” Id. at 453 n.7 (citing Timmons, 520 U.S.
at 362–63).2

         The plaintiffs’ arguments here fail for the same reason that the New Party’s arguments in
Timmons failed: a political party has no First Amendment right to use the general-election ballot
for expressive activities. The plaintiffs attempt to distinguish Timmons by arguing that “[t]he
burdens imposed by Ohio’s prohibition on all political parties is self-evidently larger than
Minnesota’s fusion ban in Timmons, which burdened the associational rights only of minor
political parties.” However, an election law that treats political parties differently raises more
constitutional concerns, not fewer, than a regulation that treats all political parties equally.
Cf. Rosen v. Brown, 970 F.2d 169, 175 (6th Cir. 1992). Thus, because a political party has no
right to use the ballot itself to educate voters, § 3505.04 does not significantly impede a political
party’s ability to spread its message to voters who do not know the winner of the party’s primary.

         The plaintiffs infer from the fact that the Timmons Court proceeded to engage in
Anderson-Burdick balancing that the inability to designate nominees on a ballot imposes at least
some burden on political parties’ rights. See 520 U.S. at 363, 364–69. Even granting such an


         2
           Similarly, in Schrader v. Blackwell, this court considered two provisions of the Ohio Revised Code that
combined to prevent a legislative candidate from being associated on the ballot with “unqualified” parties—i.e.,
parties that failed to garner a required amount of votes in prior elections or file a petition signed by a certain amount
of supporters. 241 F.3d 783, 785 (6th Cir. 2001). We determined that the restrictions that denied members of
unqualified political parties a partisan cue on the ballot were “not so severe as to trigger the strict-scrutiny review as
outlined in Burdick [and Anderson].” Id. at 787. In reaching this conclusion, we stressed that candidates of
unqualified parties were denied a partisan label but were still able to appear on the ballot. Id. at 791. In light of the
significant state interests in regulating the formation of political parties and the ballots themselves, we then
determined that the burden placed on parties to become qualified under Ohio law before they can appear on the
ballot was “not unreasonable.” Id. at 790–91. Thus, we held that “the denial of party-affiliation voting cues to
candidates of unqualified political parties . . . survives constitutional challenge.” Id. at 791.
No. 14-3678                 Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                       Page 8


inference, any burden that § 3505.04 does place on political parties is minimal because of the
extensive remaining ways that a party may convey its message.              Indeed, in arguing that
§ 3505.04 does nothing to further Ohio’s stated interest in minimizing partisanship in judicial
elections, the plaintiffs themselves have highlighted how much latitude Ohio’s election scheme
gives political parties to champion their judicial nominees and educate voters after the
primaries—and therefore how little § 3505.04 actually burdens them. The plaintiffs explain that
political parties may publicly endorse and campaign for their primary winners before the general
election and distribute model ballots at polling places for voters to take with them into the voting
booth, and that Ohio’s county boards of elections list candidates’ party affiliations on the boards’
websites. Because of the numerous ways by which political parties may still involve themselves
in the general election, the inability to educate voters on the ballot itself imposes at most a
minimal burden on political parties.

       The “voter drop off” phenomenon also fails to demonstrate that § 3505.04 burdens First
and Fourteenth Amendment interests of political parties—at least in any way that is not
inherently balanced by achievement of the nonpartisan goal of the statute. Instead of working to
show how much parties’ rights are burdened, the argument works to show how much § 3505.04
does, in fact, further Ohio’s interest in minimizing partisanship in judicial elections.         The
plaintiffs complain that “uninformed voters simply do not vote in judicial races . . . when there is
no partisan identifier to rely upon.” However, the voter drop off of which plaintiffs complain
may just as readily indicate that Ohio’s election scheme is fulfilling its stated purpose: Fewer
votes are cast solely in reliance on the judicial candidates’ party affiliations than would be cast if
the elections were partisan, thereby reducing partisanship in judicial elections. The votes that the
plaintiffs complain that they are losing are almost by definition votes that would have been based
on only the candidates’ party affiliations—the very thing that Ohio is attempting to minimize. In
short, a political party has many other means at its disposal to educate its members besides
relying on uninformed voters to cast party-line ballots.

       Moreover, § 3505.04 does not prevent voters from voting based on party affiliation or
from casting a party-line ballot. As detailed above, political parties may endorse candidates and
campaign on their behalf throughout the general election, and candidates may publicly express
No. 14-3678                   Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                     Page 9


their affiliations with their political parties. This case is therefore not like Eu v. San Francisco
Cty. Democratic Cent. Comm., 489 U.S. 214, 223 (1989), in which a total ban on primary
endorsements by political parties “directly hamper[ed] the ability of a party to spread its message
and ham[strung] voters seeking to inform themselves about the candidates and the campaign
issues.” Here, unlike in Eu, voters remain able to ascertain a judicial candidate’s political party
affiliation from a variety of different media and even to rely solely upon a party’s endorsement
of a candidate while casting their votes. Section 3505.04 only inhibits a voter’s ability to rely
exclusively on the general-election ballot to learn about the candidates’ party affiliations. Such a
burden is minimal, and is further alleviated by voters’ ability to bring sample ballots prepared by
the political parties with them into the voting booth.

          Ohio judicial candidates are also entirely free to associate themselves with the parties of
their choice and express their party affiliations publicly in forums other than the general-election
ballot. As the district court explained, candidates are free to associate with political parties by
“running in partisan primaries, attending political gatherings, participating in fund-raising
activities sponsored by political parties, appearing on political parties’ sample ballots, and saying
that they are a member[] of or are endorsed by a political party.” Brunner, 24 F. Supp. 3d.
at 692.     Unlike in Carey, in which we held unconstitutional a judicial ethics canon that
precluded judicial candidates from publicly announcing their political party affiliations, 614 F.3d
at 201–03, § 3505.04 does not prevent candidates from announcing their party affiliations to
voters.     Instead, § 3505.04 only prohibits candidates from having their party affiliations
announced by the state in one place: on the general-election ballot. Thus, unlike the content-
based restriction in Carey, § 3505.04 merely limits the forums in which judicial candidates may
express themselves. Indeed, it stretches the idea of “candidate expression” to include the way
that the state identifies a candidate on the ballot. “Ballots serve primarily to elect candidates, not
as forums for political expression.” Timmons, 520 U.S. at 363.

          Our decision in Rosen does not support the idea that there is a substantial burden on the
plaintiffs in this case. In Rosen, we held that an Ohio voting regulation that barred nonparty
legislative candidates from being designated as “Independent” on the general-election ballot,
while allowing Republican and Democratic candidates to be identified by their parties on the
No. 14-3678                  Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                     Page 10


ballot, was unconstitutional. 970 F.2d at 171. While we noted that “party identification is the
single most important influence on political opinions and voting,” id. at 172, we also noted that a
state could bar all political designations on ballots, id. at 175. Thus, Rosen stands for the limited
proposition that although a state may refuse to include party labels on ballots entirely, once it
chooses to allow them, it must do so in a nondiscriminatory manner. See id.

        In short, because of the various means other than the general-election ballot by which
political parties and judicial candidates may communicate party-affiliation information to voters,
and because of the practical nature of ballots versus other sources of information, § 3505.04
places at most only minimal burdens on the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of political
parties, judicial candidates, and voters in Ohio judicial elections.

        The minimal burden is outweighed by § 3505.04’s advancement of the important interest
of reducing partisanship in judicial elections. A minimally burdensome and nondiscriminatory
election law such as § 3505.04 is constitutional if it advances “important regulatory interests,”
Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434, a form of review akin to rational-basis review. Green Party of Tenn.,
767 F.3d at 546.      Under such review, plaintiffs “bear[] a heavy constitutional burden” to
demonstrate that a state’s election law is unconstitutional. Schrader v. Blackwell, 241 F.3d 783,
790–91 (6th Cir. 2001).

        Ohio’s stated interest of minimizing partisanship in judicial elections is an important one.
In light of the different role that judges must play from that of their legislative and executive
counterparts, we have recognized that minimizing partisanship in judicial elections can be a
compelling state interest. Carey, 614 F.3d at 201. Likewise, in recognizing that judges must
exercise neutrality and independence in the performance of their duties, the Supreme Court held
that the closely related interest of maintaining public perception of judicial integrity and
impartiality is “a state interest of the highest order.” Williams-Yulee v. Fla. Bar, 135 S. Ct. 1656,
1666 (2015) (quoting Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., 556 U.S. 868, 889 (2009)). Plaintiffs
do not really deny the importance of this state interest. Instead, they contend that § 3505.04 does
nothing to further that interest. On the contrary, § 3505.04 does advance Ohio’s interest by
discouraging purely party-line voting and signaling to voters that judges are responsible only to
the law and not to their political parties.
No. 14-3678                  Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                      Page 11


          First, § 3505.04 furthers Ohio’s interest in minimizing partisanship in judicial elections
by working to reduce the number of votes cast solely in reliance on party affiliation. As
explained above, the very fact that voter drop off is greater in judicial races than in other partisan
low-information races supports the conclusion that fewer individuals in judicial elections rely
solely on party affiliation to cast their votes than if the candidates’ affiliations were designated
on the general-election ballot. The disparity in the number of voters who “drop off” in the
nonpartisan judicial races compared to those who drop off in the partisan low-information races
suggests the existence of a significant number of voters who vote in low-information races based
only on party designation. The fact that these individuals do not vote in low-information judicial
races indicates that Ohio’s system is working: Judicial elections are probably decided based
solely on partisan politics to a lesser degree than if the party designations were included on the
ballot.

          Second, removing party designations from the general-election ballot furthers Ohio’s
interest in minimizing partisanship in judicial elections because it communicates to voters that
judges may not be “concerned with party platforms or party expediency” or “depart from the
plain provisions [of the law], no matter how much [they] may be opposed to the principles or
purposes of it.” Weinberger, 99 N.E. at 1085. Divorcing judicial candidates from their party
affiliations in the voting booth may enhance the public’s perception of judicial integrity by
conveying the impression that judges are, at the end of the day, bound by the law rather than by
their political ideologies. Minimizing this specific type of partisanship—voters’ association of
judicial candidates with their political parties at the climactic moment of choice in the same way
that voters associate executive or legislative candidates with their parties—may also decrease the
chance that voters will blur the distinctions between officials who are beholden to certain
constituencies and those who are required to be neutral and independent. Elected judges may
feel freer to rule in good conscience against their former fellow-partisans when the citizen
actions that finally gave them their judicial role were formally nonpartisan. Furthermore, by
denying partisan cues on the ballot, Ohio’s electoral system might encourage voters to inform
themselves about the qualifications of judicial candidates prior to stepping into the booth on
election day. While the efficacy of such a policy might be up for debate, the Constitution does
No. 14-3678                   Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                        Page 12


not “require elaborate, empirical verification of the weightiness of the State’s asserted
justifications.” Timmons, 520 U.S. at 364.

          Contrary to the plaintiffs’ claims that the ability of political parties to remain involved in
the general election creates a hole in the efficacy of the law, Ohio’s two-tiered regime for
electing judges is not internally inconsistent at all. Parties naturally want their members to fill
government positions. A very logical judicial election scheme could accordingly enlist parties to
come up with candidates best suited to win a nonpartisan election. Such a scheme would take
advantage of the obvious ability of parties to recruit, cull, and vet candidates, while incentivizing
the parties to come up with candidates who can win a nonpartisan race. The ultimate purpose
would be to promote the reality and appearance that judges are motivated by an allegiance to law
rather than to party. Ohio’s scheme is roughly consistent with such an approach, and there is
nothing internally inconsistent about it.

          The plaintiffs argue that § 3505.04 does not further Ohio’s interest in any way, because
Ohio has not completely eliminated partisan politics from its judicial elections. However, “[a]
State need not address all aspects of a problem in one fell swoop,” Williams-Yulee, 135 S. Ct. at
1668, especially where, as is the case here, a state’s law is reviewed under a standard similar to
rational-basis review, cf. Williamson v. Lee Optical of Okla., Inc., 348 U.S. 483, 487–88 (1955).
Indeed, even when strict scrutiny applies, laws can be constitutional even though they
“conceivably could have restricted even greater amounts of speech in service of their stated
interests.” Williams-Yulee, 135 S. Ct. at 1668. Despite the plaintiffs’ claims, their own evidence
of voter drop off and the message that nonpartisan ballots communicate to voters show that
Ohio’s interest in minimizing partisanship in judicial elections is being furthered, at least to some
degree.

          Additionally, the fact that it is still possible for Ohio voters to rely on nothing more than a
judicial candidate’s party affiliation to cast their votes does not fatally undermine the
reasonableness of the scheme. Totally eliminating such reliance would require First Amendment
infringements that would not pass muster under strict scrutiny. For instance, in Republican Party
of Minn. v. White (White I), 536 U.S. 765 (2002), the Supreme Court found unconstitutional a
judicial ethics canon that prevented judicial candidates from “announc[ing] his or her views on
No. 14-3678                Ohio Council 8, et al. v. Husted, et al.                   Page 13


disputed legal or political issues,” id. at 770, 779–80, and in Carey, we held unconstitutional a
judicial ethics canon that prevented candidates from publicly announcing their political party
affiliations. 614 F.3d at 202. But the fact that the First Amendment permits candidates to
campaign, and citizens to vote, on partisan bases in formally nonpartisan elections cannot mean
that such formally nonpartisan elections are unconstitutional.

       In sum, Ohio’s interest in minimizing partisanship in judicial elections is sufficient to
justify any minimal constitutional burden imposed by § 3505.04. The judgment of the district
court is accordingly affirmed.
