Filed under Election Law, First & Fourteenth Amendment · House District 1, Alaska Primary, August 18, 2026
Summary for the Skimming Reader
The Alaska Division of Elections printed a U.S. Senate primary ballot listing the incumbent as
“Sullivan, Dan S. (Registered Republican) Incumbent” while listing his primary challenger —
a same-named, same-party-registered candidate — as “Sullivan, Daniel J. Jr.” with no
party affiliation at all. The Division's own counsel could not identify a legal basis for the
omission. This post works through why that asymmetry, rather than the underlying name confusion,
is the constitutionally interesting part of the story.
I.The Problem Isn't the Names
Two candidates sharing a surname and a party registration is, on its own, an unremarkable
administrative headache. States distinguish same-named candidates on ballots all the time —
middle initials, suffixes, city of residence. Alaska's own regulations contemplate exactly this
fix. Nobody seriously disputes that the state may act to prevent voter confusion between
“Sullivan, Dan S.” and “Sullivan, Daniel J. Jr.”
The trouble begins one clause later. Having chosen to add descriptive information beyond the bare
name, the Division did not apply that choice evenly. One candidate received an affirmative,
unprecedented enhancement — the label “Incumbent,” a designation the Division's
own review of five prior general-election ballots could not locate a precedent for. The other
candidate had a certified, undisputed fact about his own registration removed entirely.
| Ballot Line | What the State Knows | What the Ballot Says |
| Sullivan, Dan S. | Registered Republican, incumbent U.S. Senator | “(Registered Republican) Incumbent” |
| Sullivan, Daniel J. Jr. | Registered Republican (per declaration of candidacy) | — no affiliation listed — |
That is not disambiguation. That is the state supplying true, favorable information about one
candidate while withholding true, unfavorable-to-omit information about the other. The
distinguishing problem could have been solved by treating both candidates identically — both
with middle initials, both with party labels, both with nothing extra. The state instead chose
the one combination that benefits a single candidate.
§ § §
II.Equal Protection: The Bush v. Gore Problem
The narrow holding of Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98 (2000), is often
over-read, but its actual, defensible core is this: a state may not apply arbitrary,
standardless, or unevenly administered procedures to similarly situated participants within the
same election. The touchstone is not whether the state has a legitimate interest — preventing
voter confusion plainly is one — but whether it applied a consistent, articulable rule
in pursuing it.
Two candidates for the same federal office, both certified by the state as Republican, are about
as squarely “similarly situated” as election law fact patterns get. The Division's
inconsistency is not merely alleged; it is a matter of record. Counsel for the Division shifted
the proposed ballot treatment at least three times — from middle initials, to
“nonpartisan,” to a blank field — without a public rule governing the choice, and
conceded at oral argument that no subsection of Alaska election law authorizes overriding a
candidate's stated affiliation.
When a state's own counsel cannot articulate the standard being applied, a reviewing court is not
left to presume good faith administration. It is left with the precise evidentiary gap that
equal-protection review of election procedures exists to catch.
An Equal Protection claim here would not ask a federal court to referee whether Daniel J. Sullivan
is a “legitimate” candidate in some political sense — that question was already
litigated and resolved against the state in the Alaska Supreme Court's ballot-access ruling. It
would ask only whether, having lost that fight, the state may achieve the same functional result
through asymmetric ballot design instead.
§ § §
III.The First Amendment: Two Doctrines, One Ballot
A. The Candidate's Associational Interest
Tashjian v. Republican Party of Connecticut, 479 U.S. 208 (1986),
and its descendants — Eu v. San Francisco County Democratic Central
Committee and California Democratic Party v. Jones —
establish that a candidate's choice of political identification is not administrative trivia; it
is protected associational activity. A state may regulate ballot content, but the regulation must
be weighed against the burden it places on that associational interest, and a total suppression of
a certified affiliation is a considerably blunter instrument than a middle initial.
B. The Voter's Right to Receive Information
The more novel — and arguably more compelling — theory runs through the audience rather
than the speaker. Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens
Consumer Council, 425 U.S. 748 (1976), recognizes a First Amendment interest in the
receipt of information, not merely its transmission. Ballot party labels are, functionally,
the single most compact unit of political speech a voter encounters in the booth. Here, the state
does not merely decline to provide new information; it withholds a fact already in its own
certified records, while displaying that same category of fact for the opposing candidate. That
asymmetry moves the claim from ordinary ballot-mechanics deference toward something resembling
content-based, candidate-specific suppression — the kind of case-by-case discretionary
line-drawing that courts have historically treated far more skeptically than a uniform, neutral
rule applied to every candidate alike.
§ § §
IV.Standing: Who Walks Through the Courthouse Door
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The Challenger. Daniel J. Sullivan has the cleanest Article III standing available
in this fact pattern — a concrete, particularized, already-realized injury (the label was
already omitted when ballots went to press), directly traceable to the Division, and redressable
by a straightforward corrective order.
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Registered Republican Voters. Plausible but weaker. Courts are wary of claims
resembling a generalized grievance shared identically by the entire electorate, per
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife. A voter-plaintiff would need to
show a personal, concrete stake — not simply “the ballot should have said more.”
Best deployed as a supporting plaintiff, not a solo vehicle.
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Party Organizations. Complicated, since the state party affirmatively lobbied
for the challenged treatment. Associational standing on behalf of individual members
remains theoretically available to a different advocacy organization, but this is a secondary
path at best.
§ § §
V.The Comparator Problem: Hafner
If the Division's position is that withholding a certified party label serves the state's interest
in preventing voter confusion or protecting the integrity of the ballot, that position needs to
survive contact with the Division's own conduct elsewhere on the same ballot. It does not.
Eric Hafner — a registered Democrat with no residential ties to Alaska, currently serving a
twenty-year federal sentence for threatening public officials, and already the subject of one
unsuccessful eligibility challenge by his own state party in 2024 — appears on the 2026 primary
ballot as “Hafner, Eric (Registered Democrat),” label fully intact. No asterisk, no
qualifying language, no discretionary omission. The Division that could not locate legal authority
to withhold a certified affiliation from Daniel J. Sullivan apparently located no obstacle at all
to displaying one for a candidate whose capacity to ever take the oath of office is, at minimum,
genuinely open to doubt.
This is not an argument that Hafner should be stripped of his label too — the Alaska courts
have already addressed his ballot eligibility on separate constitutional grounds (the Article I,
§ 2 residency requirement, which courts have been reluctant to adjudicate pre-election on the
theory that Congress itself judges the qualifications of its own members post-election under
Article I, § 5). The point is narrower and, for present purposes, more useful: it is direct
evidence that the Division does not, in fact, treat ballot labeling as a fixed, neutral,
consistently-applied administrative function. It treats it as a lever, pulled differently depending
on the candidate.
A state cannot credibly claim that omitting a party label from one candidate is necessary to protect
voters, while simultaneously supplying that same label, without hesitation, to a candidate whose
basic eligibility to serve has already been formally contested in litigation. Either the label is
administrative housekeeping the state owes every candidate equally, or it isn't. The Division cannot
have it both ways depending on whose name is on the line.
For litigation purposes, Hafner functions as a comparator, not a co-plaintiff or a parallel claim.
His treatment does not need to be wrong for it to be useful; it only needs to be inconsistent
with the treatment Sullivan received, under a standard the Division itself has never reduced to a
rule. That inconsistency is precisely the fact pattern Bush v. Gore
equal-protection review was built to address — not a single bad decision, but the absence of
any decision-rule capable of explaining why two candidates, similarly positioned as ballot-listed
major-party registrants, received opposite treatment on the single data point at issue.
§ § §
VI.A Note on Counsel
There is an irony worth flagging for the record, if not for the complaint itself. The Division
retained outside counsel from a firm whose practice concentrates on conservative constitutional
causes — a tradition that has, in other contexts, been among the more vigorous defenders of
candidate associational autonomy and skepticism of unenumerated administrative discretion. Here,
that same tradition of counsel argued for suppressing a Republican candidate's certified party
identity on a theory of administrative discretion with, by counsel's own admission at oral
argument, no textual home in Alaska law. Ironic advocacy is not itself a legal defect. But it is
the sort of detail that tends to find its way into a well-drafted brief's opening paragraph.
Working Thesis
The disambiguation of two same-named candidates is constitutionally unremarkable. The addition of
an unprecedented, favorable designation for one candidate, paired with the removal of a certified,
unfavorable-to-omit fact for the other, is not disambiguation — it is disparate treatment
without an articulated standard, and it burdens both the challenger's associational rights and the
electorate's interest in accurate ballot information. The claim is strongest as an as-applied
Equal Protection and First Amendment challenge brought by the affected candidate, not as a Voting
Rights Act claim, which requires a racial classification this fact pattern does not present.