KANE, J.
Grant v. Meyer, 828 F.2d 1446, 1456-57 (10th Cir.1987)(Moore, J.)(en banc).
Plaintiff Coalition for Secular Government (CSG) is a small "think tank" that advocates for the separation of church and state. One of its advocacy pieces is a policy paper on "personhood" and, in years where a "personhood" initiative has qualified for Colorado's general election ballot, the paper addresses that initiative and urges a "no" vote. CSG's "electioneering" activities have been limited to "personhood" ballot measures in 2008, 2010, and again in 2014. CSG does not advocate for candidates or political parties.
In 2012, faced with ongoing uncertainty that its "personhood" paper made it an "issue committee" under article XXVIII of the Colorado Constitution and related Fair Campaign Practice Act (FCPA), CSG filed suit, seeking declaratory judgment and injunctive relief exempting it from the law's registration and expenditure disclosure requirements. Personhood's failure to qualify for the 2012 ballot eliminated the immediacy of CSG's request for relief, but the case is newly revived with the qualification of Colorado Amendment 67 on the 2014
Applying the standards articulated in Sampson v. Buescher, 625 F.3d 1247 (10th Cir.2010), as interpreted by the Colorado Supreme Court in Gessler v. Colorado Common Cause, 327 P.3d 232 (Colo.2014), I find CSG falls outside the scope of ballot issue-committees to which Colorado's campaign finance disclosure laws may constitutionally apply. The nature of CSG and its advocacy render any "informational interest" the government has in mandating contribution and expenditure disclosures so minimal as to be nonexistent, and certainly insufficient to justify the burdens compliance imposes on members' constitutional free speech and association rights.
This conclusion is so obvious, moreover, that having to adjudicate it in every instance as the Colorado Supreme Court implies is necessary itself offends the First Amendment. By setting in stone the uncertainty that precipitated this litigation in the first place, the Court's interpretation chills robust discussion at the very core of our electoral process. I am without authority, however, to undo the damage done because Sampson provides an adequate and binding legal standard under which CSG's specific constitutional claims may be decided. The wholesale invalidation of Colorado's $200 contribution threshold for ballot issue committees, though warranted, would go beyond my charge and be improvident. What I can do, however, is award CSG its attorney fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and advise state lawmakers that the Secretary will be on the hook for fees every time a group, like CSG, falls under the $200 trigger for issue committee status and has to sue to vindicate its First Amendment rights.
Plaintiff Coalition for Secular Government ("CSG") is a nonprofit corporation that "seeks to educate the public about the necessary secular foundation of a free society, particularly the principles of individual rights and separation of church and state." CSG Mission Stm. (Tr. Ex. 40). Its advocacy includes opposition to laws based on religious scripture or dogma, such as abortion and discrimination against gay persons; government promotion of religion such as the teaching of "intelligent design" in public schools; and the granting of tax exemptions or other privileges to churches that are not made available to other non-profits. Id. Its founder and sole principal is Diana Hsieh (pronounced "Shay"), who holds a doctorate in philosophy. CSG's advocacy takes the form of blog posts and video blogs, and includes a lengthy policy paper on the consequences of enshrining the concept of "personhood" into law.
CSG was originally entirely self-financed by Dr. Hsieh, but now solicits pledges online to defray marketing and operating expenses and to pay Dr. Hsieh and the co-author of the "personhood" paper a small ($1,000 in 2010) honorarium. Combined monetary and nonmonetary contributions to CSG have ranged from $200 in 2008 to approximately $3,500 expected in 2014. Given its small size and the nature of its activities, it has never been clear that CSG is required to register as an "issue committee" under article XXVIII of the Colorado Constitution, or to meet the reporting requirements imposed under § 1-45-108 of the state's Fair Campaign Practice Act (FCPA).
In October 2010, Dr. Hsieh's house flooded and in the confusion she was a day late in filing a committee report. She was fined $50,
When it became clear "personhood" would not make the 2012 ballot, it was agreed that the declarations CSG was seeking were uniquely matters of state law and appropriate for certification to the Colorado Supreme Court. By Order dated October 10, 2012, I certified four questions
By Order dated July 2, 2014, the State Supreme Court summarily dismissed the certified questions "in light of the Court's decision in case 12SC783 Gessler v. Colorado Common Cause, which was issued June 16, 2014." (Doc. 40-1.) I will discuss Gessler in more detail below, but its gist was to invalidate a rulemaking in which the Secretary sought to raise the contribution threshold for article XXVIII "issue committee" status from $200 to $5,000 in response to the Tenth Circuit's decision in Sampson v. Buescher, 625 F.3d 1247 (10th Cir.2010). In Sampson, the Tenth Circuit held unconstitutional Colorado's campaign finance disclosure requirements as applied to a single ballot-issue committee of neighbors that had spent $1,000 to challenge an annexation initiative. The Court applied "exacting scrutiny" to the case, invalidating Colorado's disclosure requirements on grounds the burdens imposed could not be justified by the public's informational interest in how the group made and spent its money. Id. at 1261 (holding government's
Given the limited holding in Sampson, Geller's rejection of efforts to raise the issue committee contribution threshold to $5,000, and the Supreme Court's refusal answer the certified questions in this case — I am left to assess CSG's issue committee status only after a formal adjudication on an evidentiary record.
Art. XXVIII of the Colorado Constitution declares the Legislature's intent in enacting campaign disclosure regulations:
Art. XXVIII § 1, Colo. Const. Colorado's Fair Campaign Practice Act (FCPA) provides that "issue committees ... shall report to the appropriate officer their contributions received, including the name and address of each person who has contributed twenty dollars or more; expenditures made, and obligations entered into by the committee or party." Colo.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 1-45-108(1)(a)(I) (West 2013).
Art. XXVIII § 2 (10)(a) of the Colorado Constitution defines "issue committee" as "any person, other than a natural person, or any group of two or more persons, including natural persons: (I) That has a major purpose of supporting or opposing any ballot issue or ballot question; or (II) that has accepted or made contributions or expenditures in excess of two hundred dollars to support or oppose any ballot issue or ballot question." Under a technical reading of the law and after Sampson, CSG meets the "issue committee" test by virtue of its $200 — $3,500 in annual contributions that it then uses to support the distribution of its policy paper.
Reporting and disclosure requirements by their nature "infringe on the right of association." Sampson at 1255. "`Detailed record-keeping and disclosure obligations impose administrative costs that many small entities may be unable to bear.'" Id. (quoting Justice Brennan in Federal Election Comm'n v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, 479 U.S. 238, 254, 107 S.Ct. 616, 93 L.Ed.2d 539 (1986)). Not all such burdens are unconstitutional, however, and may be upheld upon a showing of a substantial relation between the disclosure requirement and a "sufficiently important governmental interest." Id. (citing Doe v. Reed, 561 U.S. 186, 196, 130 S.Ct. 2811, 177 L.Ed.2d 493 (2010)). The standard is one of "`exacting scrutiny,'" id. and to withstand such scrutiny, the strength of the governmental interest "must reflect the seriousness of the actual burden on First Amendment rights" and exceed it. See id. This is the case-by-case determination with which we are concerned.
Here, it is important to distinguish the government's interest in regulating groups that advocate for particular candidates from those supporting or opposing ballot initiatives:
Sampson, 625 F.3d at 1255. "The risk of corruption perceived in cases involving candidate elections ... simply is not present in a popular vote on a public issue." Id. (quoting First Nat'l Bk of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U.S. 765, 790, 98 S.Ct. 1407, 55 L.Ed.2d 707 (1978)).
Accordingly, of the three "proper" justifications for reporting and disclosing campaign finances articulated by the Supreme Court in Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 68, 96 S.Ct. 612, 46 L.Ed.2d 659 (1976), only the third — the public's "informational interest" — applies to ballot issue committees. Sampson, 625 F.3d at 1256.
Id. Even allowing for the "not obvious," then, CSG may be subjected to Colorado's reporting and disclosure requirements on grounds of the public's informational interest only. Id.
After Sampson, the standard for this determination is "whether the small-scale issue committee in question is `sufficiently similar' to the one at issue in Sampson to warrant being excused from certain reporting requirements." Gessler, 327 P.3d at 238 (Eid, J.). The Secretary contends it is not, distinguishing the groups based on the breadth of their respective messages and relative interest in their issue. See e.g. Hg. Tr. at 174 (pointing out that CSG "coordinat[es] with national groups to get their message out" while the Sampson plaintiffs were "restricted to a very small, very narrow issue"); Tr. at 78 (noting CSG's paper was downloaded "approximately 12,000 or more" in 2010, a number that "doesn't include the page views of the paper" that was posted "chapter by chapter on CSG's blog."). The Secretary's point is perplexing: Is he suggesting that the effectiveness of political speech — the fact it resonates, generates interest, and is downloaded from the internet by individuals wanting to read it — somehow elevates or enervates the public's informational interest in its disclosure? The more vibrant the public discourse the more justified the burdening of the speech is? Surely not. It must be remembered by those older than Ms. Hsieh that the internet is the new soapbox; it is the new town square. CSG's "personhood" paper is Tom Paine's pamphlet. It is the quintessence of political speech.
In the present case, CSG plans to spend no more than $3,500 to conduct all of the business of CSG, which includes publishing and distribute the "personhood" paper and seed money to incentivize other authors and "get[ ] intellectual projects off the ground." Tr. at 40. While this is more than the $1,000 contemplated by the Tenth Circuit in Sampson, it is magnitudes less than the opposite pole the court used for contrast (tens of millions of dollars for "complex policy issues"). As the court stated, the state interest in ballot issue campaign finance is significantly attenuated when compared to candidate campaign finance; even less so when the "issue committee" here is similarly situated to the plaintiffs in Sampson in that it is interested in a single ballot issue.
Given the nature of the ballot question and the nature of the expenditures, this is a a case where the state's informational interest is truly "not obvious." What financial interest or other untoward benefit could CSG's principals or pledge contributors realize in a defeat of the Personhood Amendment? Even so, the amount of the expenditures — no more than $3,500 — limits the informational value of the public's "right to know." Colorado's issue committee disclosure laws are concerned with "large campaign contributions" that allow "wealthy individuals, corporations, and special interest groups to exercise a disproportionate level of influence over the political process." Colo. Const. art. XXVI-II § 1. The terms "large," "wealthy," or wielding "disproportionate influence" are simply not germane to the activity in which CSG is engaged. Voters' interest in the $3,500 CSG might spend this year on all of its ballot and non-ballot related activities
Even if there is any informational interest in the $3,500 CSG has raised, that interest is outweighed by the burdens CSG has suffered and will continue to suffer in trying to comply with issue committee reporting requirements. The Secretary disagrees, noting there are only a few reporting periods left in the 2014 election cycle, and because CSG has reported as an issue committee in the past, complying with those rules in the few weeks leading up to election day will not be burdensome. The Secretary misses the point: the burdens at issue are not merely clerical or administrative, they are restrictions on speech and association. FEC v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, 479 U.S. at 254, 107 S.Ct. 616. CSG's ballot-issue advocacy, to the extent it renders it an "issue committee" at all, is sufficiently like that of the Sampson neighbors that its obligation to comply with FCPA reporting requirements must be excused.
Unfortunately, given the Tenth Circuit's refusal "to establish a bright line below which a ballot issue committee cannot be required to report contributions and expenditures" and the Supreme Court's election not to answer the certified questions, I must make a ruling on the specific facts of this case based on what I determine, sui generis, to be reasonable. I say "unfortunately" because this state of affairs means that no precedent has been established and the stability this matter of considerable public importance so needfully requires will have to await another day or days and even more lawsuits.
Based on the foregoing, it is formally ORDERED and DECLARED that CSG's expected activity of $3,500 does not require registration or disclosure as an "issue committee" and the Secretary is ENJOINED from enforcing FCPA disclosure requirements against it.
In light of the foregoing, preliminary injunctive relief is unnecessary and Plaintiff's original and renewed Motions for Injunctive Relief (Docs.13, 41) are DENIED as MOOT.
In addition, Plaintiff's request for attorney fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 is also GRANTED. Section 1988 is designed to enable individuals to act as private attorneys general to vindicate their constitutional and other civil rights and Plaintiff has done so in this case. Plaintiff shall have to and including October 28, 2014, to submit an affidavit delineating its fees with an expert endorsement of their reasonableness. If the parties reach an informal resolution of the fee matter before then, so much the better.