Ostrewich v. Nelson ( 2023 )


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  • Case: 21-20577     Document: 00516803616         Page: 1    Date Filed: 06/28/2023
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit                                      United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    ____________                                      FILED
    June 28, 2023
    No. 21-20577                               Lyle W. Cayce
    ____________                                      Clerk
    Jillian Ostrewich,
    Plaintiff—Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
    versus
    Clifford Tatum, in his official capacity as Harris County Elections
    Administrator; Jane Nelson, in her official capacity as Secretary of State of
    Texas; John Scott, in his official capacity as the Attorney General of
    Texas,
    Defendants—Appellees/Cross-Appellants,
    Kim Ogg, in her official capacity as Harris County District Attorney,
    Defendant—Appellee.
    ______________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    USDC No. 4:19-CV-715
    ______________________________
    Before Clement, Duncan, and Wilson, Circuit Judges.
    Cory T. Wilson, Circuit Judge:
    America’s “early elections were not a very pleasant spectacle” for
    voters. Burson v. Freeman, 
    504 U.S. 191
    , 202 (1992) (plurality opinion)
    (quotation omitted). Indeed, in the nineteenth century, polling places were
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    often a place of bedlam: “Sham battles were frequently engaged in to keep
    away elderly and timid voters,” 
    id. at 202
    , “[c]rowds would gather to heckle
    and harass voters who appeared to be supporting the other side,” and
    “[e]lectioneering of all kinds was permitted,” Minn. Voters All. v. Mansky,
    
    138 S. Ct. 1876
    , 1882–83 (2018). To facilitate more orderly voting, states
    came to institute a number of reforms, including restrictions on “election-
    day speech in the immediate vicinity of the polls.” 
    Id. at 1883
     (quotation
    omitted). “Today, all 50 states and the District of Columbia have laws
    curbing various forms of speech in and around polling places on Election
    Day.” 
    Id.
    At issue in this case are three such Texas laws: Texas Election Code
    sections 61.003, 61.010, and 85.036 (collectively, the “electioneering laws”).
    Jillian Ostrewich filed this action, alleging that she was unconstitutionally
    censored under the electioneering laws when she voted in 2018 and that the
    statutes unconstitutionally “chilled” her right to free speech by criminalizing
    political expression within polling places. The district court, adopting the
    magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, upheld section 61.010 as
    constitutional, but concluded that sections 61.003 and 85.036 are facially
    unconstitutional under the First Amendment.            Both sides appealed,
    contesting jurisdictional issues as well as the merits. Following Mansky, we
    hold that all three electioneering laws pass constitutional muster.
    I.
    A.
    Sections 61.003 and 85.036—which are near duplicates—prohibit
    “electioneering” near polling places. Section 61.003 states, in relevant part:
    (a) A person commits [a misdemeanor] offense if, during the
    voting period and within 100 feet of an outside door through
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    which a voter may enter the building in which a polling place
    is located, the person:
    (1) loiters; or
    (2) electioneers for or against any candidate, measure,
    or political party.
    ...
    (b) In this section:
    (1) “Electioneering” includes the posting, use, or
    distribution of political signs or literature.
    Tex. Elec. Code § 61.003. Section 85.036 is substantively the same but
    applies during the early voting period instead of on Election Day itself. Tex.
    Elec. Code § 85.036. Section 61.010, entitled “Wearing Name Tag or
    Badge in Polling Place,” complements the first two statutes, restricting what
    a person may wear in a polling place. Section 61.010 reads:
    (a) . . . [A] person may not wear a badge, insignia, emblem, or
    other similar communicative device relating to a candidate,
    measure, or political party appearing on the ballot, or to the
    conduct of the election, in the polling place or within 100 feet
    of any outside door through which a voter may enter the
    building in which the polling place is located.
    ...
    (c) A person commits an offense if the person violates
    Subsection (a). An offense under this subsection is a Class C
    misdemeanor.
    Tex. Elec. Code § 61.010.
    B.
    Houston’s 2018 election ballot included a proposition (“Prop B”) to
    amend the City Charter to guarantee Houston’s firefighters pay parity with
    the City’s police officers. Prop B supporters actively campaigned for the
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    initiative, including through street demonstrations. Many supporters wore
    distinctive yellow t-shirts that contained a union logo and the words
    “Houston Fire Fighters.” Prop B supporters also wore the shirts while
    advocating around polling locations.
    Jillian Ostrewich, a self-proclaimed “fire wife,” and her firefighter
    husband wore these shirts when they headed to the polls to vote during
    Houston’s early voting period. When Ostrewich reached the front of the
    voting line, an unidentified election worker pointed at her shirt and told her
    that “[y]ou are not going to be allowed to vote,” because voters were “voting
    on that.” This was consistent with the policy established by the polling
    location’s presiding judge, the official who manages polling locations in
    Texas. See Tex. Elec. Code § 32.075(a). 1 For Ostrewich to be permitted
    to vote, the election worker instructed her to go to the restroom to turn her
    shirt inside-out. 2 Ostrewich complied, then returned to the line and voted.
    The next day, the Harris County Administrator of Elections advised election
    workers that only yellow firefighter t-shirts explicitly promoting Prop B
    needed to be covered up; union-logoed, yellow firefighter t-shirts—like the
    one Ostrewich had worn—were permissible.
    After the election, Ostrewich filed suit, alleging that she was
    unconstitutionally censored and that Texas’s electioneering laws
    unconstitutionally chilled her right to free speech. She sued both local and
    _____________________
    1
    Under section 32.075(a), the presiding judge “shall preserve order and prevent
    breaches of the peace and violations of this code in the polling place and in the area within
    which electioneering and loitering are prohibited . . . .” See also Tex. Elec. Code
    § 32.071 (“The presiding judge is in charge of and responsible for the management and
    conduct of the election at the polling place of the election precinct that the judge serves.”).
    2
    While the election worker was who instructed Ostrewich to change her shirt, the
    policy originated from the presiding judge. Our analysis therefore refers to the presiding
    judge as the relevant actor.
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    state defendants in their official capacities, including the Texas Secretary of
    State, Texas Attorney General, Harris County Clerk, and Harris County
    Attorney, (collectively, the “State”). 3 After discovery, both Ostrewich and
    the State moved for summary judgment. The case was assigned to a
    magistrate judge, who recommended rejecting the State’s assertions that
    Ostrewich’s claims were barred by sovereign immunity and, alternatively,
    that she lacked Article III standing. Addressing the merits, the magistrate
    judge recommended upholding section 61.010 as constitutional because it
    was sufficiently limited to apparel “relating to a candidate, measure, or
    political party appearing on the ballot,” but concluded that sections 61.003
    and 85.036 were facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment
    because they contained no such limiting language. The district court adopted
    the recommendation in full. Both sides timely appealed the ruling.
    On appeal, Ostrewich asserts the district court erred in upholding
    section 61.010 as constitutional, both facially and as applied. The State
    disagrees, asserting that the district court should not have ruled on
    Ostrewich’s constitutional claims because she lacks standing and the
    Eleventh Amendment bars her claims against Texas’s Attorney General and
    Secretary of State. On the merits, the State contends all three sections pass
    constitutional muster.
    _____________________
    3
    Various officeholders have changed during the pendency of this appeal. We have
    previously granted unopposed motions to substitute and refer to each officer using his or
    her official title for consistency.
    We recognize that the defendants encompass both state and local government
    officials. However, because the defendants are represented by a single brief, we refer to
    them collectively as “the State” for simplicity.
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    II.
    We review a “district court’s judgment on cross motions for summary
    judgment de novo, addressing each party’s motion independently, viewing
    the evidence and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party.” CANarchy Craft Brewery Collective, LLC v. Tex. Alcoholic Beverage
    Comm’n, 
    37 F.4th 1069
    , 1074 (5th Cir. 2022) (quotation omitted). Summary
    judgment is appropriate if “the evidence shows that there is no genuine issue
    as to any material fact, and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.” High v. E-Sys. Inc., 
    459 F.3d 573
    , 576 (5th Cir. 2006); Fed
    R. Civ. P. 56.
    When interpreting Texas statutes, this court employs “the same
    methods of statutory interpretation used by the Texas Supreme Court.”
    Camacho v. Ford Motor Co., 
    993 F.3d 308
    , 311 (5th Cir. 2021). That court
    instructs that “text is the alpha and the omega of the interpretive process.”
    
    Id.
     (quoting BankDirect Cap. Fin., LLC v. Plasma Fab, LLC, 
    519 S.W.3d 76
    ,
    86 (Tex. 2017)).
    III.
    Before addressing the merits, we must traverse a couple of threshold
    issues: the proper parties to this action, and Ostrewich’s standing. Both
    implicate the court’s jurisdiction to consider the case. We conclude that
    Texas’s Attorney General and Secretary of State enjoy sovereign immunity,
    but that Ostrewich has standing to bring her claims against the remaining
    defendants.
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    A.
    The district court found that the Ex parte Young 4 exception to
    Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity permitted Ostrewich to bring her
    claims against Texas’s Attorney General and Secretary of State. This was
    incorrect; the exception only applies if the state officials have a sufficient
    connection with enforcing the electioneering laws. Per our precedent, they
    do not.
    Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity “prohibits suits against
    state officials or agencies that are effectively suits against a state.” City of
    Austin v. Paxton, 
    943 F.3d 993
    , 997 (5th Cir. 2019). The Young exception to
    this rule “allows private parties to bring suits for injunctive or declaratory
    relief against individual state officials,” but only if those officials have “some
    connection with the enforcement of the challenged act.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up).
    To show this required “connection,” a state officer must have a “particular
    duty to enforce the statute in question and a demonstrated willingness to
    exercise that duty.” Tex. Democratic Party v. Abbott, 
    978 F.3d 168
    , 181 (5th
    Cir. 2020) (quoting Morris v. Livingston, 
    739 F.3d 740
    , 746 (5th Cir. 2014)).
    It is insufficient for a party to show only that a state officer has “a general
    duty to enforce the law.” 
    Id.
     In the Young context, “enforcement” means
    “compulsion or constraint.” Richardson v. Flores, 
    28 F.4th 649
    , 655 (5th Cir.
    2022) (quoting City of Austin, 943 F.3d at 1000); see also Tex. All. for Retired
    Ams. v. Scott, 
    28 F.4th 669
    , 672 (5th Cir. 2022) (“If the official does not
    compel or constrain anyone to obey the challenged law, enjoining that official
    could not stop any ongoing constitutional violation.”).
    We first address the Secretary of State. To overcome her sovereign
    immunity via Young, Ostrewich must show that the Secretary has “some
    _____________________
    4
    
    209 U.S. 123
    , 155–56 (1908).
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    connection with the enforcement” of the “specific election code provisions”
    at issue. Richardson, 28 F.4th at 653–54 (quotation and citation omitted). She
    may not rely simply on the Secretary’s “broad duties to oversee
    administration of Texas’s election laws.” Id. at 654. The Secretary’s
    “[o]ffering advice, guidance, or interpretive assistance” to local officials
    does not constitute enforcement. Id. at 655.
    The district court concluded that the Secretary had a sufficient
    connection to the enforcement of Texas’s electioneering laws because she is
    responsible for training presiding judges to enforce elections law, and she
    issues election advisories interpreting the electioneering laws, which guide
    presiding judges’ discretionary decisions “under threat of removal.” See
    Tex. Elec. Code § 32.111 (“The [S]ecretary of [S]tate shall adopt
    standards of training in election law and procedure[s] for presiding and
    alternate judges.”). But the Secretary’s training and advisory duties fall
    short of the showing required for her to face suit under Young.
    In Texas, presiding judges are exclusively entrusted with enforcing
    the electioneering laws at polling locations.      See Tex. Elec. Code
    § 32.075; see also supra n.1. Both parties agree that a presiding judge has
    absolute discretion in exercising that enforcement power. See § 32.075 (“[A]
    presiding judge has the power of a [state] district judge to enforce order and
    preserve the peace[.]”). The Secretary, thus, does not directly enforce the
    electioneering laws, but only provides interpretive guidance. And, because
    “[o]ffering advice, guidance, or interpretive assistance does not compel or
    constrain” presiding judges in fulfilling their duties, Young does not operate
    to strip the Secretary of her sovereign immunity. See Richardson, 28 F.4th at
    655.
    The same goes for the Attorney General. Ostrewich must show that
    he has a particular duty to enforce the electioneering laws and has
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    demonstrated willingness to do so. See City of Austin, 943 F.3d at 1000–02.
    The district court determined that Ostrewich met this burden because there
    was no evidence that “the Attorney General will not prosecute violators in
    the future.” The court further determined that the Attorney General had
    two specific statutory duties that require him to enforce the electioneering
    laws:   Texas Election Code sections 273.001 (triggering an obligatory
    investigation by local authorities upon receipt of two or more complaints and
    permitting the Secretary to refer a complaint to the Attorney General for
    criminal investigation), and 273.021(a) (permitting the Attorney General to
    prosecute election law offenses).
    A recent opinion from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals is
    dispositive of this question. In State v. Stephens, the Court of Criminal
    Appeals held that section 273.021(a) violated Texas’s Constitution because
    the Attorney General has no independent authority to prosecute election-
    related criminal offenses. 
    663 S.W.3d 45
    , 47 (Tex. Crim. App. 2021), reh’g
    denied, 
    664 S.W.3d 293
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2022). According to the Court of
    Criminal Appeals, section 273.021(a)’s plain language merely allows the
    Attorney General to “prosecute with the permission of the local prosecutor”
    but, critically, “[he] cannot initiate prosecution unilaterally.” Id. at 55.
    Indeed, the section does not require the Attorney General to prosecute
    election law violations at all—rather, it uses the permissive term “may”
    instead of a mandatory term like “shall.” Id. at 54–55. As such, “nothing in
    [the] statute ‘requires’ the Attorney General to prosecute election cases.”
    Id. at 55. The Attorney General’s power related to election laws is therefore
    limited—he does not have the ability to “compel or constrain local officials”
    to enforce the electioneering laws, nor can he bring his own proceedings to
    prosecute election-law violators. Cf. City of Austin, 943 F.3d at 1001 (finding
    application of Young warranted when the Attorney General prohibited
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    payments, set rates, and sent letters threatening formal enforcement
    actions).
    This holds true irrespective of section 273.001. As with section
    273.021(a), the Attorney General lacks the power to prosecute election-
    related criminal offenses directly under section 273.001. Instead, section
    273.001 simply empowers the Attorney General to investigate criminal
    conduct upon a triggering event—namely, referral by the Secretary. Nothing
    in this section gives the Attorney General the ability to prosecute, as that
    power would come from section 273.021(a) if it did not contravene the Texas
    Constitution. Ultimately, as with the Secretary, the Young exception does
    not strip the Attorney General of his sovereign immunity. Richardson, 28
    F.4th at 655. The district court erred in holding otherwise. Accordingly, we
    reverse the district court’s holding regarding sovereign immunity and
    dismiss Ostrewich’s claims against the Secretary of State and Attorney
    General for lack of jurisdiction.
    B.
    To have standing against the remaining two defendants, Ostrewich
    must (1) have suffered an injury in fact (2) that is fairly traceable to the
    challenged action of one of the remaining defendants and (3) that will likely
    be redressed by a favorable decision. Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    ,
    560–61 (1992). Ostrewich alleges two injuries: First, an election worker—
    while enforcing the electioneering laws—unconstitutionally censored her
    speech by instructing her to turn her firefighter t-shirt inside-out; second, the
    electioneering laws unconstitutionally chilled her speech. The State argues
    neither injury is sufficient to confer standing, maintaining that the first is not
    traceable to a named defendant, and the second is not an injury-in-fact. We
    disagree; Ostrewich’s allegation that Texas’s electioneering laws
    unconstitutionally chilled her speech establishes standing.
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    In the pre-enforcement context, this court has repeatedly held that
    chilling a plaintiff’s speech is a constitutional harm adequate to satisfy the
    injury-in-fact requirement. E.g., Speech First, Inc. v. Fenves, 
    979 F.3d 319
    ,
    330–31 (5th Cir. 2020) (collecting cases). A plaintiff sufficiently pleads such
    an injury when she “(1) has an ‘intention to engage in a course of conduct
    arguably affected with a constitutional interest,’ (2) [her] intended future
    conduct is ‘arguably proscribed by the policy in question,’ and (3) ‘the threat
    of future enforcement of the challenged policies is substantial.’” Id. at 330
    (cleaned up) (quoting Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 
    573 U.S. 149
    , 161–
    64 (2014)).
    The State argues that Ostrewich fails to “show a threat of future
    enforcement” because she provides no evidence that she—or any Texas
    voter—has or will ever face a credible threat of prosecution for violating the
    electioneering laws. But the State’s argument is refuted by Speech First,
    where we explained that for pre-enforcement challenges to newly enacted or
    “non-moribund” statutes restricting speech, this court “assume[s] a
    credible threat of prosecution in the absence of compelling contrary
    evidence.” Id. at 335; see also id. at 331 (“It is not hard to sustain standing for
    a pre-enforcement challenge in the highly sensitive area of public regulations
    governing bedrock political speech.”). 5 Ostrewich has standing because her
    _____________________
    5
    The State tries to circumvent this analysis by arguing that Speech First is
    inapplicable because the electioneering laws are not new. Yet the State completely ignores
    that Speech First also applies to “non-moribund” statutes. 979 F.3d at 335. Moreover, the
    electioneering laws at issue are routinely invoked by Texas and enforced by election judges.
    See,           e.g.,           Election          Advisory           No.            2020-06,
    https://www.sos.state.tx.us/elections/laws/advisory2020-06.shtml.
    Similarly, the State asserts that it presented “compelling contrary evidence” that
    Ostrewich does not face a threat of prosecution, as no voter has been prosecuted for
    violating the law for at least a decade. But “a lack of past enforcement does not alone doom
    a claim of standing”—more evidence is needed. Speech First, 979 F.3d at 336; see also Ctr.
    for Individual Freedom v. Carmouche, 
    449 F.3d 655
    , 660 (5th Cir. 2006) (“Controlling
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    “claim is that the [non-moribund] policy causes self-censorship among those
    who are subject to it, and [her] speech is arguably regulated by the policy[.]”
    
    Id.
     at 336–37.
    IV.
    We now turn to the merits of Ostrewich’s appeal.                    The First
    Amendment prohibits laws “abridging the freedom of speech.”                       U.S.
    Const. amend. I. Texas’s electioneering laws, forbidding certain forms of
    electioneering and political apparel, plainly restrict a form of expression
    within the First Amendment’s ambit. But such laws do not always run afoul
    of the First Amendment.           Indeed, states are often faced “with [this]
    particularly difficult reconciliation: the accommodation of the right to
    engage in political discourse with the right to vote.” Mansky, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1892
     (quoting Burson, 
    504 U.S. at 198
    ).
    The Supreme Court has articulated a “reasonableness” test for
    dealing with such situations. In Mansky, a group of voters, like Ostrewich,
    challenged a Minnesota electioneering law that prohibited voters from
    wearing a “political badge, political button, or other political insignia . . . at
    or about the polling place.” Id. at 1883. Recognizing that a polling place is a
    “nonpublic forum,” as polling locations have not traditionally been “a forum
    for public communication[,]” the Court held that Minnesota could
    reasonably restrict speech—based on content—to further the state’s interest
    “in maintaining a polling place free of distraction and disruption.” Id. at
    1885, 1891 (quotation omitted). Under this flexible standard, states are
    required only to draw a reasonable line that “articulate[s] some sensible basis
    for distinguishing what [speech] may come in from what must stay out.” Id.
    _____________________
    precedent . . . establishes that a chilling of speech because of the mere existence of an
    allegedly vague or overbroad [law] can be sufficient injury to support standing.”).
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    at 1888. States may entrust election workers, like Texas’s presiding judges,
    with discretion to enforce these restrictions at the polls, so long as the law
    guides that discretion by “objective, workable standards.” Id. at 1891.
    Here, as in Mansky, the electioneering laws regulate conduct within
    polling places—which, as noted, are nonpublic forums. Tex. Elec. Code
    §§ 61.003 (limiting the restriction to “within 100 feet” of a polling place);
    61.010(a) (similar); 85.036(a) (similar). The district court, heavily relying on
    Mansky, determined that section 61.010 is a constitutional restriction on
    speech because it is limited to specific political apparel “relating to a
    candidate, measure, or political party appearing on the ballot,” but held
    sections 61.003 and 85.036 facially unconstitutional because they contain no
    such limiting principle.
    On appeal, Ostrewich contends the district court erred in holding
    section 61.010 constitutional, and she challenges the constitutionality of all
    three sections. She contends the electioneering laws were unreasonably
    applied to her and that they are incapable of reasonable application because
    they are facially overbroad or vague. The State disagrees, arguing that all
    three sections pass constitutional muster, both facially and as applied. We
    agree with the State. We first address section 61.010, which the district court
    upheld, before turning to sections 61.003 and 85.036, which the court struck
    down. Last, we address Ostrewich’s claim for nominal damages deriving
    from her alleged constitutional injuries.
    A.
    Ostrewich contends that section 61.010 violates the First
    Amendment’s Free Speech Clause, both facially and as applied to her
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    wearing the firefighter t-shirt. 6 The district court rejected these arguments
    and, correctly, held the section constitutional.
    1.
    When a litigant brings both facial and as-applied challenges, we
    generally decide the as-applied challenge first because it is the narrower
    question. Buchanan v. Alexander, 
    919 F.3d 847
    , 852 (5th Cir. 2019). So we
    begin with Ostrewich’s contention that the State’s enforcement of section
    61.010 violates the First Amendment as applied to her sporting her firefighter
    t-shirt at the polling location. We agree with the district court’s conclusion
    that section 61.010 provided a reasonable and constitutional basis for
    restricting Ostrewich from doing so.
    “Casting a vote . . . is a time for choosing, not campaigning. The State
    may reasonably decide that the interior of the polling place should reflect that
    _____________________
    6
    Ostrewich also asserts that the district court erroneously interpreted section
    61.010 to apply to Texas voters, rather than poll watchers. But her interpretation does not
    comport with the statute’s unambiguous text: It prohibits, “except as provided by
    Subsection (b), a person” from wearing a “badge, insignia, emblem, or other similar
    communicative device.” Subsection (b) exempts presiding judges, clerks, and peace
    officers, which shows that if the Texas Legislature wanted to exempt voters or otherwise
    limit section 61.010(a) only to poll workers, it knew how to do so. Moreover, other Texas
    election provisions—including section 61.003, which Ostrewich agrees applies to voters—
    use “person” without further defining the term.
    Ostrewich further argues that the district court’s interpretation renders section
    61.010 superfluous because sections 61.003 and 85.036 already prohibit persons from
    electioneering at the polling place and include apparel restrictions. But the three laws can
    be read congruently. Sections 61.003 and 85.036 broadly prohibit electioneering for any
    candidate, measure, or political parties, while section 61.010 more narrowly prohibits
    expression relating to a candidate, measure or political party appearing on the ballot.
    Finally, Ostrewich posits that section 61.010’s prohibition does not apply to
    apparel. But the Supreme Court has previously held that laws prohibiting political badges,
    buttons, or other insignia apply to apparel. Mansky, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1883
    . As the State argues,
    “apparel,” can certainly contain an “emblem” or “insignia.”
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    distinction.” Mansky, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1887
    . Thus, to prevent partisan discord,
    Texas may restrict voter apparel in a polling place during the voting period
    “as long as the regulation on speech is reasonable.” 
    Id. at 1885
    . The question
    is whether a presiding judge, by enforcing section 61.010, could reasonably
    restrict Ostrewich from wearing her firefighter t-shirt in order to maintain a
    polling place free of partisan influence.
    The district court concluded that Ostrewich’s firefighter t-shirt was
    synonymous with the campaign in favor of Prop B. Moreover, Ostrewich
    herself testified that she wore the shirt to the polls because she was excited
    to vote on the measure. From these facts, the district court concluded that
    Ostrewich’s firefighter t-shirt related to a measure appearing on the ballot,
    so that the presiding judge permissibly censored her to further Texas’s
    interest in ensuring a campaign-free polling place.
    Ostrewich argues the district court erred because section 61.010 can
    only constitutionally proscribe “express advocacy.”         And wearing her
    generic firefighter t-shirt did not constitute express advocacy because it did
    not contain any explicit message supporting Prop B. But a shirt, even one
    lacking words, can constitute advocacy for a political issue. See Tinker v. Des
    Moines Indep. Comm’y Sch. Dist., 
    393 U.S. 503
    , 504 (1969) (voters donning
    black armbands to express disapproval of Vietnam war). As explained by the
    district court, “the State’s interest in preventing partisan discord at the
    voting booth ‘may be thwarted by displays that do not raise significant
    concerns in other situations.’” Based on the undisputed evidence, the
    district court correctly concluded that Ostrewich’s firefighter t-shirt
    expressed support for Prop B and the presiding judge properly had “clear
    authority” under section 61.010 to order Ostrewich to change her shirt.
    Ostrewich’s as-applied challenge to section 61.010 fails.
    15
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    No. 21-20577
    2.
    We move to her facial challenge. See Buchanan, 
    919 F.3d at 854
    (“Generally, we proceed to an overbreadth issue only if it is determined that
    the statute would be valid as applied.” (quotation omitted)). In the First
    Amendment context, litigants can challenge a statute “because of a judicial
    prediction or assumption that the statute’s very existence may cause others
    not before the court to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or
    expression.” Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 
    413 U.S. 601
    , 612 (1973). Ostrewich
    lodges such a claim against section 61.010, asserting that the statute does not
    pass constitutional muster under Mansky and is overbroad or vague.
    Ostrewich’s theories for facial unconstitutionality collapse into each
    other—essentially, Ostrewich contends that section 61.010 flunks Mansky’s
    reasonableness standard because it does not provide “objective, workable
    standards” to guide presiding judges’ discretion, rendering it overbroad or
    vague. According to her, because section 61.010 prohibits content “related
    to” ballot measures, the statute impermissibly relies on presiding judges’
    discernment of whether speech is sufficiently “related to” ballot issues.
    Without additional guidance, presiding judges are left to guess at what may
    “come in from what must stay out,” Mansky, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1888
    , leading to
    inconsistent and haphazard enforcement. Section 61.010, in Ostrewich’s
    telling, thus fails to provide a sufficient limiting construction, permitting
    presiding judges to censor arbitrarily any type of apparel they deem to be
    related to a candidate, measure, or political party on the ballot.
    The State disagrees, asserting that the statute’s “related to” proviso
    constitutes a workable standard. Rather than requiring presiding judges to
    retain a mental index of various political issues and positions, section
    61.010’s standard is clear and simple to apply: When a “candidate, measure,
    16
    Case: 21-20577     Document: 00516803616           Page: 17   Date Filed: 06/28/2023
    No. 21-20577
    or political party” is on the ballot, its “badge, insignia, [or] emblem” is
    prohibited.
    “Clear and simple” may be a bit of an overstatement. The record
    offers many examples of Texas officials inconsistently applying section
    61.010. Nonetheless, while there may be room for interpretation, “[p]erfect
    clarity and precise guidance have never been required even of regulations that
    restrict expressive activity.” Mansky, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1891
     (quoting Ward v.
    Rock Against Racism, 
    491 U.S. 781
    , 794 (1989)).
    In Mansky, the Supreme Court was particularly concerned that
    Minnesota’s law lacked any limiting principle.         By Minnesota’s own
    admission, its statute could apply to ban content promoting any
    “recognizable political view.” Id. at 1890. In contrast, section 61.010 only
    prohibits Texans from wearing apparel related to a candidate, measure, or
    political party “appearing on the ballot,” thereby remedying the Mansky
    Court’s concerns about overbroad or vague electioneering restrictions.
    Indeed, this may explain why the Court explicitly referred to section 61.010
    as a law that “proscribes displays (including apparel) in more lucid terms”
    than the Minnesota statute at issue in Mansky. Id. at 1891.
    As the district court succinctly explained,
    [Section 61.010] targets people who have gathered at a
    government-designated spot at a government-designated time
    to perform a civic task—vote. Its restrictions extend no
    further . . . . By limiting its reach to issues appearing on the
    ballot, the Texas law provides fair notice of what is expected of
    people gathered in and around the polling place on election day
    and during early voting.
    Section 61.010 draws the requisite line between permitted and prohibited
    content to meet Mansky’s “reasonableness requirement.”
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    No. 21-20577
    Ostrewich also argues section 61.010 is unconstitutional because the
    law undermines Texas’s interest in ensuring a distraction-free polling place.
    According to her, section 61.010 counterintuitively fosters polling place
    distractions by requiring presiding judges to confront voters. But this belies
    the brash history of electioneering that led every state to adopt some sort of
    electioneering and secret ballot protections. See Mansky, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1883
    ;
    Burson, 
    504 U.S. at 202
    . And even disregarding that history, states may
    properly “respond to potential deficiencies in the electoral process with
    foresight, rather than react reactively,” as long as “the response is
    reasonable.” Munro v. Socialist Workers Party, 
    479 U.S. 189
    , 195–96 (1986).
    We agree with the district court that section 61.010 is constitutional.
    B.
    Ostrewich next challenges the facial constitutionality of sections
    61.003 and 85.036. We agree with the State that the district court erred in
    holding the statutes unconstitutional because the court ignored their limiting
    language. 7     The statutes prohibit “electioneering,” which is generally
    defined to include “political signs and literature.” Tex. Elec. Code
    §§ 61.003, 85.036. The district court concluded that the word “political” is
    unmoored from any limiting language, thus allowing presiding judges
    broadly, and impermissibly, to ban voters from wearing “political apparel.”
    As the State contends, however, the district court misconstrued the statutes.
    _____________________
    7
    The State also asserts that the district court did not need to address these
    constitutional claims once the court concluded that section 61.010 properly prohibited
    Ostrewich’s firefighter t-shirt in the polling location. But this construes Ostrewich’s claims
    too narrowly, as only related to her firefighter t-shirt. She asserts a broader claim, that all
    three statutes unconstitutionally chill her right to free expression at polling locations. She
    may assert such a pre-enforcement challenge as to sections 61.003 and 85.036 because these
    laws arguably restrain her from wearing expressive apparel unrelated to measures on the
    ballot. See Speech First, 979 F.3d at 336 (holding plaintiffs suffer an injury-in-fact when a
    censoring regulation chills speech).
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    No. 21-20577
    Indeed, both sections state “a person may not electioneer for or against any
    candidate, measure, or political party.” Tex. Elec. Code § 85.036; see
    also § 61.003 (same). The sections then define “electioneering” to include
    the “posting, use, or distribution of political signs or literature.” When read
    together, these electioneering laws prohibit people from deploying political
    signs or literature “for or against any candidate, measure, or political party”
    “within 100 feet of . . . [a] building in which a polling place is located.” Id.
    § 85.036. Thus, contrary to the district court’s conclusion, sections 85.036
    and 61.003 are in fact cabined by a limiting principle that meets Mansky’s
    standard. See 
    138 S. Ct. at 1888
    .
    The district court also erred in holding that sections 61.003 and 85.036
    lack an objective, workable standard. Unlike section 61.010, these two
    sections are not limited to candidates, measures, or political parties appearing
    “on the ballot.” Without the “on the ballot” limitation, the district court
    reasoned, sections 61.003 and 85.036 leave presiding judges with
    impermissible discretion. But in Mansky, the Supreme Court endorsed,
    albeit in dicta, similar prohibitions on “items displaying the name of a
    political party, items displaying the name of a candidate, and items
    demonstrating ‘support of or opposition to a ballot question’” as “clear
    enough.” 
    138 S. Ct. at 1889
    . By contrast, the Minnesota law at issue there
    instructed election workers to restrict any political-issue or political-group
    content. The electioneering laws at issue in today’s case are narrower—
    Texas’s presiding judges are limited to excluding content that would
    constitute electioneering “for or against” candidates, measures, and political
    parties.
    We reach this conclusion mindful that the standard for holding these
    sections facially unconstitutional is “daunting” and requires us to find that
    “a substantial number of its applications are unconstitutional, judged in
    relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.” Voting for Am., Inc. v.
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    No. 21-20577
    Steen, 
    732 F.3d 382
    , 387 (5th Cir. 2013) (quotation omitted). The Supreme
    Court has never suggested that electioneering restrictions could only
    proscribe content related to issues appearing on the ballot, and the district
    court failed to explain how these two statutes would otherwise be
    unconstitutional in “a substantial number” of their applications.          We
    certainly do not foresee that they would be. The district court therefore erred
    in holding sections 61.003 and 85.036 unconstitutional.
    C.
    Based on our conclusion that all three electioneering laws pass
    constitutional muster, such that Texas elections workers had a constitutional
    basis for prohibiting Ostrewich from wearing her firefighter t-shirt at the
    polling place, her claim for nominal damages fails as a matter of law. See
    Uzuegbunam v. Preczewski, 
    141 S. Ct. 792
    , 802 n.* (2021) (“Nominal damages
    go only to redressability and are unavailable where a plaintiff has failed to
    establish a past, completed injury.”). We therefore affirm the district court’s
    denial of nominal damages.
    V.
    In sum: We REVERSE the district court’s holding denying Texas’s
    Secretary of State and Attorney General sovereign immunity under the
    Eleventh Amendment and DISMISS those defendants for lack of
    jurisdiction. We AFFIRM that Ostrewich has standing to bring her claims
    against the remaining two defendants. We also AFFIRM the district court’s
    holding that section 61.010 is constitutional. However, we REVERSE and
    RENDER the district court’s holding that sections 61.003 and 85.036 are
    unconstitutional and instead uphold all three electioneering laws. Finally, we
    AFFIRM the district court’s denial of nominal damages.
    20