Markley v. Rosenblum
Markley v. Rosenblum
Opinion of the Court
**533Two sets of petitioners have challenged the Attorney General's certified ballot title for Initiative Petition 28 (IP 28). We review the ballot title for substantial compliance with ORS 250.035(2). See ORS 250.085(5) (stating standard of review). For the reasons explained below, we conclude that the ballot title does not substantially comply with ORS 250.035(2) and refer the ballot title to the Attorney General for modification.
Article I, section 8, of the Oregon Constitution prohibits laws "restraining the free expression of opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print free on any subject whatever." See State v. Robertson ,
IP 28, if adopted, would add an exception to the constitutional protections recognized in Vannatta I . More specifically, IP 28 would add the following sentence to Article I, section 8 :
"Laws consistent with the freedom of speech guarantee of the United States Constitution may regulate contributions and expenditures, of any type or description, to influence the outcome of any election; provided, that such laws are adopted or amended by initiative or by an elected legislative body by a three-fourths vote."
A law will come within the exception set out in IP 28 if three conditions are met: the law must (1) be "consistent with the freedom of speech guarantee of the United States Constitution"; (2) "regulate contributions and expenditures * * * [made] to influence the outcome of any election"; and (3) be "adopted or amended by initiative or by an elected legislative body by a three-fourths vote."
**534The Attorney General certified the following ballot title for IP 28:
"Amends Constitution: Allows laws regulating contributions/expenditures *969made to influence elections; Measure 47 (from 2006) becomes law
"Result of 'Yes' Vote: 'Yes' vote amends constitution, allows laws regulating contributions and expenditures to influence election outcomes; triggers Measure 47 (from 2006), regulating campaign expenditures, requiring certain disclosures.
"Result of 'No' Vote: 'No' vote retains Oregon Constitution's existing free-expression provision; Measure 47 (from 2006), regulating campaign expenditures, requiring certain disclosures, remains inoperative.
"Summary: Amends Constitution. The Oregon Supreme Court has interpreted the Oregon Constitution's free-expression provision ( Article I, section 8 ) to prohibit limits on many political campaign contributions and expenditures. The proposed measure amends Article I, section 8 to allow laws that regulate contributions/expenditures to influence elections. Such laws must be adopted or amended by initiative or by three-fourths vote by legislative body. If amendment passes, Measure 47 (enacted by voters in 2006) will become law and will alter Oregon's current election laws. Measure 47 limits campaign contributions/expenditures, establishes new reporting/advertising disclosure requirements for the sources and amounts of campaign contributions/expenditures. Laws regulating campaign contributions and expenditures (including Measure 47) still must comply with the First Amendment to the United States Constitution."
Petitioners challenge the caption, the "yes" and "no" result statements, and the summary. We begin with their challenges to the caption.
ORS 250.035(2)(a) provides that a ballot title must contain a "caption of not more than 15 words that reasonably identifies the subject matter of the state measure." The "subject matter" of a ballot title is "the 'actual major effect' of a measure or, if the measure has more than one major effect, all such effects (to the limit of the available words)." Lavey v. Kroger ,
Petitioners challenge the caption on primarily three grounds. First, they argue that the caption should not mention Measure 47 (2006) because the subject of IP 28 is broader than its effect on a specific law and, more importantly, that effect is at best speculative. Second, they contend that the caption should make clear that the extent to which IP 28, if adopted, would "regulate" campaign contributions and expenditures is unclear. Finally, they argue that the caption should mention that a law may regulate contributions and expenditures only if it is passed by initiative or by an elected legislative body by a three-fourths vote.
Before turning to petitioners' objection to the reference in the caption to Measure 47 (2006), we first discuss briefly the history of that measure. See Hazell v. Brown ,
Nine years later, in 2006, two initiated ballot measures were submitted to the voters. Hazell ,
" 'If, on the effective date of this Act, the Oregon Constitution does not allow limitations on political campaign contributions or expenditures, this Act shall nevertheless be codified and become effective at the time that the Oregon Constitution is found to allow, or is amended to allow, such limitations.' "
Hazell ,
With that background in mind, we turn to petitioners' objections to the statement in the caption that "Measure 47 (from 2006) becomes law." On that issue, we agree with petitioners that the subject or "major effect" of IP 28 is to amend Article I, section 8, to permit a class of laws-laws that regulate campaign contributions and expenditures. The question whether IP 28 would revive a specific law enacted some 12 years earlier is neither the subject nor the major effect of the measure. Beyond that, as we explain below in discussing petitioners' challenges to the summary, the Attorney General's statement that Measure 47 (2006) "becomes law" is inaccurate because the effect that IP 28 will have on Measure 47 (2006) is at best speculative. Finally, we agree with one of the amici that the unexplained reference to a 12-year old measure in the caption, even if otherwise appropriate, is more likely to confuse the voters than to enlighten them. For those reasons, the caption should not refer to Measure 47 (2006).
Petitioners Markley and Hedbor raise a second objection to the caption. They argue that its use of the word **537"regulate" fails to alert voters that the extent to which IP 28 would permit regulation of campaign expenditures and contributions is far from clear. As we understand Markley and Hedbor's argument, they contend that "regulations" of campaign contributions and expenditures can range from disclosure and reporting requirements to substantive limitations on the permissible amount of contributions and expenditures. See Hazell ,
The Attorney General responds that the common and ordinary definition of "regulate" is sufficient to inform voters of the potential reach of the measure.
Relying on Meyer v. Bradbury ,
Petitioners also challenge the result statements. ORS 250.035(2)(b) and (c) provide that ballot titles must contain a "simple and understandable statement of not more than 25 words that describes the result if the measure is" approved or rejected. Generally, a ballot title's result statements must adequately describe the effects of voting one way or another. As this court has observed, the "yes" result statement should describe "the most significant and immediate" effects of the ballot initiative for "the general public." Novick/Crew v. Myers ,
**539The Attorney General's certified "yes" result statement provides:
" 'Yes' vote amends constitution, allows laws regulating contributions and expenditures to influence election outcomes; triggers Measure 47 (from 2006), regulating campaign expenditures, requiring certain disclosures."
Petitioners challenge the "yes" result statement both for its statement that a "yes" vote would "trigge[r] Measure 47" and for its failure to signal that the extent to which IP 28 would permit "regulation" of campaign contributions and expenditures is unclear. We agree with those challenges for the reasons stated above.
Petitioner Lutz also argues that the "yes" result statement is deficient because it does not mention that laws regulating campaign expenditures and contributions must be passed "by initiative or by an elected legislative body by a three-fourths vote." Although the means by which those regulatory laws may be enacted is not the subject or major effect of the measure, we agree with Lutz that the three-fourths vote requirement is a significant effect of the measure. If IP 28 were adopted, it would restrict the customary ability of elected legislative bodies (and perhaps initiated measures) to enact regulatory laws by a majority vote. That result is sufficiently significant to require its mention in the "yes" result statement.
Petitioners Markley and Hedbor raise a related issue. They contend that the measure is ambiguous as to whether the three-fourths vote requirement applies only to laws passed by elected legislative bodies or whether that *972requirement also applies to laws adopted by initiative. As noted, IP 28 contains the following proviso: "provided, that such laws are adopted or amended by initiative or by an elected legislative body by a three-fourths vote." The Attorney General notes that the phrase "by a three-fourths vote" comes immediately after the phrase "by an elected legislative body." It follows, she argues, that the three-fourths vote requirement applies only to laws amended or adopted by elected legislative bodies. That is a reasonable reading of the proviso. **540However, the proviso lacks punctuation or other signals that would demonstrate that the three-fourths vote requirement would apply only to laws adopted by an elected legislative body. Cf. Meyer ,
Petitioners Markley and Hedbor challenge the "no" result statement, which provides:
" 'No' vote retains Oregon Constitution's existing free-expression provision; Measure 47 (from 2006), regulating campaign expenditures, requiring certain disclosures, remains inoperative."
Markley and Hedbor argue that "the no result statement is tautological: saying nothing more than rejection of the constitutional amendment will cause the constitution not to be amended." Again, we agree. As the court explained in Novick/Crew , a "no" result statement should "addres[s] the substance of current law on the subject matter of the proposed measure."
We turn finally to petitioners' challenges to the summary. ORS 250.035(2)(d) requires that the ballot title contain a "concise and impartial statement of not more than 125 words summarizing the state measure and its major effect." The purpose of a ballot title's summary is to give voters enough information to understand what will happen if the initiative is adopted. Whitsett v. Kroger ,
"Amends Constitution. The Oregon Supreme Court has interpreted the Oregon Constitution's free-expression provision ( Article I, section 8 ) to prohibit limits on many political campaign contributions and expenditures. The proposed measure amends Article I, section 8 to allow laws that regulate contributions/expenditures to influence elections. Such laws must be adopted or amended by initiative or by three-fourths vote by legislative body. If amendment passes, Measure 47 (enacted by voters in 2006) will become law and will *973alter Oregon's current election laws. Measure 47 limits campaign contributions/expenditures, establishes new reporting/advertising disclosure requirements for the sources and amounts of campaign contributions/expenditures. Laws regulating campaign contributions and expenditures (including Measure 47) still must comply with the First Amendment to the United States Constitution."
Petitioners challenge the summary for reasons that we have already discussed. They contend that the summary impermissibly resolves an ambiguity in the proviso to IP 28-whether the three-fourths vote requirement would apply to laws adopted by initiative as well as by elected legislative bodies. They also argue that the word "regulate" is insufficient to signal that the extent to which IP 28 would permit regulation of campaign contributions and expenditures is unclear. For the reasons stated above, we agree with those challenges.
**542Petitioners also reiterate their challenges to saying that, if IP 28 is adopted, Measure 47 (2006) will become law. Unlike the caption and the "yes" result statement, where we concluded that the effect of IP 28 on a specific law was either not the subject or a significant effect of the measure, we cannot say that the effect of IP 28 on Measure 47 (2006) is an inappropriate subject to discuss in the summary. That leaves us with the question whether the Attorney General is correct in stating, as she does in the summary, that, "[i]f [the] amendment passes, Measure 47 (enacted by the voters in 2006) will become law and will alter Oregon's current election laws."
Petitioners Markley and Hedbor argue that the Attorney General's prediction that Measure 47 (2006) will become law is "impermissible 'speculation about potential secondary effects' " of IP 28. (Quoting Rooney v. Kulongoski ,
Petitioner Lutz similarly argues that, because the effect of IP 28 on Measure 47 (2006) is, at best, uncertain, the Attorney General should neither speculate how IP 28 would affect Measure 47 (2006), nor should she say definitively that Measure 47 (2006) will go into effect. Lutz observes that, even if Measure 47's limitations on campaign contributions and expenditures would have complied with the First Amendment when the measure was put before the voters in 2006, it is extremely unlikely that those limits would survive First Amendment scrutiny now in light of the United States Supreme Court's intervening decisions in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission , --- U.S. ----,
The Attorney General responds that, "by providing constitutional authorization for laws that 'regulate contributions and expenditures ... to influence the outcome of any election,' [IP 28] effectively abrogates Vannatta 's holding that such limits violate the Oregon Constitution." (Ellipsis in original.) It follows, she reasons, that IP 28 will "provid[e] the constitutional authorization necessary for Measure 47 to automatically take effect, by its own terms." And she concludes that, even if Measure 47 (2006) may enjoy only a fleeting existence in light of the United States Supreme Court's decisions in Citizens United and McCutcheon , it would be inappropriate to pass on the constitutionality of Measure 47 in advance of a First Amendment challenge to it.
One difficulty with the Attorney General's reasoning lies in her conclusion that IP 28 will effectively abrogate Vannatta 's holding that contribution and expenditure limits violate Article I, section 8. The Attorney General's *974conclusion fails to account for the subject of the sentence that IP 28 would add to Article I, section 8. As noted, IP 28 provides:
"Laws consistent with the freedom of speech guarantee of the United States Constitution may regulate contributions and expenditures, of any type or description, to influence the outcome of any election; provided, that such laws are adopted or amended by initiative or by an elected legislative body by a three-fourths vote."
IP 28 does not provide that any law passed by the requisite three-fourths vote "may regulate [campaign] contributions and expenditures" under Article I, section 8. It provides that only those laws that are "consistent with the freedom of speech guarantee of the United States Constitution may regulate [campaign] contributions and expenditures." By its terms, IP 28 limits the laws that may regulate campaign contributions and expenditures under Article I, section 8, to "[l]aws consistent with [the First Amendment]." Or. at least that is a permissible reading of IP 28.
Under that reading, if Measure 47 (2006) is not consistent with the First Amendment (and the Attorney General does not dispute that there is a significant question whether **544it is), then it is not the sort of law that "may regulate campaign contributions and expenditures" under the terms of IP 28.
We accordingly agree with petitioners that, to the extent the summary mentions Measure 47 (2006), the most that the summary reasonably can say is that, if IP 28 were adopted, Measure 47 (2006) might be revived. For the reasons stated above, we refer to the caption, "yes" and "no" result statements, and the summary to the Attorney General for modification.
The certified ballot title is referred to the Attorney General for modification.
The court explained that the reference to " '[t]his Act' [in section 9(f) of Measure 47 (2006) ] [was] evidence that the voters intended and understood that, if and when Measure 47 became operative, it would do so as a whole piece of legislation, not in some piecemeal fashion." Hazell ,
The Attorney General also argues that petitioners Markley and Hedbor failed to raise that objection to the draft ballot title. We disagree. Before the Secretary of State, Markley and Hedbor objected to the "breadth" of the regulatory power that IP would permit, untethered to "the service of any specific purpose." We think their objections to the draft ballot title were sufficient to put the Attorney General on notice of their concerns regarding the undefined breadth of the term "regulate."
Although petitioners do not object to the reference to Measure 47 (2006) in the "no" result statement, we note that the implication of saying that a "no" vote will leave Measure 47 (2006) inoperative is that a "yes" vote would have the opposite result, a proposition that is not necessarily true.
We recognize that the terms of IP 28 invert the usual method of analysis in which we determine whether a statute violates the state constitution before determining whether it violates the federal constitution. However, IP 28 appears to be written in such a way that only those laws that are consistent with the First Amendment will come within the exception set out in IP 28 and thus avoid the limitations stated in Article I, section 8, as interpreted in Vannatta I .
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Kyle MARKLEY and Lars Hedbor v. Ellen F. ROSENBLUM, Attorney General, State of Oregon, Trent Lutz v. Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, State of Oregon
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published