Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Passed over for promotion, appellant, an African American woman in her fifties, claims that her employing agency discriminated against her on the basis of race and age when it selected a younger, white woman for the position she sought. After *514 full discovery, the district court, finding appellant had failed to plead facts sufficient to refute the employing agency’s proffered non-discriminatory reason for its decision, granted the agency’s motion for summary judgment. Agreeing with the district court, we affirm.
I.
Appellant, Margaret Barnette, an African American woman born in 1951, works for Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Located within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), CBP includes those elements of the U.S. Customs Service, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, and the Department of Agriculture that dealt with border-control issues before DHS’s creation in 2003. During the period in which the events at issue here took place — all prior to 2003 — Barnette worked for the U.S. Customs Service.
In 2001, Barnette applied for the Assistant Director for Operations (ADO) position for the South Atlantic Customs Management Center (CMC). Located in Atlanta, the South Atlantic CMC is one of twenty regional centers through which Customs oversees regional ports and manages its staff and workload. The ADO “position is a management position, which involves operational functions of the Customs Service (as opposed to administrative functions, such as personnel matters), including passenger processing, inspection of cargo, inspection of conveyances, and other programs.”
Barnette v. Ridge,
Civ. No. 02-1897,
Robert Gomez, a GS-15 and Barnette’s immediate supervisor, served as ADO until Customs promoted him to Director of Field Operations in 2001, thus creating the vacancy at issue in this ease. But Gomez served as ADO at the GS-15 grade, once he left the post Customs advertised it at the GS-14 level.
Although Barnette had spent twenty-two years in administrative personnel positions — including her first seven years at Customs — at the time she applied for the ADO she was a GS-14 serving as an Operations Specialist at the South Atlantic CMC, her second operations position since her 1995 transfer from personnel. As an Operations Specialist, her responsibilities included “executing, managing, coordinating and overseeing [some of the same] Customs/South Atlantic CMC core processes” managed by the ADO. Barnette ADO Application 3 (Apr. 16, 2001). Unlike her last personnel position, a GM-14 supervisory post, Barnette’s permanent operations positions were all non-supervisory. She nonetheless acquired supervisory experience in operations when, following Gomez’s promotion, she served a four-month detail as Acting ADO. While serving in operations positions, Barnette received several performance awards.
After reviewing all ADO applications, George Heavey, Executive Director of Field Operations in Washington and Gomez’s supervisor, recommended to the selecting official, Bonni Tischler, Assistant Commissioner for Field Operations, that she choose Michelle James, not Barnette, to fill the ADO position. Tischler did so based solely on Heavey’s recommendation. Heavey, a white man, explained that after consulting Gomez, a white Hispanic man, he recommended James, a white woman fifteen years younger than Barnette, based on her reputation as a “key player,” “a dynamic leader,” and a “good communicator,” as well as on Gomez’s opinion that James’s front line operations experience would be valuable in the ADO post. Heavey Dep. 28, 34, 55. Unlike Barnette, James had spent her entire eight-year career at Customs in operations positions *515 such as Customs Inspector, Program Officer, Supervisory Customs Inspector, and Chief Inspector at the South Atlantic CMC.
Following James’s selection, Barnette filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia alleging that Customs denied her the promotion because of her race and age in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(a), and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 633a(a). Later, after Customs denied her a temporary promotion to Customs Port Director for the Port of Atlanta, Barnette amended her complaint to include a charge of retaliation in violation of Title VII. Following full discovery, the district court found that Barnette had failed to present evidence sufficient to negate Customs’ proffered non-discriminatory reason for selecting James — that it preferred James’s greater operations experience over Barnette’s greater personnel and supervisory experience.
Barnette,
On appeal, Barnette challenges only the award of summary judgment regarding the ADO promotion. Barnette argues that she provided sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that Customs’ proffered non-discriminatory reason for James’s selection was pretext for discrimination. Reviewing the district court’s summary judgment award de novo, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to Barnette, the non-moving party.
Borgo v. Goldin,
II.
Title VII requires that “[a]ll personnel actions affecting employees or applicants for employment ... in executive agencies ... be made free from any discrimination based on race.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(a). The ADEA requires that “[a]ll personnel actions affecting employees or applicants for employment who are at least 40 years of age ... in executive agencies ... be made free from any discrimination based on age.” 29 U.S.C. § 633a(a). Given that Barnette offers no direct evidence of discrimination, to survive summary judgment and earn the right to present her case to a jury, she must resort to the burden-shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Because the district court found that Barnette successfully made out a prima facie case,
Barnette,
In the district court, Customs advanced two explanations for James’s selection. First, pointing out that the ADO position had been downgraded to GS-14 after Gomez’s promotion, Customs claimed it was agency policy to consider internal applicants seeking promotion to a higher graded position (like James, then a GS-13) over applicants seeking a lateral transfer (like Barnette, then a GS-14). Second, Customs asserted that although both candidates were qualified, it preferred James’s greater operations experience over Barnette’s greater administrative and supervisory experience. Given Customs’ minimal burden of production, and given that each of these two explanations is “both reasonable and non-discriminatory,” they may serve as legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for James’s selection and are “enough to take us to the third step under
McDonnell Douglas.” Fischbach v. D.C. Dep’t of Corr.,
As to Customs’ first explanation — its preference for promotees over lateral transfers — Barnette argues that nothing in the record demonstrates Customs actually had such a policy. The district court thought the policy’s existence was “undisputed,”
Barnette,
The district court’s error, however, has no effect on the propriety of its judgment because, as both parties agree, Heavey based his recommendation solely on Customs’ second explanation — James’s reputation and qualifications. Attacking this second explanation, Barnette points to three types of evidence she asserts “prove by a preponderance of the evidence” that Customs’ alleged preference for James’s qualifications was “pretext for discrimination.”
Reeves,
First, although acknowledging that “an employer has the discretion to choose among equally qualified candidates,” Appellant’s Br. 22-23 (quoting
Burdine,
Finding that operations and administrative skills “are critical to the proper conduct of agency business,”
Barnette,
Our decision in
Stewart v. Ashcroft,
Relying on
Cones v. Shalala,
Barnette argues that a court should infer pretext where an employee who served in a position in an acting capacity is passed over for a permanent promotion to that same position in favor of an applicant without previous experience in the position. This misreads
Cones.
There, the employing agency attempted to differentiate white employees it promoted from the African American plaintiff it refused to promote by pointing to the white employees’ prior service in their positions in an acting capacity.
Cones,
The second category of evidence Barnette claims demonstrates pretext relates to the downgrading of the ADO position from GS-15, when Gomez held the job, to GS-14. According to Barnette, the record contains “ample evidence” that Customs downgraded the ADO position as part of a “transparent ruse” to “allow[ ] Ms. James to secure the position.” Appellant’s Br. 2, 22. Barnette argues that because “[a]s a GS-13, Ms. James would not have been eligible to apply for the ADO position if it had remained a GS-15 when the vacancy was posted. So the Customs Service downgraded the position to allow Ms. James to apply.”
Id.
at 22 (citation omitted). Such manipulation of “the selection procedures,” she insists, “constitutes evidence of pretext.”
Id.
at 21 (citing
Krodel v. Young,
Barnette’s “ample evidence” consists of the grade reduction itself, James’s GS-13 grade, Customs’ concurrent plans to upgrade several Director of Operations positions to the Senior Executive Service (SES), and Gomez’s statement to Barnette that “the ADO position would likely be upgraded back to GS-15.” Appellant’s Br. 7, 19, 22. None of this evidence, however, demonstrates that Customs actually manipulated the ADO position grading pro
*519
cess. Moreover, Customs’ explanation for its actions and its supporting evidence dispel any suspicion of manipulation. Properly classified as a GS-14, the ADO was upgraded to accommodate Gomez who came to the South Atlantic CMC as a GS-15. To support the upgrade, Customs added responsibilities to the ADO position, responsibilities it later removed when Gomez was promoted. Barnette challenges neither of these propositions, nor does she dispute several other facts that support Customs’ contention that the ADO position was properly graded at the GS-14 level: (1) it was processed through the Customs’ Human Resources Department, a process over which neither Gomez nor Heavey— the alleged discriminators — had any control; (2) the
General Schedule Supervisory Guide
states that the grade of an assistant position should be one grade lower than the position to which it reports and, as Customs points out, “[a]t the time of the selection ... the director position at the Port of Atlanta was still a GS-15 position,” so “the ADO position correctly remained a GS-14 position,” Appellee’s Br. 16; and (3) the
other
assistant director position in the Port of Atlanta was occupied at the GS-14 level. Emphasizing the impropriety of “judicial micromanagement of business practices,” the district court explained— correctly in our view — that “[w]hether it would be appropriate” to classify the ADO position as a GS-15 prior to the Atlanta Director’s elevation to the SES “is a decision that must be left to [Customs] to determine without micromanagement from the Court.”
Barnette,
As her last piece of evidence allegedly demonstrating pretext, Barnette points to James’s ADO application, which, according to Barnette, inappropriately included a supervisory-level appraisal form. As Barnette sees it, the supervisory-level form allowed Gomez, also James’s supervisor, to provide a far more detailed description of James’s responsibilities than would have been possible had James submitted the non-supervisory appraisal sheet appropriate for her position. Barnette also argues that Gomez intentionally and inappropriately enhanced James’s review “to make her appear more eligible” for the GS-14 ADO position. Appellant’s Br. 25 (emphasis added). But Barnette presents no evidence either that the enhanced review affected James’s basic eligibility for the ADO position or that Heavey relied on the “exaggerat[ed]” description of her supervisory experience when recommending James. Id. So even if a jury concluded that Gomez intentionally manipulated the appraisal form in order to exaggerate James’s supervisory experience, that conclusion would do nothing to undermine Customs’ non-discriminatory explanation for hiring James — its preference for her greater operations experience over Barnette’s greater supervisory and administrative experience.
III.
“This Court will not reexamine governmental promotion decisions where it appears the Government was faced with a difficult decision between two qualified candidates, particularly when there is no other evidence that race [or age] played a part in the decision.”
Stewart,
So ordered.
