Kеn Blair maintains his First Amendment rights were violated when his fellow school board members voted to remove him as their vice president because of his relentless criticism of the school district’s superintendent. The district court disagreed, and so do we. To be sure, the First Amendment protects Blair’s discordant speech as a general matter; it does not, however, immunize him from the political fallout of what he says.
I
BACKGROUND
Blair has served as a publicly elected member of the Bethel School District School Board since 1999. There are four other Board members, who are also publicly elected. Thе members of the Board elect their own president, vice president, and legislative representative. Blair has served in each position over the years, but most recently, until October 2007, he was the Board’s vice president.
Defendant-Appellee Tom Seigel was hired as superintendent of the Bethel School District in 2000. Blair has been a persistent critic of Seigel almost from the beginning, repeatedly impugning his integrity and competence. There are many examples, but one makes the point: early in Seigel’s first term, Blair apparently insinuated to the Board and to the State Auditor that Seigel was defrauding the school district by requesting reimbursement for his moving expenses when in fact Seigel had been moved by the military. Blair is apparently the only Board member who is dissatisfied with Seigel, and since 2005 he has consistently voted against renewing Seigel’s contract.
On September 25, 2007, the Board voted 4-1 to extend Seigel’s contract and raise his pay. Blair was the lone dissenter. The next day, he explained his dissenting vote to a newspaper reporter, who then quoted Blair in a story saying, “My biggest issue with the superintendent is trust.... I have too many examples to say he’s doing a good job.”
II
DISCUSSION
The First Amendment forbids government officials from retaliating against individuals for speaking out.
Hartman v. Moore,
But Blair’s case is not a typical First Amendment retaliation case. What’s different here is the “adverse action” Blair is challenging was taken by his peers in the political arena. The record makes clear that Blair’s fellow Board members wanted
First, the adverse action Blair complains of was a rather minor indignity, and de minimis deprivations of benefits and privileges on account of one’s speech do nоt give rise to a First Amendment claim. Rather, for adverse, retaliatory actions to offend the First Amendment, they must be of a nature that would stifle someone from speaking out. The most familiar adverse actions are “exercise[s] of governmental power” that are “regulatory, proscriptive, or compulsory in nature” and have the effect of punishing someone for his or her speech.
Laird v. Tatum,
The prototypical plaintiff in these cases is a government worker who loses his job as a result of some public communication critical of the government entity for whom he works,
e.g., Pickеring v. Bd. of Educ. of Township High Sch. Dist.,
Blair has little in common with these prototypical plaintiffs. Through the ordinary functioning of the democratic process, he was removed from a titular position on a school board by the very people who elected him to the position in the first place. The Board’s objective in stripping Blair of his leadership position, ostensibly, wasn’t to punish him for his advocacy but instead to put in place a vice president who better represented the majority view. But even if the Board’s intent was to play political hardball in response to Blair’s advocacy, his authority as a member of the Board was unaffected; despite his removal as Board vice president, he retained the full range of rights and prerogatives that came with having been publicly elected. The district court found Blair’s removal from the Board leadership position didn’t chill his speech, and the record supports that finding.
Second, as the district court intuited, more is fair in electoral polities than in other contexts. It is common for political bodies to have internal leadership structures and for members of those bodies to be openly рartisan in voting for and against one another for leadership positions. In fact, we
expect
political officials to cast votes in internal elections in a manner that is, technically speaking, retaliatory,
i.e.,
to vote against candidates whose views differ from their own. Indeed, an internal political leadership election is often a referendum on the majority point of view. Yet, to accept Blair’s argument is to hold that the First Amendment prohibits elected officials from voting against candidates whose speech or views
To lend perspective to this point, we conceive little difference between what the Board’s internal vote against Blair accomplished and whаt voters in a general public election might do if they too were disaffected by Blair’s advocacy. In other words, it wouldn’t have been controversial in the least — and certainly not a violation of the First Amendment — had Blair’s constituents refused to support his reelection on account of his outspoken opposition to Superintendent Seigel. We see no reason the Board members’ votes here should be regulated in a way that the general public’s are not.
Third, it is significant that Blair isn’t the only party in this case whose interests implicate First Amendment concerns. To the contrary, we аssume
all
of the Board members have a protected interest in speaking out and voting their conscience on the important issues they confront— issues like teachers’ pay, curriculum policy, and allocation of education resources. The First Circuit has recognized this point expliсitly: “Voting by members of municipal boards, commissions, and authorities comes within the heartland of First Amendment doctrine, and the status of public officials’ votes as constitutionally protected speech [is] established beyond peradventure of doubt .... ”
Stella v. Kelley,
Here, the vote to remove Blair as Board vice president communicated to Blair and to the public that the Board majority viewed Seigel’s performance very differently from the way Blair saw it, and wanted to distance itself from Blair’s criticism of the superintendent. The point isn’t that the vote against Blair was protected speech simply because it was expressive. Almost all retaliatory actions can be said to be expressive, including those that are manifestly unconstitutional. But, while Blair certainly had a First Amendment right to criticize Seigel and vote against
Whilе this is the first time our circuit has considered a First Amendment retaliation claim that arises in the context of the political process and public debate, both the Sixth Circuit and the Tenth Circuit have evaluated similar claims. In
Zilich v. Longo,
Similarly, in
Phelan v. Laramie County Cmty. Coll. Bd.,
We agree with the analysis of the Sixth Circuit in Zilich and the Tenth Circuit in Phelan. Blair’s removal from the titular position of Board vice president is, for First Amendment purposes, analogous to the condemning resolution in Zilich and the censure in Phelan, and those deсisions support our conclusion here. Disagreement is endemic to polities, and naturally plays out in how votes are cast. While the impetus to remove Blair as Bethel School Board vice president undoubtedly stemmed from his contrarian advocacy against Siegel, the Board’s aсtion did not amount to retaliation in violation of the First Amendment.
Ill
CONCLUSION
The decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court held that “in order lor governmental action to trigger First Amendment scrutiny, it must carry consequences that infringe upon protected speech.”
Blair v. Bethel Sch. Dist.,
No. C08-5181,
. To be liable under § 1983, a government official must be "acting, purporting, or pretending to act in the performance of his or her official duties.”
McDade v. West,
. Blair argues his speech deserves enhanced protection because it was
political
speech that exposed corruption, mismanagement and waste within the Bethel School District. It is true that "[p]olitical speech lies at the core of the First Amendment's protections.”
Kaplan v. County of Los Angeles,
. To be very clear, we do not suggest that the retaliatory acts of elected officials against their own can nеver violate the Constitution. Obviously, they can.
See Bond v. Floyd,
