dissenting:
Regretfully, I must conclude from the majority opinion that:
1. The majority fails to understand the distinction between the corruption of public officials and political activism.
2. The majority protects, under the mantle of the First Amendment, the corruption of public officials because true First Amendment rights are not curtailed.
3. The majority ignores the Supreme Court’s mandate in New York v. Ferber, 458 U.S. 747, 765, 102 S.Ct. 3348, 3359, 73 L.Ed.2d 1113 (1982), that “there is nothing unconstitutionally ‘underinclusive’ about a statute that singles out” for proscription conduct or speech that is not protected by the First Amendment.
I therefore dissent from the majority’s use of the First Amendment as a weapon to strike down legislation fundamental to democracy, an ordinance prohibiting the payment of money to government officials for the purpose of direct financial gain.
I
Water is essential to life and civilization. Where water is scarce, access to water is a valuable financial asset. This is common knowledge in the Goleta Water District, which, like much of the rest of California, suffers from a drought. See Maria L. LaGanga, Goleta Initiates Plan to Import Canadian Water, Los Angeles Times, Mar. 16, 1991, at Al.
In 1973, in response to a severe water shortage, the voters of the Goleta Water District adopted an initiative measure that imposed a moratorium on new water service connections. Property owners seeking to develop their properties apply to the district’s Board of Directors for an exception to the moratorium, which the Board may grant or deny.
Water is a prerequisite for enterprise in the Goleta Water District. Without a supply of water, property owners cannot build and their properties cannot generate income. Hence, a property owner to whom the Board grants water service receives an enormous, direct financial benefit. In 1988, to prevent the undue influence or appearance of undue influence of Board members for the purpose of such financially motivated gain, the Board of Directors adopted Resolution 88-1. The provisions of the Resolution were enacted by the voters in the November 1988 election, as measure L, and became the ordinance at issue in this case.1 The ordinance declares:
C. The District desires to insure that [the process of granting exceptions to the moratorium] is administered in an open and unbiased manner free from undue influence, or the appearance of undue influence, of major political contributions to the election campaigns of the Board members.
D. It is not the intention of the District hereby to restrict political activity, freedom of speech or freedom of association of any person or entity desiring to make a political contribution to an election for District office. It is the intention to reasonably limit campaign contributions of those persons or entities whose contributions create the appear-*493anee of undue influence or corruption of the political process for purposes not of political expression, but for purposes of financially motivated gain from investment in real estate development by means of securing water service from District.
E. The established law is clear that there is no state or federal constitutional right to water service from the District for purposes of real estate development. This measure is intended to reasonably restrict (but not prohibit) campaign contributions made by persons in furtherance of that constitutionally unprotected interest, while leaving unrestricted campaign contributions made by persons in furtherance of their constitutionally protected rights of speech and association. It is the intention of the District to narrowly draw these restrictions to effectuate these purposes and distinctions.
In sum, the ordinance states that its purpose is to prevent corruption and the appearance of corruption. Specifically, the ordinance seeks to address campaign contributions which are made, or appear to be made, solely for the purpose of financial gain from real estate development by means of securing water service from the District. The ordinance does not seek to regulate contributions made by persons in the exercise of their constitutionally protected rights of expression and association!
In furtherance of its goal, the ordinance provides:
1. Disqualification of Directors on Applications by Major Political Contributions.
No member of the Board of Directors of this District shall participate in any hearing or vote upon an application for water service of any kind or for the assumption of responsibility for a private or mutual water system made by a major political contributor to his campaign.
The ordinance defines a “major political contributor” as a person or entity who donates more than $250.00.2 It also requires that, to trigger application of the ordinance, the contributor either own property within the District or be otherwise situated to reap direct financial gain from the grant or denial of a particular application for water service:
9.2. Required Interest in Real Estate.
... [I]n order to be considered a major political contributor, any such person or entity must own, possess an option or right to acquire one or more parcels of real property within the District which are eligible under District rules, regulations and ordinances for new, additional or expanded water service from District at the time of making the contribution and who subsequently applies for water service from the District to the same or other parcels within the District. The eligibility requirement refers to circumstances where an application may be filed and the Board of Directors exercises its discretion under its rules, regulations and ordinances to grant, deny or modify such water service application.
9.3. Other Facts Indicating Financial Interest.
... Any other such person or entity shall be considered a major political contributor where the facts and circumstances reasonably demonstrate that the campaign contribution was made for the purpose of financial gain and not primarily for purposes of first amendment political expression, speech or association.
The plaintiff in this case is a real estate developer in the District bringing a civil *494rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, contending that the ordinance violates his First Amendment, substantive due process, and equal protection rights. The district court granted summary judgment without an evidentiary hearing, and held that the ordinance, on its face, violated the plaintiffs First Amendment rights.
Today the majority affirms the grant of summary judgment on the ground that the ordinance discriminates between applicants for water service and their opponents. The majority concludes that the ordinance is unconstitutional because it does not burden the First Amendment rights of all contributors. The majority reaches this incomprehensible result by misstating the facts of the case and misapplying First Amendment law.
II
The majority asserts that the ordinance burdens the First Amendment rights of contributors, relying on Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 96 S.Ct. 612, 46 L.Ed.2d 659 (1975). The majority is wrong. Buckley holds that campaign contribution and expenditure limitations infringe, in varying degrees, upon freedoms of political expression and association protected by the First Amendment. Id. at 23, 96 S.Ct. at 636. But Buckley does not govern the case before us today.
Buckley involved a flat, across-the-board cap on campaign contributions, which the Court sustained because the limitation was closely drawn to serve a sufficiently important governmental interest. Id. at 25, 96 S.Ct. at 637. The measure at issue in today’s case disqualifies a Board member from voting on an application for water service when a person or entity with a direct financial interest in that vote has made a major contribution to the Board member’s campaign. It does not in any way prohibit or limit contributions.
The majority acknowledges in a footnote that “[technically, the ordinance does not limit the amount anyone may contribute to a candidate for the Board.” Majority Opinion at 489 n. 1. The majority then dismisses the issue by pointing out that the ordinance provides a “powerful disincentive” for affected persons to pay money to Board members who will vote on their applications (or applications in which they have a direct financial interest). But the majority fails to examine the nature of this “disincentive.” Without more, a disincentive to contribute does not magically transform a disqualification provision into a contribution limitation. The Goleta Water District ordinance provides no disincentive for persons to contribute to Board members in furtherance of their constitutionally protected rights of political expression and association; it only operates to prevent bribery or the appearance of bribery. A person can contribute as much as he wishes to a candidate whose views he supports. He simply cannot contribute a large sum that is, or appears to be, a quid pro quo for the candidate’s vote on an application which he supports or opposes because of a direct financial interest.
Ill
The majority accurately notes that the disqualification measure’s purpose is to prevent corruption and the appearance of corruption, and that the Supreme Court has held that this is a legitimate and compelling governmental interest. Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce, 494 U.S. 652, 110 S.Ct. 1391, 1397, 108 L.Ed.2d 652 (1990); Buckley, 424 U.S. at 26-27, 96 S.Ct. at 638-39. However, the majority neglects to note more precisely that the ordinance addresses corruption in a particular context: where a person “contributes” a large sum to a public official in exchange for an act, in this case a vote for or against an application, that will confer upon him a direct financial benefit. The ordinance does not seek to regulate every situation in which a person contributes money in the vague hope of influencing a Board member. To attempt to do so would be to toe the delicate line between protected and unprotected conduct, and risk burdening the former. Many contributions are made with the intent to encourage a public official to act in ways that will ultimately benefit the contributor, and not all of these contribu*495tions constitute bribery. The Supreme Court has attempted to distinguish between bribery and contributions made for general goodwill or a vague expectation of benefit by holding that bribery requires proof of a quid pro quo. McCormick v. United States, — U.S. -, 111 S.Ct. 1807, 1816-17, 114 L.Ed.2d 307 (1991); see also United States v. Arthur, 544 F.2d 730, 734-35 (4th Cir.1976) (“Not every gift, favor or contribution to a government or political official constitutes bribery. It is universally recognized that bribery occurs only if the gift is coupled with a particular criminal intent_ That intent is not supplied merely by the fact that the gift was motivated by some generalized hope or expectation of ultimate benefit on the part of the donor.... ‘Bribery’ imports the notion of some more or less specific quid pro quo for which the gift or contribution is offered or accepted.” Id. at 734 (citations omitted).); United States v. Vap, 852 F.2d 1249, 1255 (10th Cir.1988). The ordinance defines its scope even more narrowly, by seeking to regulate only situations in which a person contributes or appears to contribute money not only as a quid pro quo, but also for a direct financial benefit.
Although the majority notes that the prevention of corruption is a valid legislative purpose, it then concludes that the ordinance does not serve that purpose. Its reasoning turns on the assumption that the ordinance discriminates between applicants and opponents of a water service application. This assumption is simply wrong.
First, the majority is mistaken in claiming that the ordinance applies only to applicants for water service. The ordinance does not discriminate between applicants and opponents or other non-applicants. The Goleta Water District explained before the district court and this court that the ordinance applies not only to an applicant for a permit, but also to opponents of the application (such as competitors of the applicant) who, by their opposition, seek direct financial gain. The District interprets Section 9.3 of the ordinance to disqualify a Board member from voting on an application for water service whenever the grant or denial of the application would result in a direct financial benefit to a major contributor. The section reads:
9.3 Other Facts Indicating Financial Interest.
... Any other such person or entity shall be considered a major political contributor where the facts and circumstances reasonably demonstrate that the campaign contribution was made for the purpose of financial gain and not primarily for purposes of first amendment political expression, speech or association.
It is conceded that Section 9.3 is somewhat ambiguous. Hence, fundamental principles of statutory construction require that this court accord “substantial deference” to the Board’s interpretation. See Public Utility District No. 1. v. Bonneville Power Admin., 947 F.2d 386, 390-91 (9th Cir.1991). If the Board fails to apply the section accordingly in a case involving an actual permit application, then a cause of action will lie to challenge the ordinance as applied. But in the instant case, the plaintiff challenges the ordinance merely on its face.
Second, the majority lumps together contributors who have a direct financial stake in an application with contributors who may have an indirect or speculative financial interest as well as those who have non-financial interests. The majority argues that the ordinance does not address large, influential contributions from the latter two groups of contributors. While the majority’s expansive concern with corruption is laudable, it misses the point. The ordinance's purpose is narrow. It excludes from its scope the protected First Amendment rights of political expression and association, and seeks only to prevent quid pro quo arrangements and the appearance of such arrangements by persons who stand to reap direct, concrete, and immediate financial gain from a vote on an application.
IY
Finally, in affirming the district court’s grant of summary judgment, the majority essentially complains that the ordinance fails to infringe on the First Amendment *496rights of all contributors. The majority suggests that the ordinance might be constitutional if it mandated a limitation on all contributions. It is ironic that the majority uses the First Amendment to invalidate an ordinance narrowly tailored to avoid touching First Amendment rights, and then turns around and recommends that the ordinance impose a sweeping burden on those same rights.
The Goleta Water District ordinance is narrow in its scope. It only disqualifies a Board member from voting on a particular application in which a major contributor has a direct financial stake. It does not prevent the Board member from voting on any other application or issue that represents the contributor’s political interests. Thus, the contributor can contribute as much as he wishes for purposes of political expression and association — for any purpose other than to pay a Board member in exchange for a direct financial favor, or to create the appearance of such conduct.
The Constitution does not protect the right to bribe. Austin, 110 S.Ct. at 1397; Buckley, 424 U.S. at 26-27, 96 S.Ct. at 638-639. By addressing only bribery situations and leaving untouched the ability to contribute for any other purpose, the ordinance prevents bribery (not protected) and allows contribution for political expression and association (protected).
Today the majority strikes down the ordinance on the ground that the ordinance fails to burden the First Amendment rights of all contributors, including those who do not have a direct financial interest in the grant or denial of water service, such as “persons with environmental rather than economic interests in mind.” But to limit the contributions of such persons would be to infringe deeply upon their constitutionally protected freedoms of political expression and association.
V
In sum, the majority is wrong for three reasons. First, the ordinance burdens no one’s First Amendment rights. It merely disqualifies a Board member when a contribution is made, or appears to be made, for the constitutionally unprotected purpose of corruption. Second, the majority incorrectly identifies the scope of the ordinance. The ordinance distinguishes between those who contribute or appear to contribute in exchange for direct financial gain and those who contribute for political expression and association, and regulates only the former. Finally, the majority's recommendation, which would burden the First Amendment rights of all contributors, cannot withstand constitutional analysis.
It is ironic that the majority strikes down constitutionally permitted legislation because the legislature fails to restrict persons in the exercise of their constitutional rights. The majority ignores the distinction between contributions made for political expression and association and quid pro quo payments made, in actuality or appearance, solely for the purpose of direct financial gain.
I dissent.
. The ordinance was enacted pursuant to authorization provided by California Elections Code § 23,544, by which “a governing body of a district may by resolution limit campaign contributions in elections to district offices.”
. The ordinance reads:
8. Definition: Major Political Contribution: $250.00.
A major political contribution is a donation or donations of cash or anything of value (excluding volunteer work) totalling in excess of J250.00 made to a director or candidate for director or to any person or committee which at that time was acting in and of the election of a candidate for director who is elected, or in case of a recall election, retained in office, with respect to any single election at any time during a period of nine months prior to the commencement of the term of office for which the election is held; and any such contribution during the term of office of any such director. Any such contribution which is returned within one week after receipt shall be disregarded.