Appellants Albert Flenner and William Glover, former Cook County correctional officers, allege that Michael F. Sheahan, the Sheriff of Cook County, initiated discharge proceedings against them due to their affiliation with the Cook County Republican Party. Claiming that Sheahan violated their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights to be free from patronage employment practices, Flen-ner and Glover brought suit under Title 42, section 1983. Sheriff Sheahan raised the affirmative defense of qualified immunity, and moved the district court for judgment on the pleadings. The district court granted his motion, holding that Sheriff Sheahan was entitled to qualified immunity because the law concerning patronage dismissal of corree 1 tional officers was not clearly established in 1993, the time of the alleged constitutional violation. Because we conclude that the district court erred in determining that appellants could prove no set of facts sufficient to support their claim for relief, we reverse the district court’s judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
I.
Albert Flenner and William Glover were hired as Cook County correctional officers *1123 by the Republican administration of Sheriff James O’Grady on August 10, 1989 and January 2, 1990, respectively. Appellants were active members of the Cook County Republican Party, and both had campaigned on behalf of former Sheriff O’Grady. In the December 1990 general election, Sheriff Sheahan defeated O’Grady. Appellants allege that Sheriff Sheahan instructed the Inspector General for the Cook County Sheriff to compile a list of names of employees of the Sheriffs Department who had been hired by the O’Grady administration and to screen those employees to determine whether they had answered truthfully all of the questions on their employment applications. Making a misrepresentation on an application for employment constitutes a ground for dismissal.
Sheahan initiated complaints against appellants in January 1993. Hearings were held before the Cook County Merit Board, which resulted in appellants’ dismissal in February 1993. According to appellants’ complaint, Glover did in fact have a high school diploma, although the finding of the Merit Board was to the contrary. While Flenner did not have a high school diploma at the time he applied for his position, he alleges that he subsequently obtained one while still employed as a correctional officer.
Appellants claim that these charges were a pretext for terminating them because of their political affiliation. They allege that three correctional officers, none of whom had graduated from high school, were hired by the Sheahan administration. These officers were sponsored by either the Cook County Democratic Party or Sheriff Sheahan himself for positions identical to the positions held by appellants. Although all three misrepresented on their applications that they had a high school diploma or the equivalent of a diploma, these officers were permitted to obtain G.E.D.’s and to remain employed as Cook County correctional officers.
II.
We review
de novo
an order granting a motion for judgment on the pleadings under Rule 12(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
See GATX Leasing Corp. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
Appellants have alleged that Sheriff Sheahan initiated discharge proceedings against them because of their political affiliation and, for purposes of reviewing appellee’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, we accept these allegations as true. Sheriff Sheahan does not contest, for purposes of this motion, that filing complaints against appellants because of their political affiliation would constitute a violation of their constitutional rights. Our inquiry therefore is limited to Sheriff Sheahan’s claim that, even if all of appellants’ allegations are true, he is entitled to qualified immunity.
“The defense of qualified immunity shields government officials performing discretionary functions ‘from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’”
See Smith v. Fruin,
Sheriff Sheahan argues that he is entitled to immunity because it was not sufficiently established in January 1993 that the dismissal of Cook County correctional officers based on their political affiliation was a violation of the officers’ First Amendment rights to freedom of association. Sheriff Sheahan points to the decisions of this court in
Dimmig v. Wahl,
While recognizing that the position of correctional officer is not the same as the position of deputy sheriff, appellee argues that a reasonable person would conclude that the two positions should be treated similarly for purposes of patronage dismissal. This is so, according to Sheriff Sheahan, because, under Illinois law, the method by which correctional officers and deputy sheriffs are removed from their positions is the same — for cause, upon written charges filed with the Cook County Sheriffs Merit Board. 1
III.
The issue before this court is therefore whether it was sufficiently clear in January 1993 that initiating disciplinary proceedings against Cook County correctional officers due to their political affiliation violated the officers’ First Amendment rights. The constitutional right to be free from patronage employment practices was first recognized by the Supreme Court in
Elrod v. Burns,
In
Branti v. Finkel,
These cases made clear that an employee who performs primarily ministerial functions and who has little autonomy or discretion in performing his duties is not subject to patronage dismissal. Appellants allege in their complaint that Cook County correctional officers have no policymaking or decisionmaking authority except for that which is necessary to carry out the daily instructions given to them by their immediate supervisors as to the handling, supervision and care of the prisoners to whom they are assigned. These allegations place them squarely within the category of employees not subject to patronage employment practices. Nevertheless, Sheriff Sheahan counters that in 1993 an ambiguity existed in the law which could lead a reasonable officer to conclude that Cook County correctional officers were subject to patronage dismissal as a matter of law, regardless of their job responsibilities.
Sheriff Sheahan argues that this court’s decisions in Dimmig and Upton muddied the legal waters by suggesting that deputy sheriffs were subject to patronage dismissal as a matter of law — in other words, that the job title of a discharged employee is dispositive in determining whether the employee is subject to patronage dismissal. According to Sheahan, it was only a small and logical step to conclude that correctional officers were likewise subject to patronage dismissal as a matter of law. Both the decisions of the Supreme Court and this court belie the reasonableness of such a conclusion.
As early as 1975, this court rejected the notion that labels or job titles are relevant to the inquiry into whether patronage dismissal is permissible.
See Burns v. Elrod,
This court’s decision in
Meeks v. Grimes,
To the extent the district court opinion stands for the proposition that bailiffs are confidential employees as a matter of law it is inapposite with Elrod and Branti ... [Wjhile we focus on the inherent powers of *1120 the office rather than the individual who occupies it, it is impossible to generalize about the nature of an individual type of position, such as bailiff or secretary; job responsibilities can vary greatly between different governmental units or even within a governmental unit. For this reason the test under Branti must be applied to each individual office, and status under that formulation is left to the trier of fact . to be determined.
Meeks,
Even if appellee’s assertion that deputy sheriffs were subject to patronage dismissal as a matter of law in 1993 were correct, it would do little to advance their argument with respect to correctional officers, as the appellee has not attempted to argue that correctional officers and deputy sheriffs possess similar duties and responsibilities. Sheriff Sheahan urges only that deputy sheriffs and correctional officers should be treated in the same manner for purposes of patronage dismissal because neither can be removed from office “except for cause” under Illinois law. Sheriff Sheahan has made no suggestion to this court as to why this fact is relevant and/or determinative under
Branti,
nor has he directed the court’s attention to a decision of any court holding that the statutory method of removal is instructive in the analysis of patronage dismissal.
Cf. Lohorn,
IV.
Our rejection of Sheriff Sheahan’s arguments does not resolve this case, as the district court appears to have employed a different analysis in granting the Sheriffs motion for judgment on the pleadings. Relying on dicta in
Kolman v. Sheahan,
in which we stated “that
Branti
has produced a ■ ‘shambles’ of ‘inconsistent and unpredictable results,”’ the district court held that, as a general matter, “patronage dismissal law was not clearly established in 1993.” See
Kolman,
We do not take exception with the district court’s observation that considerable uncertainty exists in the area of patronage law. This is an observation that, as the district court noted, we have made often ourselves.
See, e.g., Kolman,
The great uncertainty in this area results from the application of
Branti’s
deceptively simple standard to a wide range of government positions, which in turn involve an endless variety of job responsibilities and varying degrees of discretion and autonomy. “[Bjetween the strictly menial government worker (who, under
Elrod
and
Branti,
is clearly and completely protected form patronage firing) and the pofieymaker/eonfiden-tial assistant (whose protection from patronage firing is non-existent), there is a range of government positions for which the propriety of patronage firing has depended largely on the courts’ juggling of competing constitutional and political values.”
Id.
at 1213. As we have recognized previously, because uncertainty exists within this range, “[a] plaintiff has little chance of winning a case of first impression unless she occupies an extremely high or low rung on the bureaucratic ladder.”
Pounds,
The district court’s error lies in its conclusion that the uncertainty in applying the
Branti
standard precludes liability for the dismissal of those employees who do in fact occupy an extremely “low rung on the bureaucratic ladder.”
See id.
Because this ease is before us on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, we view the facts in the fight most favorable to the non-moving party. According to appellants, they received daily instructions from their immediate supervisors as to the handling, care and supervision of the prisoners to whom they were assigned. Accepting these allegations as true, it would appear that appellants are among those government workers “who are clearly and completely protected from patronage firing.”
See Pounds,
Of course, on remand, the district court may be presented with evidence that the position of correctional officer involves more autonomy or discretion than is alleged in appellants’ complaint. Once the factual record is developed, the district court may be required to revisit the qualified immunity issue. In making the determination whether the law was sufficiently clear in 1993 that correctional officers were not subject to patronage dismissal, the. district court should look to analogous ease law.
See Pounds,
Appellants argue that the unlawfulness of Sheriff Sheahan’s actions was apparent because they performed ministerial functions analogous to those performed by the plaintiffs in Matlock, Meeks and Soderbeck. Appellants may be correct. However, it is also *1118 possible that the position of Cook County correctional officer involves more discretion or autonomy than the government positions involved in the cases cited and that the position of correctional officer is among those positions for which the propriety of patronage dismissal has not been clearly established. This is a determination which can be made by the district court only after it has developed the appropriate factual record.
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Sheriff Sheahan refers to 55 ILCS 5/3-7012 (West 1993), which states in pertinent part: "[N]o deputy sheriff in the Counly Police Department, no full-time deputy sheriff not employed as a counly police officer or county correctional officer and no employee in the County Department of Corrections shall be removed, demoted or suspended except for cause, upon written charges with the Board by the Sheriff....”
. A careful reading of
Meeks
reveals that the fact that two employees are subject to identical termination procedures is irrelevant. In
Meeks,
this court directed the district court to consider separately the various bailiff positions in the Gaiy City Court. As we noted in that opinion, all of the bailiffs in that case were at wiE employees under the Indiana Code.
