PUBLIC INFORMATION — The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday agreed to decide whether the First Amendment requires that
the names of people who sign ballot-initiative petitions be kept
secret, reports Adam Liptak in the New York Times. California already exempts this information from disclosure under the Public Records Act, and the issue's complexities yield many observations.
As in the courts decision on Wednesday to block the broadcasting of the trial of a challenge to a ban on same-sex marriage
in California, the appeal was brought by opponents of such unions who
said they feared harassment should their views be made widely known.The new case arose from an effort to overturn a Washington State
domestic partnership law known as the everything but marriage act.
Opponents of the law gathered more than 130,000 signatures, enough to
place a referendum on the November ballot.
Several groups asked the state to turn over the names, under its
public records law, and two groups said they intended to post the names
on the Internet. Their goal, according to a news release, was to
encourage conversations among friends, relatives and neighbors that
can be uncomfortable for both parties.
Protect Marriage Washington, a group that supports traditional
marriage, sued to block release of the names, saying disclosure would
probably result in threats, harassment and reprisal.
A federal judge granted the request, but the judges order was overturned by a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in San Francisco. The Ninth Circuit panel said it was unclear whether petition
signatures were speech protected by the First Amendment.In any event,
it said, the signatures were gathered in public with no promise of
confidentiality and collected on sheets with space for 20 signatures
each.
Even if the names had warranted some First Amendment protection, the
panel said, that protection was overridden by two justifications:
protecting the integrity of elections through transparency and
providing voters with information about who supported placing the
referendum on the ballot.As in the same-sex marriage case, the Supreme Court intervened at an unusually early stage in the Washington case, staying
the Ninth Circuits ruling in October. That had the effect of blocking
disclosure of the names through the election in November. The effort to
overturn the everything-but-marriage act failed.