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Oct 30th, 2008
Posted by Frank Knaack, First Amendment Working Group at 2:29pm

What Not to Wear...on Election Day

The ACLU is strongly committed to protecting everyone's right to make their political opinions known, regardless of one’s viewpoint. This includes pro-life demonstrators protesting former President Clinton and opponents of the Iraq War calling for President Bush's impeachment (PDF). In addition, the ACLU is currently involved in numerous court challenges supporting political demonstrators who have been prevented from demonstrating in the presence of the president.

With a new election, comes a new set of challenges. In one week we will decide the next president of the United States. This presidential campaign cycle has been the most costly and the longest in history. It has also been one where fashion and politics collided. I cannot remember an election where I saw more people wearing clothing or other paraphernalia supporting one candidate or another on a daily basis (I should confess that I am not that old; I can only clearly remember back to the 1996 election). It is not just that people are wearing the clothing, but that the clothing itself has become so diverse as to allow people to express both their political aspiration and their fashion sense at the same time. While this can be seen as a positive step in effort to increase participation in our political process, it also sets the stage for potential problems at the polls.

As many of you know, the voting process for federal elections is determined at the state level. This means that each state sets the rules by which citizens exercise their right to vote. This decentralized process has led to some confusion among voters, as the voting rules differ from state to state, and sometimes county to county. One of the common problems stemming from this process has to do with state laws prohibiting campaigning at or near the polls. In some states this law extends to passive political speech (i.e. wearing political clothing, pins, stickers, etc.) near or at the polling place. This law permits voting officials to deny the right to vote to anyone wearing clothing or paraphernalia supporting a candidate or issue on the ballot.

It would seem that government censorship of political speech is exactly the type of speech the framers sought to protect when they authored the First Amendment. As the First (and later Fourteenth) Amendment makes clear, Congress (and the States) “shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech.” But, the U.S. Supreme Court has carved out an exception for the permissible prohibition of political speech near the polling place on election day. The plurality found, in Burson v. Freeman (1992), that “some restricted zone is necessary in order to serve the States’ compelling interests in preventing voter intimidation and election fraud.” Thus, a “minor geographic limitation” does not “constitute[ ] a significant impingement.” But, this case focused on the question of active political campaigning near the polling place and not passive political speech at the polling place.

Unlike the U.S. Supreme Court, both the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit have addressed the question of limiting passive political speech at the polling place. In Schirmer v. Edwards (1993) the Fifth Circuit found that a law prohibiting all campaign activity within 600 feet of a polling place on election day to be permissible under the First Amendment. And, in Marlin v. District of Columbia Bd. of Elections and Ethics (2001), the D.C. Circuit upheld an election board regulation prohibiting a voter from wearing a campaign sticker. While the reasoning differed in these two cases, the result was the same; passive political speech can be regulated during the voting process.

While two U.S. appellate courts have found that such prohibitions are permissible under the U.S. Constitution, the highest courts in several states have found that such prohibitions violate state speech laws. The ACLU of Virginia has recently announced it plans to challenge Virginia’s prohibition on passive political speech in the hope of adding to the growing body of state law protecting passive political speech at the polls. Unfortunately, the question will not be decided during this election cycle.

The confusion in the courts has placed the voter in a difficult position; can you wear your political clothing when you exercise your right to vote? Unless you know for sure, we suggest that you either refrain from wearing political clothing, or be prepared to cover up or remove such clothing. Though you may be permitted to vote with it on, you also risk losing your right to vote. In an election that has been described by many as the most important in our lifetime, we suggest that pragmatism carry the day.

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4 Responses to "What Not to Wear...on Election Day"

  1. andrea Says:

    Learn how Presidential campaigns are often predicted far in advance by political scientists. Check this out http://www.thetruthabout.com/public/294.cfm?affID=and16

  2. Chuck Says:

    I have to say this is one thing that I thought I'd never see on the ACLU site. You are all about protecting rights, yet you blatantly just told people what not to wear? Did I read that correctly?

    Don't create or impose a double standard when it comes to liberty. Freedom is freedom, any law or suggestion to do what you want to do is not freedom at all.

  3. Chuck Says:

    that last sentence should have read: "any law or suggestion to not do what you want to do is not freedom at all.
    "

  4. Lady Says:

    Chuck, very respectfully, I disagree. I believe that we have some laws to maintain order so that we may enjoy our freedoms. This protects our right to vote and I would be willing to refrain from wearing a political message for the few minutes that I am inside the poll booth to show respect for democracy. I do not want to be intimidated by angry campaigners on my way into the polls, and I would not feel comfortable handing my ballot over to a biased poll-worker, who is campaigning inside the polling place. One's freedom should not infringe on the freedoms of others. Just as we are are not free to steal from and murder people, we should not be free to intimidate voters at the polling place. Some may feel that a button or t-shirt is hardly intimidation, but where do we draw the line? It is easier to comply with the rule and ensure everyone's freedom to vote they way they choose than to get into the semantics of "freedom." And, hey... going to the polls is still not nearly as bad as going through airport security! :)

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