In this case, plaintiff-appellant Carmen Nereida-Gonzalez (Nereida), a veteran'government employee displeased by a series of adverse employment actions, sued two of her superiors. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Nereida appeals. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Background
We limn the facts in the light most advantageous to the summary judgment loser, consistent with record support, as Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 requires.
See, e.g., Amsden v. Moran,
Appellant, a known member of the New Progressive Party (NPP), started working for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico in the 1960s. By 1984, she occupied a career position in the State Insurance Fund (SIF), a government agency. 1 In November of that year, the incumbent NPP governor lost the gubernatorial election to a member of the rival Popular Democratic Party (PDP). Hot on the heels of the change in command two PDP loyalists, defendants Cirilo Tirado-Delgado (Tirado) and Rafael Rivera Gonzalez (Rivera), received high-level SIF appointments — Tirado as Administrator of the SIF, Rivera as Director of Personnel.
Once ensconced at the agency, the defendants allegedly informed appellant that she would be demoted because of her political affiliation. The prophecy soon became a reality. By letter dated June 20, 1985, Rivera advised appellant that her position was being eliminated as part of a departmental reorganization and that, conse *703 quently, she was being transferred to a different SIF position as assistant to the Director of the Systems and Procedures Office. Rivera’s letter acknowledged that “[t]his transfer represents a demotion.”
Although the defendants now struggle to portray the reassignment as a lateral transfer, the record bears out Rivera’s initial characterization of the move. The base salary for appellant’s new position ($1565 per month) was significantly lower than the base salary for her former position ($1915 per month). The terms of her employment provided that, until the gap was closed, she would continue to be paid at her accustomed rate, but the difference between her new base salary and her actual pay would absorb any raises or bonuses she otherwise would have been eligible to collect. Thus, while appellant’s pay was not reduced outright, it was effectively frozen and her ability to earn more money was circumscribed. This situation lasted at least until February 3, 1987, when Tirado informed appellant by letter that, in terms of salary and classification, her new position was being upgraded to the level of her previous position.
The demotion damaged appellant’s pride as well as her pocketbook. Her new job, unlike her old one, did not entail supervisory responsibilities. What is more, even the modest functions and duties corresponding to the new job title were placed beyond her reach as she was asked to perform only clerical tasks. As a final indignity, although the defendants abolished appellant’s former position on paper, its functions remained essentially intact and were performed by an employee with ties to the PDP.
Asserting that she had been constructively discharged, or, alternatively, demoted because of her exercise of First Amendment rights, and contending that the adverse personnel actions undertaken at defendants’ direction deprived her of property without due process of law, appellant brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988). She sought both equitable relief and money damages. The district court gave her cold gruel, entering summary judgment in defendants’ favor on all claims. This appeal followed.
II.
Discussion
A
Summary Judgment
Summary judgment exists to “pierce the boilerplate of the pleadings and assay the parties’ proof in order to determine whether trial is actually required.”
Wynne v. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Medicine,
Because the granting of summary judgment necessarily involves applying a legal standard to facts which must, by definition, be undisputed, appellate review of a district court order under Rule 56 is plenary.
See Wynne,
*704 B
Constructive Discharge
We need not tarry over appellant’s most touted initiative: her claim that she was constructively discharged in reprisal for the free exercise of her First Amendment rights. We have ruled, squarely and recently, that a “claim of constructive discharge due to a demotion or transfer cannot succeed when a claimant, in fact, has not left employment.”
Pedro-Cos v. Contreras,
C
Transfer and Demotion
Next, appellant claims that she was transferred and demoted for the same (impermissible) reason: to punish her for exercising prerogatives of free association and the like guaranteed to her by the First Amendment. Because this claim is scissile, its component parts are best treated separately.
The Claim for Money Damages
Insofar as appellant’s First Amendment transfer-and-demotion claim is one for compensatory damages, we conclude that the doctrine of qualified immunity bars recovery. Qualified immunity shields government officials performing discretionary functions from civil liability for money damages when their conduct does not violate “clearly established” statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Before 1989, that is, throughout the period when the present defendants allegedly acted to appellant’s detriment,
2
it was a subject of much conjecture whether the constitutional prohibition against politically motivated firings extended to other personnel actions, such as refusals to hire, demotions, and failures to promote.
See Rodriguez-Pinto,
The Claim for Equitable Relief
The remaining furculum of appellant’s First Amendment transfer-and-demotion claim has more meat on its bones. A primary purpose of providing officials with qualified immunity is to ensure that fear of personal liability will not unduly influence or inhibit their performance of public
*705
duties.
See, e.g., Anderson v. Creighton,
Here, Nereida sued the defendants both individually and in their official capacities. As we have explained, the doctrine of qualified immunity sets the individual-capacity claims to rest. But, the official-capacity claims are qualitatively different: when a plaintiff sues a state official in the latter’s official capacity, as opposed to the latter’s personal capacity, the underlying rationale for qualified immunity has no bite.
An official capacity suit is, in reality, a suit against the governmental entity, not against the governmental actor.
See Kentucky v. Graham,
Absent the interposition of qualified immunity, we must look to what rights we now believe the law conferred on a government worker at the time in question, rather than merely seeking to ascertain what rights were clearly established at that time.
See Rodriguez-Pinto,
In
Agosto-De-Feliciano,
we determined that the First Amendment’s proscription of patronage dismissals as formulated by the Court in
Elrod v. Burns,
Shortly after we decided
Agosto-De-Fel-iciano,
the Supreme Court cast further illumination on the issue. In
Rutan,
Under Rutan, then, a plaintiff who has held a non-policymaking job in the public sector may ordinarily forestall summary judgment by pointing to evidence in the record which, if credited, would permit a rational factfinder to conclude that a demotion occurred and that it stemmed from a politically based discriminatory animus. Nereida passes this test.
There can be no disputing that the record contains evidence sufficient to justify a trier in finding that a demotion occurred. Under the NPP-led regime, appellant occupied a position with supervisory and coordinating functions. When the new regime settled in, she was shifted to a less lustrous position in a lower pay bracket. Her affidavit also relates that she was effectively deprived of raises and similar due-course increments, divested of supervisory powers, and assigned “only nominal tasks ... of a clerical nature.” These facts, if proven, together with defendants’ contemporaneous characterization of her transfer as a step down, would unquestionably permit a finding that appellant was, in fact, demoted.
Appellant hás likewise adduced sufficient evidence of discriminatory animus. According to her affidavit, the defendants told her outright that she would “be demoted and assigned to another position without any responsibilities or duties” because of her NPP affiliation. This direct evidence of discriminatory animus, although denied by defendants, is adequate to ward off summary judgment on the point. Cf. Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(A) (statements of party-opponent made in either an individual or a representative capacity are not considered hearsay). In this case, moreover, the direct evidence is buttressed by other facts of record from which a factfinder could reasonably conclude that: (1) appellant was a known member of the NPP; (2) she was transferred on the premise of what some evidence indicates was a sham reorganization; and (3) a number of other personnel actions allegedly occurred at about the same time, all of which involved insinuating PDP members into career positions previously held by NPP members. On this scumbled record, a reasonable factfinder, drawing inferences favorable to appellant and making credibility determinations in her favor, could easily conclude that the defendants acted out of discriminatory animus. 4
Because our canvass of the record reveals evidence which, if credited, would warrant a reasonable factfinder in concluding that appellant was entitled to reinstatement and, perhaps, other equitable redress, 5 the district court swept too broadly in entering summary judgment across the board.
D
Due Process
Appellant also assigns error anent the handling of her due process claim — a claim which was presumably foreclosed by the entry of summary judgment but which the court below never specifically mentioned in its opinion. Pressing an analogy to
Rodriguez-Pinto,
While we could, of course, search to ascertain whether summary judgment might be affirmable “on any independently sufficient ground made manifest by the record,”
One Parcel,
III.
Conclusion
We need go no further. For the reasons stated we affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment on appellant’s constructive discharge claim and on her First Amendment claims against the defendants in their individual capacities; we reverse the district court’s entry of summary judgment on appellant’s First Amendment claim for equitable redress against the defendants in their official capacities; and we vacate, the order for summary judgment insofar as it purports to foreclose appellant from further prosecution of her due process claim.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith. Two-thirds costs to appellant
Notes
. Appellant served as executive assistant to SIF’s Director of Administrative Services. The defendants did not urge below, and have not contended on appeal, that political affiliation is an appropriate criterion for this position.
. The record is tenebrous as to whether petty harassment (e.g., shortstopping of responsibilities) continued after 1989. But, it is apparent that, by then, the major hardships (e.g., reduced compensation) had been ameliorated. Thus, there seems to be little basis for arguing that, in 1989, Agosto-De-Feliciano stripped the cloak of qualified immunity from the defendants vis-a-vis any remnants of the alleged mistreatment thereafter occurring, and, indeed, appellant has made no such argument on appeal.
. Appellant has not asserted that her claim for compensatory damages should proceed against the defendants in their official capacities, and we do not consider, therefore, whether sovereign immunity would bar the maintenance of such an action in federal court.
. To be sure, even if a plaintiff adduces evidence that her job loss was politically motivated, her employer may still prevail by demonstrating that the employee would have been ousted anyway, say, for unsatisfactory work performance or as a legitimate casualty of a bona fide reorganization.
See Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ.
v.
Doyle,
. Given the myriad factual uncertainties that dot the record, we leave to the court below three related questions: (1) whether a job still exists into which appellant might be reinstated, (2) whether appellant can collect back pay, and (3) if so, the amount thereof.
