Court Opinion

ID: 4204113
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-09-18 14:13:25.198604+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:41:08.464933
License: Public Domain

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Working Families Party, Christopher            :
M. Rabb, Douglas B. Buchholz, and              :
Kenneth G. Beiser,                             :
                   Petitioners                 :
                                               :
                v.                             :   No. 435 M.D. 2016
                                               :   Argued: February 8, 2017
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                  :
Pedro A. Cortes, in his Official               :
Capacity as Secretary of the                   :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania                   :
and Jonathan M. Marks, in his                  :
Official Capacity as Commissioner,             :
Bureau of Commissions, Elections               :
and Legislation, Department of State,          :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                  :
                   Respondents                 :

BEFORE:         HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
                HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
                HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
                HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
                HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
                HONORABLE JULIA K. HEARTHWAY, Judge1
                HONORABLE JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge

OPINION
BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT                                   FILED: September 18, 2017

                Working Families Party, Christopher M. Rabb, Douglas B. Buchholz,
and Kenneth G. Beiser (collectively, Working Families) have filed a petition for
review in this Court’s original jurisdiction2 against the Commonwealth of

1
    This case was decided before Judge Hearthway’s term ended on September 1, 2017.
2
    Section 761(a)(1) of the Judicial Code provides:
          (a) General rule.-The Commonwealth Court shall have original jurisdiction of
          all civil actions or proceedings:
(Footnote continued on the next page . . . )
Pennsylvania; Pedro A. Cortes, Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania;
and Jonathan M. Marks, Commissioner of the Department of State’s Bureau of
Commissions,         Elections,    and     Legislation      (collectively,     Commonwealth),
challenging, as unconstitutional, several provisions of the Election Code3 that
prohibit the nomination of a single candidate for public office by two or more
political organizations. Such a nomination process is called “fusion.”4 Before the
Court are the parties’ cross-applications for summary relief. Concluding that the
anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code are constitutional under the United
States and Pennsylvania Constitutions, we deny Working Families’ application for
summary relief and grant the Commonwealth’s application for summary relief.

                           Background & Procedural History
               The undisputed facts of this case are as follows. In the April 26,
2016, primary election, Christopher M. Rabb was nominated by the Democratic
Party as its candidate for Representative of the General Assembly’s 200th
Legislative District.5 In July 2016, approximately three months after the primary
election, Working Families circulated papers to nominate Rabb as its candidate in
the general election for Representative of the 200th Legislative District. On July

(continued . . . )
               (1) Against the Commonwealth government, including any officer
               thereof, acting in his official capacity….
42 Pa. C.S. §761(a)(1).
3
  Act of June 3, 1937, P.L. 1333, as amended, 25 P.S. §§2600-3591.
4
  “‘Fusion’ as the word is used in electoral politics is a process by which two or more political
[organizations] nominate one candidate for an office in an election…. [I]n states that allow
fusion, a single candidate appears as a representative for two or more [political organizations] for
the same office in the general election.” Stewart v. Taylor, 104 F.3d 965, 967 (7th Cir. 1997).
5
  Rabb received 10,299 votes, constituting 47.23% of the total votes cast in the Democratic
primary. Petition ¶20; Answer ¶20.

                                                 2
27, 2016, Working Families submitted Rabb’s nomination papers with 958
signatures of registered voters in the 200th Legislative District, a Candidate
Affidavit, Rabb’s Statement of Financial Interests, and a check in the amount of
$100 to Commissioner Marks’ office at the Department of State.
            Rabb altered his Candidate Affidavit by striking through the following
text:

            that my name has not been presented as a candidate by
            nomination petitions for any public office to be voted for at the
            ensuing primary election, nor have I been nominated by any
            other nomination papers for any such office; that if I am a
            candidate for election at a general or municipal election I shall
            not be a registered and enrolled member of a political party at
            any time during the period of thirty (30) days prior to the
            primary up to and including the day of the following general or
            municipal election[.]

Petition ¶25; Answer ¶25; Commonwealth’s Application for Summary Relief Ex.
4. Rabb further altered his Candidate Affidavit by adding the following italicized
text:

            I swear (or affirm) to the above parts as required by the laws
            applicable to the office I seek, having struck out certain parts
            based on my honest and sincere belief that they are violative of
            the Pennsylvania and U.S. [C]onstitutions.

Working Families’ Application for Summary Relief ¶15; Commonwealth’s
Application for Summary Relief ¶15.
            Commissioner Marks refused to process Rabb’s nomination papers for
two reasons.    First, Rabb had “altered the form of the statutory candidate
affidavit.” Second, “[Rabb’s] name was already presented by nomination petitions
in the General Primary, which precludes [him] from seeking the nomination of a

                                        3
political body pursuant to 25 P.S. §2911(e)(5).”6 Commonwealth’s Application for
Summary Relief Ex. 6.
               On August 5, 2016, the Working Families Party, Rabb, and two voters
residing in the 200th Legislative District, Douglas Buchholz and Kenneth Beiser,
challenged Commissioner Marks’ decision with the instant lawsuit.                          Working
Families’ petition for review included two counts. Count I requested a declaratory
judgment that the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code are unconstitutional
under the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions. Count II requested a writ
of mandamus directing the Commonwealth to process Working Families’
nomination papers for Rabb and to prepare a general election ballot that showed
Rabb’s nomination by both the Democratic Party and Working Families Party for
Representative to the General Assembly for the 200th Legislative District.

6
 Section 951(e) of the Election Code provides:
        There shall be appended to each nomination paper offered for filing an affidavit
        of each candidate nominated therein, stating – (1) the election district in which he
        resides; (2) the name of the office for which he consents to be a candidate; (3) that
        he is eligible for such office; (4) that he will not knowingly violate any provisions
        of this act, or of any law regulating and limiting election expenses, and
        prohibiting corrupt practices in connection therewith; (5) that his name has not
        been presented as a candidate by nomination petitions for any public office to be
        voted for at the ensuing primary election, nor has he been nominated by any other
        nomination papers filed for any such office; (6) that in the case where he is a
        candidate for election at a general or municipal election, he was not a registered
        and enrolled member of a party thirty (30) days before the primary held prior to
        the general or municipal election in that same year; (7) that, in the case where he
        is a candidate for election at a special election, he is not a registered and enrolled
        member of a party; and (8) that he is not a candidate for an office which he
        already holds, the term of which is not set to expire in the same year as the office
        subject to the affidavit.
25 P.S. §2911(e) (emphasis added).

                                                  4
             Concluding that there were no disputed issues of fact, on August 25,
2016, this Court directed the parties to file applications for summary relief with
supporting briefs. Working Families filed its application for summary relief on
September 2, 2016, and the Commonwealth filed its application on September 7,
2016. On September 13, 2016, a panel heard oral argument.
             Following oral argument, this Court denied Working Families’
application for summary relief on Count II and granted corresponding relief to the
Commonwealth. The Court held that mandamus was not the appropriate vehicle
for testing the constitutionality of a statute and, thus, dismissed Count II of the
petition for review. Working Families Party v. Commonwealth, (Pa. Cmwlth., No.
435 M.D. 2016, filed September 30, 2016), slip. op. at 3-4.7 Argument on the
parties’ applications for summary relief on Count I of the petition for review
seeking declaratory relief was heard in February 2017, before this Court en banc.
             In Count I, Working Families asks this Court to declare that the anti-
fusion provisions of the Election Code violate the 14th Amendment to the United
States Constitution, and Article I, Sections 5, 7, and 20 of the Pennsylvania
Constitution.    The Commonwealth responds that the anti-fusion provisions
constitute a valid exercise of the legislature’s power to regulate elections under the
United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions.
                               Historical Background
             We begin with a review of the relevant statutory provisions and case
law precedent. In the 1800s and early 1900s, fusion was a common feature of
many states’ electoral systems, including Pennsylvania’s. See Timmons v. Twin

7
 This mooted the Commonwealth’s application for summary relief based on the assertion that
Count II was barred by the doctrine of laches.

                                            5
Cities Area New Party, 520 U.S. 351, 356 (1997) (“Fusion was a regular feature of
Gilded Age American politics.”). In 1937, the Pennsylvania General Assembly
enacted a comprehensive election statute, known as the Election Code, 25 P.S.
§§2600-3591, to assure the efficiency and integrity of the electoral process. In re
Street, 451 A.2d 427, 433 (Pa. 1982). Included therein, as an “essential element of
the Legislature’s plan,” are several anti-fusion provisions that forbid a single
candidate in a statewide race from appearing on the ballot multiple times on behalf
of more than one party. Id. The anti-fusion provisions ended party-raiding, which
is “the organized switching of blocks of voters from one party to another in order
to manipulate the outcome of the other party’s primary election.” Anderson v.
Celebrezze, 460 U.S. 780, 788 n.9 (1983). Party-raiding results in one political
faction dominating both political parties in the primaries. The Election Code’s ban
on fusion remains in force today.8
              The Election Code divides political organizations into two classes:
political parties and political bodies. Section 801 of the Election Code, 25 P.S.
§2831.9 The political party designation is further divided into “major political

8
  Notably, fusion is permitted for candidates for school board and courts of common pleas,
municipal court, and magisterial district judges. See Section 910 of the Election Code, 25 P.S.
§2870. However, Sections 951(e)(5) and 976 of the Election Code prohibit minor political
parties and political bodies from nominating the same candidate in a local race. See 25 P.S.
§§2911(e)(5), 2936. This disparate treatment was held unconstitutional in Patriot Party of
Allegheny County v. Allegheny County Department of Elections, 95 F.3d 253 (3d Cir. 1996), and
reaffirmed as unconstitutional in Reform Party of Allegheny County v. Allegheny County
Department of Elections, 174 F.3d 305 (3d Cir. 1999).
9
  Section 801 states, in relevant part, as follows:
        (a) Any party or political body, one of whose candidates at the general election
        next preceding the primary polled in each of at least ten counties of the State not
        less than two per centum of the largest entire vote cast in each of said counties for
        any elected candidate, and polled a total vote in the State equal to at least two per
(Footnote continued on the next page . . . )
                                       6
parties” and “minor political parties.” Section 912.2 of the Election Code, 25 P.S.
§2872.2.10 This Court has explained the distinction between a “political body” and
a “political party” as follows:

(continued . . . )
       centum of the largest entire vote cast in the State for any elected candidate, is
       hereby declared to be a political party within the State, and shall nominate all its
       candidates for any of the offices provided for in this act, and shall elect its
       delegates and alternate delegates to the National convention as party rules
       provide. State committee members, and also such party officers, including
       members of the National committee, as its rules provide, shall be elected by a vote
       of the party electors, in accordance with the provisions of this act and party rules.
       (b) Any party or political body, one of whose candidates at either the general or
       municipal election preceding the primary polled at least five per centum of the
       largest entire vote cast for any elected candidate in any county, is hereby
       declared to be a political party within said county; and shall nominate all its
       candidates for office in such county and in all political districts within said
       county, or of which said county forms a part, and shall elect such party officers as
       its rules provide shall be elected therein, by a vote of the party electors, in
       accordance with the provisions of this act.
        (c) Any political body which is not a political party, as hereinabove defined, but
        which has nominated candidates for such general or municipal election by
        nomination papers in the manner provided by this act, shall be deemed to be a
        political body within the meaning of this act, but such political body shall not be
        entitled to nominate its candidates or elect its party officers at primaries held
        under the provisions of this act.
25 P.S. §2831(a), (b), (c) (emphasis added).
10
   Section 912.2 was added by the Act of February 19, 1986, P.L. 29. It states, in relevant part,
as follows:
        (a) Notwithstanding any other provision in this act to the contrary, minor political
        parties shall nominate all of their candidates for the offices to be filled at the
        ensuing November election pursuant to section 903 in accordance with the
        requirements of section 951, other than subsection (e)(6) and (7) thereof, and
        section 954, and shall obtain the required signatures during the same time frame
        available to political bodies. Minor political parties shall be subject to the
        provisions of this act applicable to political parties with respect to special
        elections, voter registration forms, substituted nominations and all other purposes
        except as otherwise expressly provided in this section. “Minor political party”
(Footnote continued on the next page . . . )
                                       7
               [A] “political party” is a group that receives more than a certain
               number of votes at the preceding general election and is
               permitted to select its candidates by the primary election
               method after which the prospective candidate places his or her
               name on the primary ballot by filing a nomination petition.
               Any other political group is a “political body” and must select
               its candidates by filing nomination papers.

In re Zulick, 832 A.2d 572, 574 n.7 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003) (citations omitted). In
short, a political party uses the primary election to nominate its candidate; a
political body nominates its candidate by collecting the requisite number of
signatures from electors, of any party or no party, and filing nomination papers
with the Secretary of the Commonwealth.
               The anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code prohibit political
parties and political bodies from nominating candidates already nominated by
another political organization. Those anti-fusion provisions relevant to political
bodies follow.
               Section 951(e)(5) of the Election Code requires a political body
candidate to file an affidavit with the Commonwealth stating

               that his name has not been presented as a candidate by
               nomination petitions for any public office to be voted for at the
               ensuing primary election, nor has he been nominated by any
               other nomination papers filed for any such office[.]

(continued . . . )
        shall mean a political party as defined in section 801(a) or (b) whose State-wide
        registration is less than fifteen per centum of the combined State-wide registration
        for all State-wide political parties as of the close of the registration period
        immediately preceding the most recent November election. The Secretary of the
        Commonwealth shall prescribe forms or, if there is insufficient time, make
        appropriate conforming changes in existing forms to carry out the purposes of this
        section.
25 P.S. §2872.2(a) (emphasis added).

                                                 8
25 P.S. §2911(e)(5). Likewise, the Secretary of the Commonwealth is required to
reject nomination papers

               if the candidate named therein has filed a nomination petition
               for any public office for the ensuing primary, or has been
               nominated for any such office by nomination papers previously
               filed[.]

Section 976 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. §2936 (applicable to both political
bodies and political parties). Finally, the Election Code prohibits a political body
from filing a substitute nomination certificate for a candidate already nominated by
another political party. Section 980 of the Election Code states:

               no substitute nomination certificate shall nominate any person
               who was a candidate for nomination by any political party for
               any office to be filled at the ensuing November election,
               whether or not nominated for such office by such political
               party, or who has already been nominated by any other political
               body for any office to be filled at the ensuing November or
               special election.

25 P.S. §2940.          Significantly, the Election Code has identical provisions
prohibiting political parties from engaging in fusion. See Sections 91011 and 97912
of the Election Code, 25 P.S. §§2870, 2939.
               Working Families concedes that the Election Code prohibits fusion of
candidates in statewide races and makes no exception for major political parties.

11
   Section 910 requires that a political party candidate file an affidavit with the Commonwealth
stating “that he is not a candidate for nomination for the same office of any party other than the
one designated in such petition.” 25 P.S. §2870.
12
   Section 979 prohibits political parties, in the event of a vacancy, from nominating a candidate
who has already been nominated by a political party or political body for the same office. It
states: “no substitute nomination certificate shall nominate any person who has already been
nominated by any political party or by any other political body for the same office.” 25 P.S.
§2939.

                                                9
However, Working Families maintains that the so-called “Magazzu Loophole,”
named after our Supreme Court’s decision in Appeal of Magazzu, 49 A.2d 411 (Pa.
1946), allows major political parties to fuse their candidates in statewide races,
such as those for General Assembly and United States Congress, but denies
political bodies this opportunity.
                                 Appeal of Magazzu
             In the primary election of 1946, Pietro A. Magazzu was a Republican
candidate for the office of representative in the General Assembly.           He was
defeated by another Republican candidate. The Democratic ticket contained one
candidate, Milo B. Serfas, and Magazzu defeated Serfas by write-in votes. The
county board of elections refused to certify Magazzu as the nominee of the
Democratic Party; instead, it certified Serfas. The issue presented to our Supreme
Court was whether “a candidate who had filed nominating petitions as a member of
one party [was] ineligible to receive the nomination of another party for the same
office by ‘write-in’ or legal ballots or votes[.]” Magazzu, 49 A.2d at 411.
             The Supreme Court recognized that the Election Code forbids a
candidate from being nominated by more than one political party. However, the
Court clarified that:

             [n]owhere in the act, or its amendments, is there a prohibition
             against a voter writing in or pasting in the name of a person for
             whom he desires to vote if such name is not printed on the
             ballot of the political party of which the voter is a member.

Id. at 412. The Court also noted that the opportunity for write-in votes on a paper
ballot is guaranteed by Section 1002(b) of the Election Code, which states:

             There shall be left at the end of the list of candidates … as
             many blank spaces as there are persons to be voted for, for such
             office, in which space the elector may insert the name of any
                                         10
               person whose name is not printed on the ballot as a candidate
               for such office.

25 P.S. §2962(b). Similarly, Section 1216(e) provides a mechanism for write-in
votes where voting is done by machine:

               [a] voter may, at any primary or election, vote for any person
               for any office, for which office his name does not appear upon
               the voting machine as a candidate, by an irregular ballot
               containing the name of such person deposited, written or
               affixed in or upon the appropriate receptacle or device provided
               in or on the machine for that purpose, and in no other manner.

25 P.S. §3056(e).13        The Supreme Court held that Magazzu belonged on the
general election ballot as the Democratic Party candidate for state representative.
               In Magazzu, one candidate by that name appeared on the general
election ballot with a single party designation. Working Families notes that a
candidate can win a major party’s nomination in the primary and also win another
party’s nomination by means of write-in votes. In that case, the candidate will
appear on the general election ballot as nominated by both major political parties.
Working Families asserts that this happens with some regularity.14

13
   Serfas’ argument that the Election Code prohibited Magazzu from being certified as the
Democratic Party’s candidate was based on the use of machine ballots. A voting machine
displays the names of candidates for each party and is locked so that the voter may only vote for
a candidate listed for the voter’s party. Serfas maintained that because Magazzu was identified
as a Republican candidate on the voting machine, he was ineligible from receiving write-in votes
as the Democratic candidate. Serfas conceded that this objection would not apply to a paper
ballot, which lists only the candidates nominated by a voter’s political party. The Court rejected
this argument, stating that it could “ascribe no intent to the legislature to differentiate in that
respect between a paper and a machine ballot.” Magazzu, 49 A.2d at 412.
14
   Working Families compiled a list of elected state representatives with both Democratic and
Republican designations. See Working Families’ Application for Summary Relief, Exhibit G.
The list identified members of the General Assembly, both Senators and Representatives, who
were designated Democratic/Republican in seven different election cycles from 2002 to 2014.
(Footnote continued on the next page . . . )
                                      11
              The Commonwealth responds that Working Families overstates the
significance of our Supreme Court’s holding in Magazzu.                   It contends that
Magazzu simply established that the Election Code allows a voter to write in “the
name of a person for whom he desires to vote if such name is not printed on the
ballot of the political party of which the voter is a member” and to expect that vote
to be counted. Magazzu, 49 A.2d at 412. Magazzu did not create a “loophole”
from the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code. In any case, the Magazzu
holding applies equally to major political parties, minor political parties, and
political bodies. We agree.
              The holding in Magazzu does not authorize the two major parties to
nominate a single candidate for statewide office. Rather, Magazzu stands for the
simple proposition that in a primary election, a voter may write in the name of any
person “not printed on the ballot of the political party” to which the voter belongs.
Id. The write-in vote allows citizens to choose a candidate who does not have the
support of the party establishment. A major party candidate can win his party’s
primary election and also win the other party’s primary with write-in votes. In that
case, the individual will appear on the ballot as the candidate for the two major
parties in the general election. However, a political body candidate who has filed
the requisite nomination papers prior to the primary election can also win the

(continued . . . )
Some of those listed involved the same representative in succeeding election cycles. According
to Working Families’ exhibit, the Democratic/Republican designations occurred 100 times in
these seven election cycles. The General Assembly has 253 members. There are 50 Senators
and 203 Representatives. Representatives are elected every two years, and Senators are elected
every four years.

                                             12
write-in vote for a major party in the primary and, thus, appear on the general
election ballot as the candidate of a major party and of a political body.
                 The anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code forbid the nomination
of one candidate by more than one political organization for the same office.
However, these provisions have nothing to do with the ability of voters to
nominate a candidate by write-in vote. The potential for fusion by a successful
write-in campaign is not limited to major party candidates. The same may be
accomplished by a political body. We reject Working Families’ contention that
Magazzu permits what the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code prohibit.
                               Alleged Constitutional Violations
                 With this background, we turn to the constitutional challenge Working
Families has lodged against Sections 634, 910, 951, 976, 979, 980 and 1406 of the
Election Code, 25 P.S. §§2784, 2870, 2911, 2936, 2939, 2940, and 3156. These
provisions, in various ways and at various steps in the electoral process, prohibit
two or more political organizations from nominating a single candidate. The
proscription applies both to political parties, major and minor, and to political
bodies.
                                                   I.
                 Working Families first contends that the anti-fusion provisions of the
Election Code violate the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to
the United States Constitution.15 More specifically, Working Families argues that

15
     The Fourteenth Amendment provides:
         All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction
         thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No
         State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges and
         immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person
(Footnote continued on the next page . . . )
                                      13
the anti-fusion provisions have a disparate impact on political bodies. Working
Families concedes that it can use write-in votes to have its candidate also appear on
the ballot as the candidate of a major party. However, it argues that the write-in
path to fusion is far more difficult for political bodies than for major parties.
              For a major party to fuse its candidate with another party, a candidate
submits a nomination petition with the requisite number of signatures to appear on
the primary ballot.16 Simultaneously, the party or candidate, or both, must launch a
write-in campaign for the other major party’s nomination in the primary. If the
primary election results in the candidate winning the nomination of both parties, he
will appear on the general election ballot as a candidate for both parties.
              For a political body to fuse, the task is different.17 The political
body’s preferred candidate cannot file a nomination petition as a major party
candidate and appear on the primary election ballot. The political body nominates
its candidate by filing nomination papers with the Secretary of the Commonwealth
on or before August 1st. If the political body wants to have its preferred candidate
also appear on the general election ballot as a major party candidate, it must wage
a write-in campaign. To do this, it will have to file its nomination papers before

(continued . . . )
       of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person
       within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, §1 (emphasis added).
16
   The number of signatures required for nomination petitions of candidates for the primary
election varies based on the office sought. See Section 912.1 of the Election Code, added by the
Act of December 12, 1984, P.L. 968, as amended, 25 P.S. §2872.1.
17
   Working Families submits that since 2002, no political body or minor party candidates have
successfully fused with a major party.

                                              14
the primary election takes place.18             Working Families’ Brief in Support of
Summary Relief at 26. Notably, to sign a political body’s nomination papers, the
elector needs to be a registered voter, but he need not be a member of the political
body.19 Working Families contends that its path to fusion is more difficult and,
thus, the fusion ban violates equal protection.20

18
   The signature requirement for statewide offices is found in Section 951(b) of the Election
Code, 25 P.S. §2911(b). It requires a political body’s nomination paper to include valid
signatures equal to two percent of the vote total of the candidate with the largest number of votes
for any statewide office in the previous election. Id.
        The dissent observes that political bodies must collect a “high number” of signatures to
meet the dictates of Section 951(b). We note, first, that Working Families does not challenge the
signature requirement for political bodies. To nominate a candidate for representative to the
General Assembly in the 2016 election, Working Families was required to obtain a minimum of
495 signatures. Working Families obtained 958. For Working Familites, compliance with
Section 951(b) was not onerous.
        We acknowledge, however, that Section 951(b) has been called into question with respect
to the signature requirements for statewide elections. Recently, three Pennsylvania political
bodies, the Constitution Party, Green Party, and Libertarian Party, launched a successful
challenge to Section 951(b). They sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary
injunction to be excused from complying with the signature requirement formula in Section
951(b). On June 30, 2016, the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania granted the
motion and ordered the Secretary of the Commonwealth to accept the political bodies’
nomination papers containing far fewer signatures than would have otherwise been required
under Section 951(b). Constitution Party of Pennsylvania v. Cortés (E.D. Pa., No. 12-2726,
order filed June 30, 2016). The district court’s order is “intended to replace the signature
requirement” imposed by Section 951(b), and sets forth a new, static signature requirement for
certain offices. Id. (requiring, for example, a candidate for Attorney General to obtain 2,500
signatures including 250 from each of at least 5 counties). Notably, the district court’s order
does not create a new signature requirement for the office of state representative to the General
Assembly, but requires candidates for all such “non-statewide offices” to comply with Section
951(b). Id. at 2, ¶2.
19
   By contrast, only members of the major political party can sign a nomination petition to place
a candidate on the primary election ballot.
20
   The dissent notes that a major party, unlike a minor party or political body, may nominate “by
write in someone who has submitted a nomination petition for the other [major] party’s
primary.” Dissenting op. at n.3. This difference is a function of the fact that only major parties
(Footnote continued on the next page . . . )
                                      15
             Working Families’ argument presupposes that a grass roots movement
cannot successfully take on the candidate chosen by a major party’s establishment,
which commands the party’s coffers and staff. Surely, the presidential race of
2016 undermines this assumption. One anti-establishment candidate was no doubt
assisted by his personal fortune and a successful reality television show. However,
the socialist candidate, lacking both attributes, almost defeated the other major
party’s establishment candidate.
             Fusion by write-in vote is different for a political body than for a
major party because the Election Code sets up a different nomination procedure for
each political organization. That a political body finds it difficult to have its
candidate win a major party primary by write-in vote may be explained by the lack
of an appealing candidate with an inspiring message. Acknowledging the political
body’s different path to fusion by a write-in campaign, we address Working
Families’ equal protection claim.
             The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has summarized the basic principles
of equal protection as follows:

             The prohibition against treating people differently under the law
             does not preclude the Commonwealth from resorting to
             legislative classifications provided that those classifications are
             reasonable rather than arbitrary and bear a relationship to the
             object of the legislation.

Kramer v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Rite Aid Corp.), 883 A.2d 518,
532 (Pa. 2005) (quoting Curtis v. Kline, 666 A.2d 265, 267-68 (Pa. 1995))

(continued . . . )
file nomination petitions to place candidates on the primary election ballot. Any person,
including a political body’s candidate, can win a major party primary by write-in vote.

                                           16
(emphasis added).21 In short, legislative classifications, per se, do not offend equal
protection.
               The level of scrutiny to be applied to a legislative classification
depends upon the interest affected by the classification. Our Supreme Court has
identified three levels of scrutiny:

               The types of classifications are: (1) classifications which
               implicate a “suspect” class or a fundamental right; (2)
               classifications implicating an “important” though not
               fundamental right or a “sensitive” classification; and (3)
               classifications which involve none of these. Id. Should the
               statutory classification in question fall into the first category,
               the statute is strictly construed in light of a “compelling”
               governmental purpose; if the classification falls into the second
               category, a heightened standard of scrutiny is applied to an
               “important” governmental purpose; and if the statutory scheme
               falls into the third category, the statute is upheld if there is any
               rational basis for the classification.

Curtis, 666 A.2d at 268 (quoting Smith v. City of Philadelphia, 516 A.2d 306, 311
(Pa. 1986)).
               Working Families asserts that the anti-fusion sections of the Election
Code, in conjunction with the Magazzu holding, create a classification that treats
political parties and political bodies differently with respect to their ability to fuse
candidates. Working Families further argues that this classification affects the

21
  In Kramer, the Court addressed equal protection claims under both the United States and
Pennsylvania Constitutions. It recognized that “[i]n evaluating equal protection claims under the
Pennsylvania Constitution, this Court has employed the same standards applicable to federal
equal protection claims.” Kramer, 883 A.2d at 532. Accordingly, the analysis set forth in
Kramer is applicable here, where Working Families brings its claim under the Fourteenth
Amendment of the United States Constitution.

                                               17
fundamental right to vote, and thus, is subject to strict scrutiny review.22 We
disagree.
               First and foremost, the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code do
not create a classification. They are facially neutral; they prohibit both political
parties and political bodies from fusing their candidate with another political
organization’s candidate. This conclusion was reached by our Supreme Court in In
re Street, 451 A.2d 427 (Pa. 1982).
               T. Milton Street filed nomination papers to appear on the general
election ballot as candidate of the Milton Street Party, a political body, for the
office of Representative of the Second District of Pennsylvania to the United States
Congress.      After Street’s nomination papers were filed and accepted by the
Secretary of State, the Republican Party’s candidate withdrew from the election.
The Republican Party then filed a substitute nomination certificate naming Street
as its substitute nominee. The Democratic Party challenged the Republican Party’s

22
    Every law regulating election processes imposes some kind of burden upon a voter. Only
where a law imposes a severe burden on the right to vote is it subject to strict scrutiny. Burdick
v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428, 433 (1992).
        Working Families tries to make its equal protection claim a voting rights case by arguing
that the anti-fusion provision “forces [voters] to make a Hobson’s choice between efficacy and
fidelity to their own values.” Working Families’ Brief in Support of Application for Summary
Relief at 44. It contends that being presented with the choice to “vote party” or “vote candidate”
burdens the voting rights of its members.
        The United States Supreme Court rejected the “Hobson’s choice” argument in Timmons
v. Twin Cities Area New Party, 520 U.S. 351, 360 (1997). In Timmons, the Court of Appeals
held that Minnesota’s fusion ban forced members of the New Party to make a “no-win choice”
between voting for a candidate with no realistic chance of winning or “defecting” to vote for a
major party candidate. Id. In overruling the Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court held that the
New Party “remains free to endorse whom it likes, to ally itself with others, to nominate
candidates for office, and to spread its message to all who will listen.” Id. at 361. Indeed, every
voter in every general election has to make hard choices, regardless of whether they are a
member of a major party, a minor party or a political body.

                                               18
substitute nomination certificate under Section 979 of the Election Code. The
Commonwealth Court granted the Democratic Party’s requested relief to set aside
the substitute nomination certificate.
              Before the Supreme Court, Street conceded that his substitute
nomination by the Republican Party violated Section 979 of the Election Code,
which states that “no substitute nomination certificate shall nominate any person
who has already been nominated by any political party or by any other political
body for the same office….” 25 P.S. §2939. Street raised several constitutional
challenges to Section 979 of the Election Code, including equal protection.
              Street argued that Section 979 violated equal protection of law
because it treated political bodies and political parties alike even though they are
different. Street conceded that the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code
promoted the legitimate state interest of preventing party-raiding. However, the
prohibition against a party’s substitute nomination of a candidate who has already
been nominated by a political body failed to further this, or any other legitimate
state interest.
              The Supreme Court disagreed. It rejected Street’s theory that political
bodies must be treated differently than political parties, noting, instead, that it was
the differentiation proposed by Street that posed an equal protection issue. The
Supreme Court held that facially discriminatory anti-fusion laws do not violate
equal protection, explaining:

              Under Pennsylvania’s Election Code…political parties and
              political bodies are treated equally: neither may nominate,
              either initially or through substitution, a candidate for the
              general election who has already been nominated by another
              political group.

                                          19
In re Street, 451 A.2d at 431.      Because anti-fusion provisions of the Election
Code were facially neutral, Street did not meet the threshold burden of
demonstrating a legislative classification. Section 979 of the Election Code was at
issue in In re Street, but the Supreme Court’s analysis applies with equal force to
the other anti-fusion provisions in the Election Code challenged here by Working
Families.
             Nor does Magazzu treat political parties and political bodies
differently. As Working Families concedes, fusion is available to a political party
and a political body so long as it is accomplished by write-in votes. To the extent
a successful write-in campaign in the primary is harder for a political body
candidate to achieve, this is a fortuity arising from factual circumstances, such as
finances and organization, external to the statute.
             Even assuming, arguendo, that Working Families has identified a
disparate impact on political bodies, we reject its contention that this creates a
classification that requires a strict scrutiny review.   The right to vote is not
impacted by anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code.           Citizens of the
Commonwealth are free to cast their vote for their candidate of choice, by write-in
or otherwise. To the extent Magazzu implicates the right to vote, it protects the
right by assuring that write-in votes will be counted.
             In re Street, 451 A.2d 427, is dispositive of Working Families’ equal
protection claim. In arguing otherwise, Working Families points to Reform Party
of Allegheny County v. Allegheny County Department of Elections, 174 F.3d 305
(3d Cir. 1999), which considered the provisions of the Pennsylvania Election Code
that allowed major parties to fuse candidates for certain local races but expressly
prohibited minor parties from doing so. See Sections 951(e)(5) and 976 of the

                                          20
Election Code, 25 P.S. §§2911(e)(5), 2936. The Court of Appeals held that the
prohibition of fusion in local races by political bodies and minor parties violated
equal protection and was unconstitutional.       Because Reform Party considered
facially discriminatory statutory provisions in the Election Code, it is inapposite.
             Even so, the Court of Appeals did not apply a strict scrutiny standard
of review for deciding the equal protection challenge.         Rather, it applied an
intermediate level of scrutiny, which weighed the burden imposed against “any
plausible justification the State has advanced for imposing unequal burdens on
major and minor parties.” Reform Party, 174 F.3d at 315. As set forth below, the
Commonwealth has offered a justification for the burden that passes the
intermediate standard of review applied in Reform Party.
             Working Families’ equal protection argument is not based upon the
language of the Election Code but, rather, upon the premise that Magazzu has
excused political parties from the anti-fusion dictates of the Election Code. This is
not a correct understanding of Magazzu, which allows a candidate to win a primary
election by write-in votes even though he appeared on the primary ballot for
another political party. In In re Street, 451 A.2d 427, our Supreme Court rejected
an equal protection challenge to the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code,
and it did so more than 30 years after its holding in Magazzu. Magazzu does not
require a re-examination of the holding reached in In re Street.
                                          II.
             Working Families next argues that the anti-fusion provisions of the
Election Code violate Article I, Sections 5, 7, and 20 of the Pennsylvania
Constitution. These provisions provide for free and equal elections, freedom of
speech, and freedom of association. We consider these claims ad seriatim.

                                          21
                                 Speech and Association
              The Pennsylvania Constitution guarantees every citizen freedom of
speech and freedom to associate with others.                 Article I, Section 7 of the
Pennsylvania Constitution provides, in relevant part:

              The free communication of thoughts and opinions is one of the
              invaluable rights of man, and every citizen may freely speak,
              write and print on any subject, being responsible for the abuse
              of that liberty.

PA. CONST. art. I, §7. Article I, Section 20 guarantees the right to associate. It
reads:

              The citizens have a right in a peaceable manner to assemble
              together for their common good, and to apply to those invested
              with the powers of government for redress of grievances or
              other proper purposes, by petition, address or remonstrance.

PA. CONST. art. I, §20.
              Freedom of speech and association undeniably constitute fundamental
rights.23 In re Nader, 905 A.2d 450, 465 (Pa. 2006). Nevertheless, our Supreme
Court has recognized that in the context of election law, “not all restrictions
imposed by [] States on candidates’ eligibility for the ballot impose
constitutionally-suspect burdens on voters’ rights to associate or choose among
candidates.” Id. (quoting Anderson v. Celebrezze, 460 U.S. 780, 788 (1983)). The
Commonwealth may, and inevitably must, “enact substantial regulation containing
reasonable, non-discriminatory restrictions to ensure honest and fair elections that

23
  Working Families does not separate its speech rights and associational rights claims. They are
one and the same in the context of a ballot access claim.

                                              22
proceed in an orderly and efficient manner.” Banfield v. Cortés, 110 A.3d 155,
176-77 (Pa. 2015).
               In deciding whether the Election Code’s anti-fusion provisions violate
speech and associational rights guaranteed by the Pennsylvania Constitution, we
weigh the character and magnitude of the burden imposed by the provisions
against the interests proffered to justify that burden. Timmons, 520 U.S. at 358.
The Pennsylvania Constitution affords greater protection of speech and
associational rights than does our Federal Constitution.                       See DePaul v.
Commonwealth, 969 A.2d 536, 546 (Pa. 2009) (noting, inter alia, that Article I,
Section 7 is the “ancestor, not a stepchild, of the First Amendment”).
Nevertheless, our Supreme Court has explained that reference to “First
Amendment authority remains instructive in construing Article I, Section 7” of the
Pennsylvania Constitution. Id. at 547.
               Working Families argues that prohibiting a political body from fusing
its candidate with a major party candidate denies the political body freedom of
expression and association.24          It is barred from choosing the most attractive
candidate willing to accept its nomination. Working Families further argues that
the fusion ban violates the speech and associational rights of candidates and of
voters. It contends that the Election Code’s burden on speech and association
requires a strict scrutiny review.
               Our Supreme Court has ruled that the fusion ban in the Election Code
does not violate the First Amendment. It explained as follows:

24
   Nothing in the Election Code prevents a major party candidate from associating with a
political body and expressing support for the political body’s values and platform. In a general
election, a candidate reaches out to all voters, not just those in the party that nominated him. To
this end, candidates seek endorsements from a wide spectrum of individuals and interest groups.

                                                23
             While the right to associate for the advancement of political
             beliefs includes the right to advance a candidate who represents
             those interests, the “ballot access” cases of the United States
             Supreme Court make it clear that the right of association does
             not encompass the right to nominate as a candidate a
             particular individual who fails to meet reasonable eligibility
             requirements.... Where, as here, the challenged requirement
             simply prohibits the nomination of a candidate who is already
             on the ballot, it cannot reasonably be said that this requirement
             “unfairly or unnecessarily burden[s] either a minority party’s or
             an individual candidate’s equally important interest in the
             continued availability of political opportunity.”

In re Street, 451 A.2d at 432 (quoting Lubin v. Panish, 415 U.S. 709, 716 (1974)
(emphasis added)). Here, the most recent “ballot access” case is Timmons, 520
U.S. 351, which was decided a generation after In re Street.
             In Timmons, the New Party, a minor political party as defined in
Minnesota election law, sought to nominate Andy Dawkins as its candidate for
Minnesota State Representative. Dawkins had previously filed as a candidate for
State Representative of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, a major
political party, and was running unopposed. Neither Dawkins nor the Democratic-
Farmer-Labor Party objected to the New Party’s nomination of Dawkins, and he
filed the required candidate affidavit with election officials.
             Minnesota’s election law prohibited fusion candidacies.        Because
Dawkins had already filed a petition to be a candidate for the Democratic-Farmer-
Labor Party’s nomination, local election officials refused to accept the New Party’s
nomination petition naming Dawkins.          As a result, the New Party filed suit
contending that Minnesota’s election laws prevented it from selecting and
associating with its candidate of choice. In rejecting the New Party’s claim, the
Supreme Court explained:

                                          24
             The New Party’s claim that it has a right to select its own
             candidate is uncontroversial, so far as it goes.... That is, the
             New Party, and not someone else, has the right to select the
             New Party’s “standard bearer.” It does not follow, though, that
             a party is absolutely entitled to have its nominee appear on the
             ballot as that party’s candidate.... That a particular individual
             may not appear on the ballot as a particular party’s candidate
             does not severely burden that party’s associational rights.

Timmons, 520 U.S. at 359 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added). The
Court further observed that the anti-fusion sections of Minnesota’s election law
merely “reduce[d] the universe of potential candidates who may appear on the
ballot as the party’s nominee....” Id. at 363.
             The United States Supreme Court rejected the argument that anti-
fusion laws severely burden the First Amendment guarantee of speech and
association because the primary purpose of a ballot is to elect candidates, not to
serve as a forum of political expression. The Supreme Court reasoned as follows:

             It is true that Minnesota’s 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. In addition, the ban shuts off one possible avenue a
             party might use to send a message to its preferred candidate
             because, with fusion, a candidate who wins an election on the
             basis of two parties’ votes will likely know more—if the
             parties’ votes are counted separately—about the particular
             wishes and ideals of his constituency. We are unpersuaded,
             however, by the party’s contention that it has a right to use the
             ballot itself to send a particularized message, to its candidate
             and to the voters, about the nature of its support for the
             candidate. Ballots serve primarily to elect candidates, not as
             forums for political expression.... Like all parties in Minnesota,
             the New Party is able to use the ballot to communicate
             information about itself and its candidate to the voters, so long
             as that candidate is not already someone else’s candidate. The
             party retains great latitude in its ability to communicate ideas to
             voters and candidates through its participation in the campaign,
             and party members may campaign for, endorse, and vote for
                                          25
               their preferred candidate even if he is listed on the ballot as
               another party’s candidate....

Id. at 362-63 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added).
               Pennsylvania’s Constitution provides greater protection of speech and
associational rights than does its federal counterpart, but we are guided by the
teachings of the United States Supreme Court on these rights. DePaul, 969 A.2d at
547. Further, where a party to litigation “mounts an individual rights challenge
under the Pennsylvania Constitution, the party should undertake an independent
analysis” to explain why “state constitutional doctrine should depart from the
applicable federal standard.” Id. at 541.25 Working Families has not offered this
explanation.      Accordingly, we employ the analytical paradigm established in
Timmons, 520 U.S. 351, with respect to Article I, Sections 7 and 20 of the
Pennsylvania Constitution.
               In Timmons, the Supreme Court held that the “character and
magnitude of the burden” on the right of speech and association must be weighed
against the state’s justification for the burden. The Supreme Court explained that:

               [r]egulations imposing severe burdens on plaintiffs’ rights must
               be narrowly tailored and advance a compelling state interest.
               Lesser burdens, however, trigger less exacting review, and a
               State’s “‘important regulatory interests’” will usually be enough
               to justify “‘reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions.’”

25
  In Commonwealth v. Edmunds, 586 A.2d 887 (Pa. 1991), our Supreme Court held that when
advocating a departure from the analogous federal standard in interpreting a state constitutional
provision, the party should brief (1) the text of the Pennsylvania Constitution, (2) its history and
Pennsylvania case law thereon, (3) case law from other jurisdictions and (4) policy
considerations, including unique issues of state and local concern. Working Families has not
done the Edmunds analysis.

                                                26
Timmons, 520 U.S. at 358 (citations and quotations omitted). Timmons held that
the anti-fusion provisions limit the “universe of potential candidates” that may
appear as a party’s candidate. Id. at 352. Under Timmons, this was held to require
the “less exacting review,” i.e., whether the Commonwealth’s asserted interests
justify the burden imposed. Id. at 358.
               The Commonwealth has proffered an “important regulatory interest”
to justify the Election Code’s prohibition of fusion. The Election Code designates
a political organization as either a political party or a political body based on its
performance in the preceding general election.                  Based on a percentage-vote
calculation set forth in Section 801 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. §2831,26 a
political organization whose candidate receives two percent of the total votes cast
for any candidate who is elected, both statewide and in each of at least ten
counties, is designated a statewide political party. A political organization whose
candidate receives five percent of the total votes cast in a given county, at either
the preceding general or municipal election, may attain county political party
status.27 A political organization that has a vote performance below two percent at
the state level, or five percent at the county level, is designated as a political body.
               If fusion were permitted, Rabb’s name, for example, would have
appeared on the general election ballot with the designation “Democratic
Party/Working Families Party.” His name would not appear twice, i.e., once as a

26
   See supra n.8.
27
   There is a further division between major political parties and minor political parties. See
Section 912.2 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. §2872.2. Minor political parties are parties whose
statewide registration is less than fifteen percent of the combined statewide registration for all
statewide political parties. Id. Major political parties are those with greater than fifteen percent
registration.

                                                27
candidate of the Democratic Party and again as a candidate of the Working
Families Party.      The Election Code provides no procedure to disaggregate or
apportion the total votes received by a candidate.               Accordingly, it would be
impossible to determine whether the support for the candidate came from the votes
of the political party or from the political body.
              Because Pennsylvania aggregates its vote totals, fusion would make it
impossible to perform the percentage-based vote calculation to determine proper
designations of political organizations in the next election cycle. 28 This vote-based
calculation is important because only political parties must nominate their
candidates in primary elections. Section 902 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. §2862.
Without the anti-fusion provisions, third party candidates could be eliminated from
the general election ballot.
              Political bodies may begin to circulate nomination papers on the tenth
Wednesday prior to the primary and must file them on or before the second Friday
following the primary election, i.e., August 1st. See Section 953(b), (c) of the
Election Code, 25 P.S. §2913(b), (c).29 If fusion were permitted, members of a

28
   Working Families responds that the disaggregation issue could be avoided by dividing the total
number of votes by the number of nominating bodies, or, by assigning one hundred percent of
the votes to the non-major-party organization. See Youngman v. Lycoming County Board of
Elections, 47 Pa. D. & C. 2d 367 (1969). Because we hold the anti-fusion provisions pass
constitutional muster, we decline to consider these alternative vote allocation methods.
29
   It states, in relevant part, as follows:
         (b) No nomination paper shall be circulated prior to the tenth Wednesday prior to
         the primary, and no signature shall be counted unless it bears a date affixed not
         earlier than the tenth Wednesday prior to the primary nor later than the second
         Friday subsequent to the primary.
         (c) All nomination papers must be filed on or before the second Friday subsequent
         to the primary.
25 P.S. §2913(b), (c).

                                               28
major political party could, during and after the primary election, circulate
nomination papers to name the major party’s nominated candidate as the nominee
of a political body without the consent of any members of the political body. The
superior organization of a major party would enable it to collect the requisite
signatures and submit nomination papers to the Secretary of the Commonwealth
faster than the real political body could accomplish those tasks. Commonwealth’s
Application for Summary Relief, Marks Declaration ¶33 (“[political bodies] have
typically waited until shortly before the deadline to submit their nomination
papers[.]”). The Secretary must accept the first valid set of nomination papers
bearing the name of a political body, and reject any filed later. By winning the
race to file, a major party could “impersonate” a political body. This would have
the undesirable result of fewer candidates being presented to the electorate in the
general election.
             The General Assembly has made the determination that stability in the
election process is not served by fusion of candidates. Our Supreme Court has
stated:

             The real purpose of this part of the so-called “party raiding”
             provisions is to prevent the election ballot from being cluttered
             by candidates who are seeking to multiply the number of times
             their name appears on the ballot under various inviting labels.

Packrall v. Quail, 192 A.2d 704, 706 (Pa. 1963). As observed by our Supreme
Court, the constitutionality of anti-fusion “has been consistently sustained by this
Court since the enactment of the Election Code in 1937.” In re Street, 451 A.2d at
433. We hold that the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code do not violate
the rights of speech and association protected by Article I, Sections 7 and 20 of the
Pennsylvania Constitution.

                                         29
                             Free and Equal Elections
             In its final argument, Working Families asserts the ban on fusion
violates the free and equal election clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
Article I, Section 5 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, which guarantees free and
equal elections, provides:

             Elections shall be free and equal; and no power, civil or
             military, shall at any time interfere to prevent the free exercise
             of the right of suffrage.

PA. CONST. art. I, §5. Elaborating on the meaning of the “free and equal election
clause,” our Supreme Court has directed that:

             [E]lections are free and equal within the meaning of the
             Constitution when they are public and open to all qualified
             electors alike; when every voter has the same right as any other
             voter; when each voter under the law has the right to cast his
             ballot and have it honestly counted; when the regulation of the
             right to exercise the franchise does not deny the franchise
             itself[;] and when no constitutional right of the qualified elector
             is subverted or denied him.

Shankey v. Staisey, 257 A.2d 897, 899 (Pa. 1969) (quoting Winston v. Moore, 91
A. 520, 523 (Pa. 1914)).
             Our Supreme Court has recognized that Article I Section 5 implicates
a citizen’s right to vote, which is “fundamental and ‘pervasive of other basic civil
and political rights.’” Banfield, 110 A.3d at 176 (quoting Bergdoll v. Kane, 731
A.2d 1261, 1269 (Pa. 1999)).        Nevertheless, the Commonwealth “may enact
substantial regulation containing reasonable, non-discriminatory restrictions to
ensure honest and fair elections that proceed in an orderly and efficient manner.”
Id. at 176-77.

                                         30
            Working Families argues the anti-fusion provisions of the Election
Code deny voters the right to have their vote counted in a way that reflects their
true party preference.      Working Families asserts that it is imperative that
representatives know the values of those who vote for them, and cross-nomination
enables some record of this by permitting members of political bodies to “vote
their values without wasting their votes.” Working Families’ Brief in Support of
Application for Summary Relief at 24. It is beyond peradventure that each citizen
has a right to cast his vote and have it counted. However, as explained previously,
the Pennsylvania Constitution does not guarantee that a voter will approve of his
party’s chosen candidate; a voter may be presented with the choice to “vote party”
or “vote candidate.”
            In the 2016 general election, Working Families’ members had the
unfettered ability to vote for Rabb, their preferred candidate. That Rabb’s name
appeared on the general election ballot as the Democratic Party candidate, but not
also as the Working Families candidate, did not impose a burden. Members of
Working Families were free to cast their vote for Rabb.
            To the extent Working Families claims that its members’ voting rights
were infringed upon because they cannot send a message about their preferred
candidate through the ballot, we have addressed this contention. Simply, “[b]allots
serve primarily to elect candidates, not as forums for political expression.”
Timmons, 520 U.S. at 363.
            Working Families argues that under Magazzu, supporters of political
bodies cannot vote for fused candidates whereas supporters of major party
candidates can. However, as addressed above, this is the result of circumstances
external to the Election Code. Magazzu established simply that number of votes,

                                        31
even when cast by write-in, determines the winner of a primary election. A
candidate’s appearance on the ballot with multiple political designations does not
affect voting rights. A voter supporting such a candidate is not in a position
superior to the voter casting his ballot for a candidate having a single political
designation. In each scenario, the vote is counted once.
             In its final argument, Working Families maintains the anti-fusion
provisions are a product of the major political parties’ effort to prevent the free
exercise of the right of suffrage. Specifically, it asserts “the legislature acted to
advance the interests of the two established major parties, and to block outsiders.”
Working Families’ Brief in Support of Application for Summary Relief at 28. It
offers no support of this claim.      In any case, the “motive” of an individual
legislator voting on legislation is irrelevant to the constitutionality of a collective
work product. See McCormick v. Columbus Conveyer Company, 564 A.2d 907,
910 n.1 (Pa. 1989) (holding that remarks and understandings of individual
legislators is not relevant to the meaning of the statute). As noted above, the anti-
fusion provisions serve an important regulatory function:         they prevent party
raiding and “avoid voter confusion.” In re Street, 451 A.2d at 430. We decline to
address further Working Families’ bald assertions of legislative conspiracy.
             In sum, Working Families has failed to present a viable claim that the
anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code impose any burden on the right to vote
or otherwise offend Article I, Section 5 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
                                     Conclusion
             Working Families has failed to establish that the anti-fusion
provisions of the Election Code are unconstitutional under the United States or
Pennsylvania Constitutions. Magazzu did not create a major party exemption from

                                          32
the Election Code’s across-the-board ban on any political organization nominating
a candidate of another political organization. The Election Code’s anti-fusion
provisions, which are facially neutral, violate neither the equal protection clause of
the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution nor the rights of free and
equal elections and freedom of speech and association guaranteed by Article I of
the Pennsylvania Constitution.
             Accordingly, we deny Working Families’ application for summary
relief and grant the Commonwealth’s application for summary relief.
                                     _____________________________________
                                     MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge

                                         33
          IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Working Families Party, Christopher   :
M. Rabb, Douglas B. Buchholz, and     :
Kenneth G. Beiser,                    :
                   Petitioners        :
                                      :
             v.                       :     No. 435 M.D. 2016
                                      :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,         :
Pedro A. Cortes, in his Official      :
Capacity as Secretary of the          :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania          :
and Jonathan M. Marks, in his         :
Official Capacity as Commissioner, :
Bureau of Commissions, Elections      :
and Legislation, Department of State, :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,         :
                   Respondents        :

                                     ORDER

             AND NOW, this 18th day of September, 2017, petitioners’ application
for summary relief is denied and respondents’ cross-application for summary relief
is granted as to Count I of the petition for review.

                                    ______________________________________
                                    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Working Families Party,                         :
Christopher M. Rabb, Douglas B.                 :
Buchholz, and Kenneth G. Beiser,                :
                        Petitioners             :
                                                :
               v.                               :
                                                :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                   :
Pedro A. Cortes, in his Official                :
Capacity as Secretary of the                    :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                   :
and Jonathan M. Marks, in his                   :
Official Capacity as Commissioner,              :
Bureau of Commissions, Elections                :
and Legislation, Department of State,           :
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                   :   No. 435 M.D. 2016
                          Respondents           :   Argued: February 8, 2017

BEFORE:        HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
               HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
               HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
               HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
               HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
               HONORABLE JULIA K. HEARTHWAY, Judge
               HONORABLE JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge

DISSENTING OPINION
BY JUDGE COSGROVE                                   FILED: September 18, 2017

               While I respect the well-crafted and well-reasoned Majority opinion,
the decision in Appeal of Magazzu, 49 A.2d 411 (Pa. 1946) compels my dissent. In
that case, the Supreme Court permitted a candidate, who had filed nominating
petitions as a member of one party, to receive the nomination of another party for
the same office. Thus, while our Election Code 1 (except in local judicial and

      1
          Act of June 3, 1937, P.L. 1333, as amended, 25 P.S. §§ 2600 - 3591.
school director races) prohibits “fusion” candidacies (i.e., “the nomination by more
than one political party of the same candidate for the same office in the same
general election,” Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party, 520 U.S. 351, 353 n.1
(1997), and while such prohibitions are constitutional, Timmons, the holding in
Magazzu makes an exception for candidates who are nominated by the opposing
party through the write-in process. As a result, and pursuant to what Working
Families Party calls the “Magazzu loophole,” Majority, slip op. at 10, a major party
may, through the write-in process, nominate a candidate who has also filed
petitions seeking the nomination of the other major party.
               This avenue is not, however, available to minor parties or political
bodies since they do not nominate their candidates in the primary but must do so
through a labor intensive gathering of signatures.2 Under the provisions challenged
in this case, these non-major parties are prohibited from nominating someone who
has filed nominating petitions for one of the major parties. It is that simple and, as
such, is constitutionally infirm.
               By way of example, assume Candidate X files petitions seeking the
nomination of the Democratic Party in the primary, and prevails. Candidate X also
receives more votes (through write in) than all the candidates who filed nominating
petitions on the Republican side. Candidate X is now the candidate of both the
Democratic and Republican parties in the General Election. But he or she is not,
and cannot be, placed on the ballot as the candidate of a minor party or a political
       2
          While the number of signatures required for placement on the ballot is fluid (depending
on the results in the previous election), and can be extraordinarily high pursuant to Section
951(b) of the Election Code, 25 P.S. § 2911(b), the Secretary of the Commonwealth “is not
enforcing” the mechanism which determines this number “[a]s a result of a federal district court
order” filed in Constitution Party of Pennsylvania v. Cortés, 824 F.3d 386 (3rd Circuit 2016), but
instead is requiring a static and diminished number of signatures. See Pennsylvania Department
of State Political Body Nomination Paper General Instructions Sheet, available at
http://www.dos.pa.gov/VotingElections/CandidatesCommittees/RunningforOffice/Documents/2
017%20PB%20Nomination%20Paper%20Instructions%20(KMK%20edits)%20with%20chart.p
df (last viewed August 17, 2017).
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body. He or she may be the unanimous choice of such a minor party or political
body; he or she may have garnered the requisite number of signatures required of
such organizations to secure a spot on the ballot in their name; but the provisions in
question in this case prohibit this candidate from receiving this nomination.
               The Majority suggests that Magazzu does not inhibit the minor
parties/political bodies since they can likewise mount write-in campaigns during
the primary and thus seek a major party's nomination for the candidate of their
choice. What the Majority seems to miss, however, is that unlike the major parties,
the minor parties/political bodies cannot employ the nominating process to which
they are relegated (i.e., collection of the high number of signatures necessary to
place their candidate on the general election ballot) for a candidate who had also
submitted nominating petitions for one of the major parties during the primary.3
This distinction is so directly contrary to the concept of equal protection that it
cannot survive scrutiny on any level under the Fourteenth Amendment. U.S.
CONST. amend. 14.
               The decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit in Reform Party v. Allegheny County Department of Elections, 174 F.3d
305 (3rd Cir. 1999) offers a framework for application of equal protection
principles here. That case involved a question whether a statutory “ban on minor
party ‘cross-nominations’ in certain local offices” was constitutional, since major
parties were allowed to cross-nominate candidates in these particular local races.
Reform Party, 174 F.3d at 308. As these provisions had already been declared
       3
         The Majority correctly notes that a political body/minor party candidate “who has filed
the requisite nomination papers prior to the primary election can also win the write-in vote for a
major party in the primary, and thus, appear on the general election ballot on behalf of a major
party.” Majority, slip op. at 13 (emphasis added). What the political body/minor party cannot
do, however, is submit nomination papers for a candidate who has also submitted a nomination
petition for inclusion on the primary ballot of one of the major parties. A major party may,
however, nominate by write in someone who has submitted a nomination petition for the other
party’s primary.
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unconstitutional by the Third Circuit in Patriot Party of Allegheny County v.
Allegheny County Department of Elections, 95 F.3d 253 (3rd Cir. 1996), the
Reform Party court revisited the question in the aftermath of Timmons, and
reaffirmed its earlier ruling that “Pennsylvania's decision to ban cross-nomination
by minor parties and to allow cross-nomination by major parties constitutes the
type of ‘invidious discrimination’ prohibited by the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Reform Party, 174 F.3d at 310.
               The Majority distinguishes Reform Party since it addressed a matter
of facial discrimination, where the provisions at issue here, according to the
Majority, are not facially discriminatory.           This distinction, however, does not
excuse the Election Code's constitutional impairment vis-à-vis minor political
parties and political bodies since it was the disparate treatment of these
organizations as compared to major parties which Reform Party condemned.
Further, stapled to the “Magazzu loophole,” the provisions in question here are
thus, indeed, “facially discriminatory,” Reform Party, with no countervailing state
interest to sustain them. Contrary to the Majority's view, the reasoning of Reform
Party is equally as applicable here as it was in that case.
               If Magazzu is as limited as the Majority suggests,4 then it creates a
distinctly exclusive political club with only the two major parties as members. So-

       4
          The Majority notes that in In re Street, 451 A.2d 427 (Pa. 1982) “our Supreme Court
rejected an equal protection challenge to the anti-fusion provisions of the Election Code, and it
did so more than 30 years after its holding in Magazzu.” Majority, slip op. at 21. While this is
so, the Street Court also reaffirmed Magazzu in a footnoted reference: “Aside from the three
offices for which cross-filing of nominations is permitted (judge of a court of record, elected
school director and justice of the peace), cross-filing is permitted in the general election only
when, in addition to obtaining the nomination of a political party or political body through the
filing of nomination petitions or nomination papers, a candidate receives a write-in nomination in
another party's primary. See Magazzu Election Case, 355 Pa. 196, 49 A.2d 411 (1946).” In re
Street, 451 A.2d at 430, n.7.
                                              JMC-4
called minor parties, such as Working Families Party, are not invited to this club
and are unable to enjoy these particular fruits of membership.          This cannot
withstand constitutional muster even under the most relaxed standard.
             Perhaps the Supreme Court got it wrong when it created the “Magazzu
loophole.” If so, that Court will have to correct it by overruling this nearly
seventy-year-old decision. Since that is something we cannot do, we must apply
Magazzu's rationale evenly and equally. I do not believe the Majority opinion
fulfills this responsibility, and therefore, I must dissent.

                                         ___________________________
                                         JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge

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