Opinion 96-5
Serving on committee to elect Register of Probate.
May 22, 1996
Opinion 96-5
Dear:
The
Committee has received your request for advice dated April 11, 1996.
In it, you ask whether you may play a "behind the scenes" role in
supporting a friend's candidacy for Register of Probate in your court.
Specifically, you have been asked to serve on a committee to elect
her. You also inquire whether you may plan strategies with others
about campaign issues, tell personal acquaintances of your support
and encourage them to vote, or make anonymous telephone calls on
her behalf. You also ask if your domestic partner may hold a fundraising
gathering in your home and if you may attend such a gathering.
The general prohibition
on political activity contained in Canon 6 would prohibit your service on a committee
to elect, your planning of election strategies on a candidate's behalf, as well
as your endorsement of the candidate to others, which would in the Committee's
view be considered political "activity." As we noted in opinion No. 92-3, any
telephone calls on behalf of a candidate in which you identify yourself by name
or position would also be the type of political activity prohibited by Canon
6.
The Committee has
previously interpreted the Canon to prohibit attendance at fundraising events
because of the perception that such an appearance constitutes an endorsement,
prohibited by Canon 6(2). See opinions No. 90-1, 94-4. Such an endorsement is
in the Committee's view "public" even if it occurs within a private residence
and, in our opinion, the Code would prohibit attendance at such a gathering held
by your domestic partner regardless of where it is held. As noted in opinion
No. 94-4, attendance at "dances, testimonial dinners or other social events where
some fundraising may occur must be weighed by each clerk magistrate on the merits
of the occasion and the potential message that attendance will broadcast." Your
domestic partner is free, however, to work on behalf of a chosen candidate.