Cameron Blau v. Hon Steven D. Wolnitzek in His Official Capacity as Chair, Judicial Conduct Commission , 482 S.W.3d 768 ( 2016 )


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  •                                               RENDERED: FEBRUARY 18, 2016
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    oSuprrittr        Caurf TArttfurhu
    2015-SC-000086-CL
    IN RE:                                             F
    ROBERT A. WINTER, JR., PLAINTIFF
    AND
    CAMERON BLAU AND
    HONORABLE ALLISON JONES,
    INTERVENING PLAINTIFFS
    THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY, NORTHERN DIVISION
    COVINGTON, CIVIL NO. 14-119-ART
    HONORABLE STEPHEN D. WOLNITZEK,
    IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS CHAIR,
    JUDICIAL CONDUCT COMMISSION, ET AL.
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VENTERS
    CERTIFYING THE LAW
    Pursuant to CR 76.37(1), we granted the certification request of the
    United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky (District
    Court), to provide the answer under Kentucky law to the following three
    questions and the associated sub-questions:
    Question 1:
    Canon 5A(1)(a) states that a judge or judicial candidate shall not
    "campaign as a member of a political organization." What
    constitutes "campaign[ing] as a member of a political
    organization"? As applied to this case, would it include a
    candidate's statements in mailers identifying his political party,
    such as "I am the only Republican candidate for Judge" or "I am
    the Conservative Republican candidate for Judge"? Would a
    candidate's statement that his opponent was "the Democrat
    candidate for Judge" or the "Liberal Democrat for Judge" violate
    the Canon?
    Question 2:
    Canon 5A(1)(b) states that a judge or judicial candidate shall not
    "act as a leader or hold any office in a political organization." What
    constitutes "act[ing] as a leader or hold[ing] any office"? As applied
    to this case, would hosting events for a political party violate the
    Canon?
    Question 3:
    Canon 5B(1)(c) states that a judge or judicial candidate "shall not
    knowingly, or with reckless disregard for the truth, misrepresent
    any candidate's identity, qualifications, present position, or make
    any other false or misleading statements." What constitutes a false
    statement? As applied to this case, would it include a candidate
    who asks voters to "re-elect" her to a second term even though she
    was appointed to her first term?
    These canons were promulgated by this Court with the objective of
    complying with Section 117 of our Constitution requiring that "Justices of the
    Supreme Court and judges of the Court of Appeals, Circuit and District Court
    shall be elected from their respective districts or circuits on a nonpartisan basis
    as provided by law." (Emphasis added.) We interpret this provision of the
    Kentucky Constitution as directing that Kentucky's judicial elections be
    nonpartisan in truth and substance, and not merely in process and procedure
    by the superficial omission of a political party designation on the voting ballot.
    Accordingly, we provide the following certification of Kentucky law in response
    to the District Court's questions.
    2
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Robert A. Winter, Jr., filed to run in the May 2014 primary election as a
    candidate for circuit court judge in the 16th Judicial Circuit (Campbell
    County). As part of his campaign strategy, Winter mailed brochures to
    registered Republican voters identifying himself as a registered Republican
    and, conversely, identifying his opponents as registered Democrats. After the
    brochures were sent out, the Kentucky Judicial Conduct Commission (JCC)
    notified Winter that it had received complaints that his brochures violated the
    Kentucky Code of Judicial Conduct. Winter responded in June 2014 by filing
    suit in the District Court against the JCC challenging the constitutionality of
    Canons 5A(1)(a) (prohibiting judges and judicial candidates from campaigning
    as a member of a political organization) and 5B(1)(c) (prohibiting judges or
    judicial candidates from making "false" or "misleading" statements).
    During the same election cycle, Cameron Blau entered the race as a
    candidate for district court judge in the 17th Judicial District (Campbell
    County). Because Blau likewise intended to openly campaign as a Republican
    and send brochures likewise identifying himself as a Republican, in October
    2014, Blau filed an intervening complaint to join Winter's challenge to Canons
    5A(1)(a) and 5B(1)(c). As relevant here, Blau also challenged the
    constitutionality of Canon 5A(1)(b) (a judicial candidate shall not "act as a
    leader or hold any office in a political organization"). In his complaint, Blau
    stated that he wanted to send out brochures to potential voters identifying
    himself as "the only Republican candidate for Judge," or "the Conservative
    3
    Republican candidate for Judge" and identifying his opponent as "the
    Democrat candidate" or the "Liberal Democrat for Judge." Blau also indicated
    in his complaint that he wanted to seek the endorsement of the local
    Republican Party, host events for the local Republican Party, and make
    political donations to members of the Republican Party.' In a lengthy order
    preliminarily addressing the constitutionality of the canons under review (the
    Injunction Order), the District Court concluded that there was a likelihood that
    each of the canons at issue was unconstitutional, and granted Blau's motion to
    prevent the JCC from enforcing the canons against him in the November 2014
    election.
    Allison Jones was appointed by Governor Steve Beshear to the Kentucky
    Court of Appeals in July 2013. To retain the office to which she was appointed,
    Jones became a candidate in the November 2014 General Election. In October
    2014, the JCC received a complaint alleging that Judge Jones had made false
    and misleading statements in speeches and campaign materials. The "false
    and misleading statements" referred to Jones' use of the word "re-elect" to
    describe her effort to retain the judicial position to which she had been
    appointed rather than "elected." Jones then intervened in Winter's District
    Court action, contending that Canon 5B(1)(c) (prohibiting false statements) was
    unconstitutional. The only issue presented in Jones' portion of the case is
    whether an incumbent judge who was appointed to office may properly use the
    1 Blau also raised constitutional challenges to other judicial canons not at issue
    in the questions of law presently before us.
    4
    word "re-elect" to describe her effort to retain the office to which she was
    appointed but not elected.
    It is within the context of this litigation that the District Court requested
    that we certify the law on the questions addressed herein.
    II. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
    We begin with a few general considerations that guide our examination of
    the questions presented by the District Court. First, pursuant to the Kentucky
    Constitution, all judges and justices at every level of the state judiciary are
    selected by ballots cast by the people of Kentucky. Ky. Const. § 117. Thus, we
    recognize that the judicial canons we address in this decision were designed to
    serve the state's compelling interest of encouraging an unbiased and impartial
    judiciary for the Commonwealth, and that the Commonwealth's interest is
    offset by restricting the political speech of only the few who volunteer to be a
    candidate for office, not their supporters, advocates, and non-candidate
    adversaries.
    The ultimate objective of our system of judicial selection is to achieve a
    delicate balance. On one side of the scales, we must foster and protect the
    people's prerogative to choose by direct vote the judges that preside locally and
    statewide. On the other side of the scales, we must create a political
    environment in which judges selected by the citizens are not tethered, or
    beholden to partisan political factions and their associated creeds. And, we
    must do so in a way that preserves the judiciary as an institution that is not
    partial to or biased against any political faction.
    5
    The federal judicial system achieves this balance by an effective but
    different approach. Rather than selecting judges by popular election, the
    federal system selects judges by the collaborative effort of the political
    branches, the executive and the legislative, based upon any and all factors
    including the nominee's political ties, beliefs, and political ideologies. The
    federal system achieves its assurance that judges are not beholden to political
    interests and factions by appointing them for life. With the lifetime tenure,
    federal judges are liberated from any ties or allegiance to the political factions
    that supported their ascension, and that might otherwise seek to influence
    them.
    The federal system secures the government's vital interest in an
    independent judiciary at the expense of the people's ability to choose and
    replace their judges. Kentuckians, like the citizens of most states, chose to
    achieve the same balance by alternate means. We have judges who must earn
    the public's respect and maintain the public's confidence by periodically
    entering and re-entering the arena of elective politics. Kentucky, like most
    states, assures the impartiality and integrity of the judiciary, not with a lifetime
    appointment, but through moderate restrictions on partisan activities set out
    in canons of conduct. The judicial canons at issue in this case perform the
    same function of keeping judges free from the potentially corruptive influences
    and appearances of partisan politics accomplished in the federal system by the
    lifetime tenure of judges. As such, the canons that make up our Code Judicial
    6
    Conduct advance a laudable and necessary goal that serves a vital interest of
    this Commonwealth.
    In the discussions of the judicial canons at hand, we are mindful that the
    public's trust in, and respect for, its judiciary is at stake. We accordingly are
    constrained to undertake a narrow view of those canons as we answer the
    questions posed by the District Court. At the same time we provide an
    interpretation that complies with controlling First Amendment case authorities,
    strict scrutiny, and other relevant, constitutional principles relating to
    vagueness, overinclusiveness, and underinclusiveness.
    III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    Our canons of judicial conduct are set forth in Supreme Court Rule
    (SCR) 4.300. The preamble to the canons states in part:
    The Code of Judicial Conduct is intended to establish standards
    for ethical conduct of judges. It [of necessity] consists of broad
    statements . . . .
    The Canons and Sections are rules of reason. They should be
    applied consistent with constitutional requirements, statutes,
    other court rules and decisional law and in the context of all
    relevant circumstances . . . .
    This litigation concerns the restrictions on the speech of judicial
    candidates in judicial elections. Because the First Amendment 2 reviles
    2 The First Amendment provides that Congress "shall make no law . . .
    abridging the freedom of speech." The Fourteenth Amendment makes that prohibition
    applicable to the States. Stromberg v. California, 
    283 U.S. 359
    , 368 (1931).
    7
    restrictions on core political speech, 3 such restrictions are subject to the strict
    scrutiny standard. Williams-Yulee v. Florida Bar, 
    135 S. Ct. 1656
    , 1665
    (2015). 4 Under the strict scrutiny standard, "[a] State may restrict the speech
    of a judicial candidate only if the restriction is narrowly tailored to serve a
    compelling interest." 
    Id.
     Prior authorities have identified and held that there is
    a compelling governmental interest in encouraging an unbiased and impartial
    judiciary and in maintaining the integrity of the judiciary.        See 
    id. at 1666
    (States have a compelling interest in preserving public confidence in the
    integrity of the judiciary). Those are precisely the interests addressed in the
    canons under review.
    We interpret the law, including the judicial canons now under review, by
    applying the plain and ordinary meaning of relevant text.          Pearce v. University
    of Louisville, by & through its Board of Trustees, 
    448 S.W.3d 746
    , 749 (Ky.
    2014). 5 We fundamentally undertake to construe the law so as to avoid an
    unconstitutional result. Caneyville Volunteer Fire Department v. Green's
    Motorcycle Salvage, Inc., 
    286 S.W.3d 790
    , 806 (Ky. 2009); Ballinger v.
    3 Speech concerning public issues and the qualifications of candidates for
    elective office commands the highest level of First Amendment protection. See Eu v.
    San Francisco County Democratic Central Committee., 
    489 U.S. 214
    , 223 (1989).
    4 This holding appears in Section II of Williams-Yulee, which was joined by only
    four Justices. However, the four dissenters likewise agree that strict scrutiny is the
    proper standard of review of laws constraining judicial campaign speech. Accordingly,
    it is now definitively established that strict scrutiny is the proper standard of review in
    judicial electioneering cases.
    5 Of course, there is an obvious difference between our interpretation of
    legislative acts, in which our principal objective is to determine the intent of another
    body; here, the judicial canons we interpret were promulgated by this Court, and thus
    in this sense we are interpreting our own work.
    8
    Commonwealth, 
    459 S.W.3d 349
    , 354 (Ky. 2015) (citations omitted). Of course
    this fundamental rule of construction also applies to the interpretation of the
    rules we promulgate. Summe v. Judicial Retirement and Removal Commission,
    947(S.W.2d 42, 47 (Ky. 1997). Moreover, we accede to the decisions of the
    federal courts addressing important First Amendment issues relating to judicial
    candidate electioneering. Because recent federal decisions guide our
    interpretation of the canons at issue, we begin with a brief overview of their
    central holdings.
    In Republican Party of Minnesota v. White, 
    536 U.S. 765
     (2002), the
    Supreme Court struck down a Minnesota judicial canon which prohibited
    candidates for judicial election from announcing their views on disputed legal
    or political issues. Proponents of the canon argued that it survived the strict
    scrutiny test because it served the compelling governmental interest of
    preserving the appearance of an impartial judiciary. The Court, however,
    concluded that the canon failed the strict scrutiny test because it did not
    advance the proffered interest. The Court held that the canon did not preserve
    the appearance of an impartial judiciary because it did not restrict speech
    advocating for or against particular parties or political factions; rather, it
    restricted candidates from expressing their own personal opinions on popular
    issues. The Court found no compelling state interest in suppressing judicial
    candidates' views on such issues. 6
    6 See also J.C.J.D. v. R.J.C.R., 
    803 S.W.2d 953
     (Ky. 1991) (Panel of Special
    Justices) (Code of Judicial Conduct provision prohibiting all discussion of judicial
    9
    In Family Trust Foundation of Kentucky v. Wolnitzek,        
    345 F. Supp. 2d 672
    (E.D. Ky. 2004), the District Court considered Kentucky's Judicial Canon
    5B(1)(c), which provided, in relevant part, that a judge or candidate to judicial
    office "shall not make pledges or promises of conduct in office other than the
    faithful and impartial performance of the duties of the office; [and] shall not
    make statements that commit or appear to commit the candidate with respect
    to cases, controversies or issues that are likely to come before the court[.]" In
    striking down the canon, the District Court held that the canon was
    unconstitutionally overbroad in that it was not limited to a ban on promises or
    commitments by candidates to rule a certain way on cases likely to come before
    them (which would be sustainable as furthering a compelling government
    interest in securing judicial open mindedness), and it consequently stifled the
    right of judges and candidates to speak out on issues and the corresponding
    right of voters to hear their views. Consistent with that determination the
    decision further held that judicial candidates cannot be prohibited from
    responding to election issue questionnaires inquiring into their positions on
    public issues.
    In Carey v. Wolnitzek, 
    614 F.3d 189
     (6th Cir. 2010), the Sixth Circuit
    Court of Appeals held that a former version of Kentucky Judicial Canon 5A(2),
    which prohibited judges and judicial candidates from disclosing their party
    candidate's views on disputed legal or political issues unnecessarily violated
    constitutional free speech rights of judicial candidates).
    10
    affiliation in any form of advertising, or when speaking to a gathering, except in
    answer to a direct question by a voter in one-on-one or very small private
    informal settings, was unconstitutional because it was not narrowly tailored to
    advance the Commonwealth's interest in preventing a biased judiciary, or
    diminishing the role of political parties in judicial selection, and thus the canon
    facially violated free speech and associational rights. The Sixth Circuit
    reasoned that by prohibiting candidates from disclosing their party affiliations,
    the clause effectively prevented candidates from announcing their individual
    views on many issues to the extent that a party identification signals the
    judicial candidate's alignment with the views incorporated into a political
    party's platform. The decision further held that the canon was underinclusive
    for these additional reasons: the identification of the candidate's party
    affiliation was forbidden only when the candidate raised the point and could
    otherwise be disclosed by the candidate's supporters; judicial candidates were
    not restrained from disclosing their memberships or affiliations with other
    types of organizations that advocated political opinions, such as the Federalist
    Society or the ACLU, which may be more telling than one's actual party
    identification itself; and the canon did not prohibit judicial candidates from
    being members of a political party. Rather, it only prohibited them from
    announcing their particular party membership.?
    7 Carey also held that our canon prohibiting a judicial candidate from
    personally soliciting funds was unconstitutional; however, that holding has been
    superseded by Williams-Yulee v. Florida Bar, 
    135 S. Ct. 1656
     (2015) (upholding
    restrictions on a judicial candidate's personal solicitation of campaign funds).
    11
    Most recently, and perhaps most importantly, the Supreme Court
    decided in Williams-Yulee that a Florida judicial canon restricting a judicial
    candidate's personal solicitation of campaign funds was constitutional because
    it was narrowly tailored to serve the compelling governmental interest in
    obviating the indecorous practice of an attorney who regularly practiced before
    a judge, or a litigant with a case pending before a judge, personally handing
    cash to the judge or being placed in the untenable position of rebuffing the
    judge's personal solicitation. See also Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., Inc.,
    
    556 U.S. 868
    , 889 (2009) (holding that there is serious risk of actual bias,
    based on objective and reasonable perceptions, when a person with a personal
    stake in a particular case has significant and disproportionate influence in
    placing a judge on the case by raising funds, or by directing a judge's election
    campaign, when the case was pending or imminent).
    With the above standards and constitutional limitations in mind, we now
    turn to the particular questions posed by the District Court in its certification
    of law request.
    IV. QUESTION I - CANON 5A(1)(A)
    The District Court's first question seeks certification of a broadly-stated
    question along with two more specific subparts. Canon 5A(1)(a) states as
    follows:
    Canon 5. A judge or judicial candidate shall refrain from
    inappropriate political activity.
    A. Political Conduct in General.
    12
    (1) Except as permitted by law, a judge or a candidate for election
    to judicial office shall not:
    (a) campaign as a member of a political organization[.]
    (Emphasis added.) The section is further clarified by the following official
    commentary:
    A judge or a candidate for election to judicial office retains the right
    to participate in the political process as a voter. A judge or a
    candidate for election to judicial office may publicly affiliate with a
    political organization but may not campaign as a member of a
    political organization.
    Because the specific prohibition contained in Canon 5A(1)(a) (shall not . .
    . campaign as a member of a political organization) is limited by the
    introductory clause "except as permitted by law," our interpretation of the
    section is guided by the various First Amendment court decisions addressing
    judicial campaign issues as referenced above.
    A. Answer to Question 1: What constitutes "campaign[ing] as a
    member of a political organization"?
    The Terminology Section of SCR 4.300 defines a "political organization"
    as "denot[ing] a political party or other group, the principal purpose of which is
    to further the election or appointment of candidates to political office." The
    Democrat and Republican parties clearly fall within this definition.    Carey held
    that a judicial candidate cannot be restrained from identifying himself as a
    member of a political party, and our current version of Canon 5 was
    promulgated in response to that decision. It follows that the canon does not,
    and indeed could not, reach that activity. In summary, a judicial candidate
    may identify himself to the public as a member of a political party.    Carey v.
    13
    Wolnitzek, 
    614 F.3d 189
    ; Commentary to Canon 5 ("a candidate for election to
    judicial office may publicly affiliate with a political organization").
    Nevertheless, there is a vast difference between the permissible speech of
    a judicial candidate identifying herself as a member of a political party and the
    impermissibly deceptive conduct of representing herself as the nominee of a
    political party. The former statement would be true; the latter is by any
    standard, blatantly false. Canon 5A(1)(a) draws that distinction.
    The Canon 5 provision proscribing "campaigning as a member of a
    political organization" prohibits the dissemination of campaign materials and
    other public representations suggesting to the voters that the candidate is the
    endorsed judicial nominee of a political party. For example, a campaign
    representation such as "I am the Republican candidate for the 16th Judicial
    Circuit Court" is impermissible. There is no "Republican candidate" for that
    office; the assertion is materially false and misleading.   See Canon 5B(1)(c)
    (prohibiting materially false statements). Political parties and factions do not
    select or nominate candidates for judicial office in Kentucky. Canon 5A(1)(a)
    merely recognizes and faithfully codifies this Constitutional reality.
    B. Answer to Question 1A: As applied to this case, would it include a
    candidate's statements in mailers identifying his political party,
    such as "I am the only Republican candidate for Judge" or "I am the
    Conservative Republican candidate for Judge"?
    As noted above, pursuant to Carey, prohibiting a judicial candidate from
    identifying himself as a member of a political party is unconstitutional and the
    present version of Canon 5A(1)(a) was drawn to comply with Carey. Therefore,
    the statement "I am the only Republican candidate for Judge" is permissible, as
    14
    long as it is true, because the message merely identifies the candidate as a
    Republican who is a candidate for judge, albeit the only one. It does not imply
    that the candidate is the nominee of the Republican Party, which would be
    prohibited.
    In contrast, the statement "I am the Conservative Republican candidate
    for Judge," transmits the message that the candidate is the formal nominee for
    the Republican Party. As discussed above, this is an impermissible depiction
    by the candidate of his status in the judicial race; the insertion of the modifier
    "Conservative" into the statement does not, in our view, dispel the
    disingenuousness of the statement. Under the current state of affairs of
    modern American politics, the Republican Party is commonly regarded as
    occupying the conservative side of the political spectrum, and so the addition of
    the modifier "Conservative" is surplusage, doing nothing to dispel the implied
    falsehood that the candidate is running for Kentucky judicial office as the
    formal candidate of the Republican Party.
    C. Answer to Question 1B: Would a candidate's statement that his
    opponent was "the Democrat candidate for Judge" or the "Liberal
    Democrat for Judge" violate the Canon?
    The statement by a candidate that his opponent is "the Democrat
    candidate for Judge" is an impermissible message to the voters. His opponent
    is not, in fact, the Democrat candidate for Judge. As previously explained,
    such candidates do not exist in Kentucky, and such a campaign message
    would therefore amount to a blatant falsehood.    See Canon 5B(1)(c) (prohibiting
    materially false statements).
    15
    Similarly, a statement by a candidate that his opponent is "the Liberal
    Democrat for Judge" is likewise impermissible. For the identical reasons
    discussed above, the modern Democratic Party is widely acknowledged as
    falling within the liberal segment of the political spectrum. There is no
    meaningful difference between stating that someone is "the Liberal Democrat
    for Judge" as opposed to "the Democrat for Judge." Both phrasings imply the
    false and misleading message that the opponent is the Democratic Party
    nominee for judge.
    D. Summary
    In summary, judicial candidates may "affiliate," 8 that is "portray"
    themselves as members of a political party without restriction; what they may
    not do under Canon 5A(1)(b), in tandem with Canon 5B(1)(c), is portray
    themselves, either directly or by implication, as the official nominee of a
    political party.
    V. QUESTION 2     -   CANON 5A(1)(B)
    The second question concerns Canon 5A(1)(b). This Canon states as
    follows:
    Canon 5. A judge or judicial candidate shall refrain from
    inappropriate political activity.
    A. Political Conduct in General
    (1) Except as permitted by law, a judge or a candidate for election
    to judicial office shall not:
    8 Merriam Webster defines "affiliate" as "to closely connect (something or
    -
    yourself) with or to something (such as a program or organization) as a member or
    partner[.1" http://www.merriam-webster.corn/dictionary/affiliate (January 2016).
    16
    (b) act as a leader or hold any office in a political organization.
    A. Answer to Question 2: Canon 5A(1)(b) states that a judge or judicial
    candidate shall not "act as a leader or hold any office in a political
    organization." What constitutes "act[ing] as a leader or hold[ing]
    any office"?
    "Holding any office" in a political organization means occupying a formal
    position with a recognized title or performing a function within the established
    organizational structure of an association whose principal purpose is to further
    the election or appointment of candidates to political office. An "office" in such
    an organization includes recognized titles such as chairman, director,
    secretary, treasurer, press secretary, precinct leader, membership recruiter,
    youth coordinator, and the like.
    "Acting as a leader" encompasses a less formal but broader range of
    participation. Matter of Disciplinary Proceeding Against Blauvelt, 
    801 P.2d 235
    ,
    238 (1990), 9 notes that Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1283
    (1986), defines leader, among other ways, as "a person who by force of
    example, talents, or qualities of leadership plays a directing role, wields
    commanding influence, or has a following in any sphere of activity or thought."
    "Acting as a leader," therefore, captures efforts to advance the political agenda
    of the party in a less formal way through proactive planning, organizing,
    9 Blauvelt addressed a judicial canon substantially identical to Canon 5A(1)(b)
    and held that a judge serving as a delegate to political party's county convention was a
    "leader" within meaning of the canon's prohibition against a judge acting as a "leader"
    in a political organization.
    17
    directing, and controlling of party functions with the goal of achieving success
    for the political party. These less formalized, leader-without-title, positions
    would include, for example, acting formally or informally as a party
    spokesperson; organizing, managing, or recruiting new members; organizing or
    managing campaigns; fundraising; and performing other roles exerting
    influence or authority over the rank and file membership albeit without a
    formal title, including as further discussed below, hosting political events.
    B. Answer to Question 2A: As applied to this case, would hosting
    events for a political party violate the Canon?
    Consistent with the definition of "acting as a leader," as just discussed,
    one who hosts an event for a political party is "acting as a leader" for the party.
    Merriam-Webster defines "host" as: "1 a: one that receives or entertains guests
    socially, commercially, or officially; b: one that provides facilities for an event or
    function . . . ." 1-0 Therefore, someone who provides the facilities for an event of
    a political party or officially receives the political party attendees is, indeed,
    acting as a "leader" of a political party. The "host" of an event, political or
    otherwise, uses the prestige of his or her name to promote the event and exerts
    a significant measure of control and authority over the event, more so, in our
    view, than the more passive political delegate function in Blauvelt. Perforce, a
    judicial candidate hosting a political event acts as a leader of that event and is,
    in turn, acting as a leader of the political party on whose behalf the political
    event is being held. Under Canon 5A(1)(b) that is prohibited conduct.
    10   http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/host (January 2016).
    18
    VI. QUESTION III - CANON 5B(1)(C)
    The final questions posed by the District Court concern the misleading
    speech prohibition by a judicial candidate contained in Canon 5B(1)(c). Canon
    5B(1)(c) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
    B. Campaign Conduct.
    (1) A judge or candidate for election to judicial office:
    (c) shall not . . . with reckless disregard for the truth, misrepresent
    any candidate's identity, qualifications, present position, or make
    any other false or misleading statements.
    A. Answer to Question 3: Canon 5B(1)(c) states that a judge or judicial
    candidate "shall not knowingly, or with reckless disregard for the
    truth, misrepresent any candidate's identity, qualifications, present
    position, or make any other false or misleading statements." What
    constitutes a false statement?
    A falser statement is a statement that is not factually true in the normal
    sense; that is, an untrue utterance. For example, it would include such
    statements as: "I graduated first in my class" when the candidate did not; "I
    have won all of my cases as an attorney" when the candidate had not; "I was an
    officer in the military" when the candidate was not; or "my opponent was
    convicted of a drug offense" when the opponent was not. 12
    11 Merriam-Webster defines false as "not real or genuine: not true or accurate;
    especially: deliberately untrue: done or said to fool or deceive someone."
    http:/ / www.merriam-web sten com/ +dictionary/ false (January 2016) .
    12 In United States v. Alvarez, 
    132 S. Ct. 2537
     (2012), the Supreme Court held
    that false statements generally are not a category of unprotected speech exempt from
    the normal prohibition on content-based restrictions. 
    Id. at 2547
     (striking down a
    federal statute which prohibited lying about military awards). (Per opinion of Justice
    Kennedy, with three Justices concurring and two Justices concurring in the
    19
    The provision does not, however, cover expressions of opinion because
    expressions of an opinion do not implicate a statement that is not factually
    true. For example such statements as "Justice Stevens was the best Justice
    ever"; "Citizens United was the best decision ever"; or "my opponent is too
    liberal" are all expressions of opinion and not subject to Canon 5B(1)(c).
    In summary, Canon 5B(1)(c) extends only to statements made during a
    campaign which are objectively factually untrue and do not extend to
    expressions of subjective opinions or innocuous campaign-trail "puffing" ("I am
    the most qualified candidate in the state.").
    B. Answer to Question 3A: As applied to this case, would it include a
    candidate who asks voters to "re-elect" her to a second term even
    though she was appointed to her first term?
    The prefix "re" affixed to a verb implies that the action described in the
    verb has occurred on a previous occasion. 13 For example, if a television
    network announces that it will rerun a particular program, it has implicitly but
    definitively asserted that the program had been run on a prior occasion; it is
    implied that a soldier who re-enlists in the army had enlisted in the military on
    a prior occasion; and something can be reasserted only if it has previously
    been asserted.
    judgment). However, the Court pointedly exempted from the scope of the decision
    laws aimed at "maintain[ing] the general good repute and dignity of . . . government . .
    . service itself." 
    Id.
     at 2546 (citing United States v. Lepowitch, 
    318 U.S. 702
    , 704, 
    63 S. Ct. 914
    , 
    87 L.Ed. 1091
     (1943)). Because the canons we address fall squarely within
    this exception, we are persuaded that Alvarez does not apply here.
    13   See generally http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/re (January
    2016).
    20
    Given this universally accepted convention of the English language, a
    candidate's request for voters to re elect her to a judicial office is an affirmative
    -
    assertion that she had been elected by voters to the same office on a prior
    occasion. A judge who holds her office by way of a gubernatorial appointment
    cannot honestly claim that she was elected to the office, and if she seeks to
    retain the office at the next election, she cannot honestly assert that she seeks
    to be re elected. Such an assertion would be a materially false statement,
    -
    deceptive to the public, and would run afoul of Canon 5B(1)(c).
    The opponents of the canon cite to various court decisions and news
    articles where the term "re-elect" was used to describe a judge who was seeking
    to retain an office attained by appointment rather than election. Using the
    term in news articles and other narratives to chronicle historic events is an
    informal and idiomatic phrasing, but it is nonetheless inaccurate.
    In contrast, when an incumbent judge uses the word "re-elect" as
    campaign stratagem to persuade the public that she acquired the office by the
    popular vote of the people rather than as the appointee of a governor, its use is
    calculated to mislead and deceive the voters. Accordingly, we distinguish these
    informal, idiomatic usages and regard these journalistic references as
    irrelevant to our review.
    VII.      CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW
    The closing step to interpreting a statute or other legal authority, such as
    the canons interpreted herein, is undertaking a final examination to ascertain
    that our interpretation complies with any existing constitutional mandates. We
    21
    have undertaken that review and are satisfied that our interpretations as
    expressed above fall well within the requirements of White, Carey, Williams-
    Yulee, and other applicable First Amendment authorities.
    Nevertheless, we are attentive that in its Injunction Order, the District
    Court expressed its skepticism regarding the constitutionality of each of the
    canons under review. In response to that skepticism, we emphasize that we
    are persuaded that Williams-Yulee resolves the District Court's criticism in
    favor of the interpretations expressed herein. For example, the District Court
    criticizes our campaign limitation, expressed in Canon 5A(1)(a), as being
    underinclusive 14 because it fails to address the practical reality that, in lieu of
    the candidate directly portraying himself as the favored candidate of a political
    party, his supporters and surrogates may undertake that same function. The
    District Court is correct; we do not purport to limit the campaign conduct of
    supporters and surrogates. But the Court's criticism ignores the fact that the
    compelling interest served by our canon is to insulate the judge personally from
    behaviors that directly undermine the impartiality and objectivity of the
    Kentucky Court of Justice. That others outside the judiciary may pursue these
    political objectives on behalf of the judge or judicial candidate does not in any
    way diminish our objective. If anything, it is a factor that favors the
    constitutionality of our canon by emphasizing its limited impact on political
    14"[U]nderindusiveness can raise 'doubts about whether the government is in
    fact pursuing the interest it invokes, rather than disfavoring a particular speaker or
    viewpoint.' Williams Yulee, 
    135 S. Ct. at 1668
    .
    -
    22
    discourse. The objective is not to keep information hidden from the public; the
    objective is to keep the judge from compromising his or her integrity and
    impartiality by engaging in deceptive and misleading conduct.
    Williams-Yulee presented a very similar situation. While the Florida rules
    prohibited a judge from personally soliciting funds, responsible representatives
    were permitted to do so on her behalf. Against the underinclusiveness
    argument, the United States Supreme Court noted: "A State need not address
    all aspects of a problem in one fell swoop; policymakers may focus on their
    most pressing concerns. We have accordingly upheld laws—even under strict
    scrutiny—that conceivably could have restricted even greater amounts of
    speech in service of their stated interests." 
    135 S. Ct. at 1668
    . By the same
    force of reasoning, our Canon 5A(1)(a) is not underinclusive; 15 nor are the other
    judicial canons we have discussed.
    The District Court likewise criticizes our canons as overbroad in that
    they may be construed to extend beyond the range of prohibitable speech and
    reach non-prohibitable speech. 16 In drafting our canons, we strived to avoid
    overbreadth and the clarifications expressed herein should obviate that
    concern. In any event, Williams-Yulee addressed the same point and the same
    15 And further, of course we have no jurisdiction over the judicial candidate's
    supporters and surrogates; however that does not mean we are powerless over those
    whom we do have jurisdiction from misleading the public into believing that they are
    the officially sanctioned nominee of a political party.
    16 The overbreadth doctrine "is predicated on the danger that an overly broad
    statute, if left in place, may cause persons whose expression is constitutionally
    protected to refrain from exercising their rights for fear of criminal sanctions."
    Massachusetts v. Oakes, 
    491 U.S. 576
    , 581 (1989).
    23
    compelling interests were at stake. There, the Supreme Court observed that
    "The First Amendment requires that [the personal solicitation canon] be
    narrowly tailored, not that it be 'perfectly tailored.' The impossibility of perfect
    tailoring is especially apparent when the State's compelling interest is as
    intangible as public confidence in the integrity of the judiciary." 
    135 S. Ct. at 1671
     (citation omitted). The same principle applies in this situation as we
    strive to protect the democratic ideal of citizens choosing their judges and, at
    the same time, preserve the neutrality of the judicial branch by insulating
    judges from detrimental influences of partisan politics. Perhaps we have not
    achieved the ideal-but-elusive "perfect tailoring," but nevertheless our tailoring
    comports with the standard prescribed in Williams-Yulee.
    The District Court also suggests in its Injunction Order that the canons
    at issue are unconstitutionally vague; 17 however, as we discuss herein, a plain,
    ordinary, and common sense application of the language of the canons gives
    accurate guidance to a judicial candidate of what he may or may not do in a
    political campaign: he may not campaign as the nominee of a political party; he
    may not act as an office holder or leader, in the traditional sense of those
    terms, of a political party and he may not lie to the public on the campaign
    trail, although he is free to otherwise express his opinion on matters relating to
    himself, his opponent, and matters of public interest. It bears emphasis as
    17 "[The void-for-vagueness doctrine requires that a penal statute define the
    criminal offense with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what
    conduct is prohibited and in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and
    discriminatory enforcement." Kolender v. Lawson, 
    461 U.S. 352
    , 357 (1983).
    24
    well that Kentucky's Judicial Conduct Commission maintains an ethics
    advisory structure which is available to judicial candidates seeking specific
    advice or guidance on campaign matters.
    VIII. CONCLUSION
    The law as set forth above is hereby certified to the United States District
    Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky.
    All sitting. Minton, C.J.; Cunningham, Hughes, Keller, and Venters, JJ.,
    concur. Noble, J., concurs in part and dissents in part by separate opinion in
    which Wright, J., joins.
    NOBLE, J., CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART: I concur
    with Justice Venters' excellent analysis on all the issues in this case except for
    his answer to question IA, as to whether the statement "I am the only
    Republican candidate for judge" is permissible. I do not think it is. In the same
    discussion, he concludes that it is NOT permissible to say, "I am the
    conservative Republican candidate for judge." Both the term "only" and the
    term "conservative" are modifiers and immediately precede the phrase
    "Republican candidate." Thus, whatever the modifier may be, both sentences
    are discussing "the...Republican candidate." As the majority explains,
    Republicans (Democrats) do not have a party candidate in non-partisan judicial
    elections, and saying that one is "the Republican candidate" is inappropriate
    and misleading. I can make no distinction between the two sentences at issue,
    and thus would find that neither is permissible. Our Constitution requires that
    judicial candidates be non-partisan candidates, and declaring oneself to be any
    25
    kind of Republican (or Democratic) candidate adds partisanship to the actual
    candidacy, rather than stating in which political party one has membership.
    Wright, J., joins.
    26
    COUNSEL FOR CAMERON BLAU:
    Jack Scott Gatlin
    Freund, Freeze, and Arnold
    Christopher D. Wiest
    Chris Wiest, Attorney at Law, PLLC
    COUNSEL FOR ALLISON JONES:
    Lucinda C. Shirooni
    Thomas B Bruns
    Jack Scott Gatlin
    Freund, Freeze & Arnold
    COUNSEL FOR HON. STEVEN D. WOLNITZEK, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS
    CHAIR, JUDICIAL CONDUCT COMMISSION:
    Jeffrey C. Mando
    Louis Kelly
    Adams, Stepner, Woltermann & Dusing, PLLC
    Mark Richard Overstreet
    Bethany A. Breetz
    Stites & Harbison, PLLC
    27