SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR KING COUNTY. of the Order Denying Plaintiffs Motion for Reconsideration entered on November 15, 2017, as

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FILED DEC 0 AM :0 Honorable Beth Andrus KING COUNTY Dept. SUPERIOR COURT CLERK E-FILED CASE NUMBER: --01- SEA SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR KING COUNTY MARK ELSTER and SARAH PYNCHON, v. Plaintiffs, THE CITY OF SEATTLE, a Washington Municipal corporation, Defendant. Case No. --01- SEA NOTICE OF APPEAL TO COURT OF APPEALS 1 Mark Elster and Sarah Pynchon, Plaintiffs, seek review by the designated appellate court of the Order Denying Plaintiffs Motion for Reconsideration entered on November,, as well as the underlying Order Granting City of Seattle s Motion to Dismiss entered Nov.,, pursuant to RAP.(c). Copies of the Orders are attached to this notice. /// Notice of Appeal - 1 of PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION 0 NE rd Place, Suite Bellevue, Washington 00 () -0

1 Date: Dec., Notice of Appeal - of PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION By: s/ Ethan W. Blevins ETHAN W. BLEVINS, WSBA No. BRIAN T. HODGES, WSBA No. 0 NE rd Place, Suite Bellevue Washington 00 Telephone: () -0 Email: EBlevins@pacificlegal.org Attorneys for Plaintiffs Counsel for Defendant, City of Seattle: Office of the Seattle City Attorney Michael Ryan, WSBA #1 Jeff Slayton, WSBA # Kent Meyer, WSBA # 01 Fifth Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 Lester Lawrence Lessig, Ill. Bar # Harvard Law School Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge MA 0 PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION 0 NE rd Place, Suite Bellevue, Washington 00 () -0

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that a true copy of the above document was served upon counsel for the Defendant City of Seattle by the Court s e-service application on Dec.,. Micheal Ryan, WSBA# 1, Michael.Ryan@seattle.gov Jeff Slayton, WSBA#, Jeff.Slayton@seattle.gov Kent Meyer, WSBA#, Kent.Meyer@seattle.gov Lester Lawrence Lessig, Ill. Bar #, lessig@law.harvard.edu s/ Ethan W. Blevins Ethan W. Blevins, WSBA No. 1 Notice of Appeal - of PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION 0 NE rd Place, Suite Bellevue, Washington 00 () -0

Hon. Beth M. Andrus IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR KING COUNTY MARK ELSTER and SARAH PYNCHON, Plaintiffs, No. --01- SEA vs. THE CITY OF SEATTLE, ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO DISMISS 1 Defendant. Defendant City of Seattle has moved to dismiss the complaint filed by Plaintiffs Mark Elster and Sarah Pynchon. After briefing and argument of counsel, 1 the Court GRANTS to dismiss based on the analysis set out below. City of Democracy Voucher Program On November,, the voters in the City of Seattle passed Initiative I-1, codified as tle Municipal Code (SMC).0.00 to.0.0. The initiative an additional property tax imposed in years through. The proceeds of this tax may be used only to fund the Democracy Voucher Program. 1 See Appendix A for the materials considered by the Court. MOTION TO DISMISS - 1 01 th Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 () -0

1 Under this program, every Seattle registered voter received four vouchers totaling $0 which the voter can assign to qualified candidates running for election to the position of city mayor, city attorney, and city councilmember. SMC.0.(b) and (e). Candidates qualify to receive these vouchers from voters if they agree to participate in at least three public debates for both the primary and general elections, and they agree to comply with special campaign contribution and spending limits. SMC.0.0(b). To qualify for the program, candidates must receive a minimum number of campaign contributions, ranging from 00 for a mayoral candidate to 0 for a city attorney candidate, of at least $ or more. SMC.0.0(c). The campaign spending limits run from a high of $00,000 total for a mayoral candidate, to $0,000 total for district city council candidates and city attorney candidates. SMC.0.0(d). If a qualifying candidate demonstrates that his or her opponent has exceeded these spending limits, the candidate may ask the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission (SEEC) to be released from the spending limits. SMC.0.0(f). All Seattle residents are entitled to receive Democracy Vouchers, whether the residents own property or not. No residents living outside of Seattle may receive these vouchers even if they own real estate within the city and are paying property taxes for the Democracy Voucher Program fund. nt On June,, Mark Elster and Sarah Pynchon filed this lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Democracy Voucher Program. Mr. Elster who owns a family home in Magnolia, has been taxed under the program and received but not used Democracy Vouchers. Complaint,. Ms. Pynchon owns property in Seattle and has been taxed under the program but, because she lives outside the city limits, is not entitled to receive any Democracy Vouchers. Complaint,. Mr. Elster and Ms. Pynchon contend that the Democracy Voucher Program is a compelled subsidy of political speech which violates their First Amendment rights. The City counters that the program is a constitutionally valid method of public campaign finance approved by the United States Supreme Court in Buckley v. Valeo, U.S. 1, S. Ct., L. Ed. d (). MOTION TO DISMISS - 01 th Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 () -0

1 ANALYSIS The parties agree that this case presents the Court with an issue of first impression. Although there are reported cases affirming and invalidating various means of publicly funding political campaigns, none involve the imposition of a tax used to finance a voucher program in which registered voters make campaign contributions of their choice to candidates in certain qualified electoral races. After reviewing the case law cited by both parties and considering the arguments of the parties, the Buckley v. Valeo: The Use of Public Money to Finance Political Campaigns In, the Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of the Federal Election Campaign Act, which placed limits on campaign contributions and expenditures and created a system of public financing of presidential election campaigns and nominating conventions. The Court invalidated the campaign spending provisions but affirmed the public financing provision of the act, known as Subtitle H. Subtitle H created a Presidential Election Campaign Fund financed from general tax revenues. Taxpayers may check a box on their tax returns authorizing the diversion of taxes to a fund for distribution to presidential candidates for nominating conventions and primary and general election campaigns. U.S. at -. The amount of money each campaign was entitled to receive depended on whether the candidate belonged to a major or minor political party. Id. The challengers contended that Subtitle H constituted government support of political speech in violation of the First Amendment. The Supreme Court rejected this argument and concluded that abridge, restrict, or censor speech, but rather to use public money to facilitate and enlarge public discussion and participation in the electoral process, goals vital to a selfgoverning people. Id. at - (emphasis added). Buckley v. Valeo public financing of political candidates, in and of itself, does not violate the First Amendment, even though the funding may be used to further speech to which the cont May v. McNally, Ariz.,, P.d (0). MOTION TO DISMISS - 01 th Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 () -0

1 Public Funding of Political Campaigns Post-Buckley Since Buckley v. Valeo, several states have passed laws publicly funding political campaigns. Some have survived constitutional challenge. See Libertarian Party of Ind. v. Packard, 1 F.d 1 (th Cir. ) (imposing sales tax on personalized license plates to publicly fund campaigns); Bang v. Chase, F. Supp. (D. Minn. ) (allowing income tax filer to allocate taxes to state election campaign fund for use by specific party); May, Ariz. (imposing % surcharge on criminal and civil traffic fines to publicly fund campaigns). Some have not. See, Vt., A.d (01) (imposing tax on lobbyist expenditures to fund public grants to gubernatorial candidates violated Butterworth v. Republican Party of Fla., 0 So. d (Fla. 1) (imposing 1.% assessment on donations to state political parties to finance public campaign funding of qualifying candidates violated First Amendment). Plaintiffs contend that the Democracy Voucher program cannot survive their First Amendment challenge because the City is compelling them to subsidize the private political speech. They argue that this program, unlike any other public campaign finance case, involves a government entity allowing voters to choose to whom to donate public funds. They contend that the voucher feature interf candidates other than those selected by the voucher holder, or the right to not support any candidate at all. T their First Amendment rights. In Board of Regents v. Southworth, U.S., 0 S. Ct., L. Ed. d 1 (00), the Supreme Court considered a First Amendment challenge to a mandatory student fee used to support student organizations engaged in expressive activities. The plaintiffs claimed that they should not be compelled to subsidize student organizations with which they disagreed. Id. at -. The Court held that once the university conditioned the opportunity to obtain an education on an agreement to support objectionable speech (through the imposition of a mandatory fee), the First Amendment was implicated. Id. at 1. By analogy here, the City is conditioning MOTION TO DISMISS - 01 th Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 () -0

1 may find objectionable. The First Amendment is implicated. Viewpoint Neutrality But the fact that the First Amendment is implicated does not mean that the program is unconstitutional. The City asks this Court to adopt the public forum standard of viewpoint neutrality when evaluating the Democracy Voucher Program. Under public forum law, when a government creates a nonpublic or limited public forum, namely a forum that is limited to use by certain groups or Pleasant Grove City v. Summum, U.S. 0, -0, S. Ct., L. Ed. d (0). In Southworth, the Supreme Court applied this standard when assessing the constitutionality of mandatory student funding of organizations. U.S. at 0.. See Knox, U.S., 0-, S. Ct., L. Ed. d 1 (); Abood v. Detroit Bd. of Educ., 1 U.S., S. Ct., L. Ed. d 1 (). In Knox, the Supreme Court held that the compelled funding of the speech of other private speakers or gr is unconstitutional unless (1) there is a comprehensive regulatory scheme involving a mandated association among those who are required to pay the subsidy; and () the mandatory fee or tax is a necessary incident of the larger regulatory purpose which justified the required association. U.S. at (citing United States v. United Foods, Inc., U.S. 0,, 1 S. Ct., 0 L. Ed. d (01)). The Southworth Court acknowledged this line of cases but concluded that those cases did not apply in the context of extracurricular student speech at a university. U.S. at 0. The Court does not find the test used in Knox or more recently Harris v. Quinn, U.S., S. Ct., L. Ed. owners associate with each other. Without this mandated association, it is difficult to see how the test s a campaign funding tax. MOTION TO DISMISS - 01 th Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 () -0

1 Plaintiffs next. At oral argument, counsel clarified this argument: the voucher recipient is choosing to whom to donate public money, rather than the City, based on the vo viewpoint preference, making the decision as to which candidate receives financial support viewpoint-based. They rely on Amidon v. ersity of New York, 0 F.d (d Cir. 0) in which a federal court of appeals held that the use of a student referendum to determine how to allocate student fees among student organizations opinion of the value or popularity Id. at 1. This Court does not find Amidon to be analytically helpful. The City sets eligibility requirements for Democracy Voucher candidates. Candidates must demonstrate adequate grassroots support to qualify for the program by showing they have received a certain number of donations of $ or more. In Buckley, the Supreme Court held that it was permissible for a government to set eligibility cies with large sums of public money necessarily justifies the withholding of public assistance from candidates without sufficient U.S. at (citation omitted). The City does not, however, put eligibility to a popular vote, as in Amidon. Any voter can assign a $ voucher to any eligible candidate, even if that The City is not distributing The City argues that its voucher program should be deemed viewpoint neutral because the City is not choosing to whom to allocate campaign funds and is allowing voters to make a completely private choice, similar to school voucher programs. In Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, U.S., 1 S. Ct. 0, L. Ed. d 0 (0), the Supreme Court held that a government school voucher program was constitutional under the Establishment Clause because it was and provided assistance to a broad class of citizens who directed the Id. at. The Court is reluctant to MOTION TO DISMISS - 01 th Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 () -0

invoke Establishment Clause precedent here given the Supre Buckley that case. U.S. at. But the Court can find no other analogous precedent. This Court concludes that the Democracy Voucher program is viewpoint neutral because candidates qualify for voucher support regardless of the views they espouse, they may assign their vouchers. The City has articulated a reasonable justification for the Democracy Voucher Program. It seeks an increase in voter participation in the electoral process. This goal was recognized by the Buckley - Id. at -. The Democracy Voucher Program is a viewpoint neutral method for achieving this goal. complaint. IT IS SO ORDERED this rd day of November,. APPENDIX A Electronic signature attached Honorable Beth M. Andrus 1 Amicus Curiae Brief of Washington CAN!, et al., Sub. # Motion to Dismiss, Sub. #, Sub. # MOTION TO DISMISS - 01 th Avenue, Suite 0 Seattle, WA -0 () -0

--01- ELSTER ET ANO VS SEATTLE CITY OF ORDER DISMISSAL Beth Andrus // :: PM Beth Andrus DFDFF1AFAF0ACA0B // :: PM // :: PM C=US, E=kcscefiling@kingcounty.gov, OU=KCDJA, O=KCDJA, CN="Beth Andrus:dEHnrhGmww0YYhwmw==" Page of

Honorable Beth M. Andrus Dept. Noted for Hearing without Argument Nov., WORKING COPIES SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR KING COUNTY 1 MARK ELSTER and SARAH PYNCHON, v. Plaintiffs, THE CITY OF SEATTLE, a Washington Municipal corporation, Defendant. Pending before the Court Dated: November, Order Denying P. Mtn to Reconsider motion Case No. --01- SEA ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION OF ORDER OF DISMISSAL DENIED. Electronic signature attached Honorable Beth M. Andrus Chief Civil Judge for the King County Superior Court

--01- ELSTER ET ANO VS SEATTLE CITY OF ORDER RECONSIDERATION Beth Andrus // :: PM Beth Andrus DFDFF1AFAF0ACA0B // :: PM // :: PM C=US, E=kcscefiling@kingcounty.gov, OU=KCDJA, O=KCDJA, CN="Beth Andrus:dEHnrhGmww0YYhwmw==" Page of