Plaintiffs Danny M. Bennett and Danny L. Reid filed a complaint alleging that Dennis L. Hendrix, former Sheriff of For-syth County, Georgia and Earl A. Single-tary and David W. Waters, deputies who served under Hendrix, violated their civil rights. Plaintiffs alleged that these officers carried out a campaign of police harassment and retaliation after plaintiffs supported a county referendum opposed by the sheriff. After the district court entered an order denying the officers qualified immunity, they brought this appeal. We find no error in the district court’s order, and therefore affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1998, Forsyth County, Georgia voters considered a referendum that would have established a county-wide police force and diminished the power of the Forsyth County Sheriffs Department. 1 Most of *1249 the Department’s powers would have been transferred to the county police, and the Sheriff would have been under the supervision of county officials. Sheriff Hendrix opposed the referendum. The plaintiffs are local business owners who supported the referendum. Along with other citizens, they formed a committee in support of the referendum and sponsored a debate on the matter.
The referendum was defeated at the polls, but the plaintiffs allege that Hendrix (along with the other defendants, fellow Sheriffs Department officers) engaged in a campaign of retaliation and intimidation against the plaintiffs because of their support of the referendum. The plaintiffs allege that Hendrix formed a “Strike Force” within the Department to carry out this process of intimidation.
Among many other acts of intimidation, they allege the defendants took down license tag numbers of cars at a forum in support of the referendum, surveilled the plaintiffs’ homes and businesses, set up roadblocks near their homes, stopped their cars without reason and issued false traffic citations, accessed government databases to obtain confidential information on the plaintiffs, attempted to obtain a warrant for their arrest on trumped-up environmental charges, and mailed flyers to 35,-000 homes in Forsyth County calling the plaintiffs the “real criminals,” members of a “chain gang,” and “the same type of criminals that terrorize Forsyth County.”
According to the plaintiffs, most of these events occurred shortly before the 2000 election, and were designed to intimidate the plaintiffs from opposing Hendrix’s reelection that year. The plaintiffs assert that the intimidation tactics were suceessful. Although the plaintiffs voted and made campaign contributions during the 2000 election cycle, they allege that the defendants’ actions chilled them from engaging in further political activities like they did in 1998.
The plaintiffs sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in 2000, alleging violations of the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments, as well as a conspiracy to violate their civil rights, along with several state tort laws. The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on most of these claims, but denied summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ claim of retaliation in violation of the First Amendment, their § 1983 conspiracy claim, and state law claims against Hendrix, Singletary, and Waters. The defendants moved for summary judgment based on the defense of qualified immunity. The court held that the defendants were not entitled to qualified immunity because they had violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, and those rights were clearly established at the time. Accordingly, the district court denied summary judgment. 2
II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
Although the defendants’ appeal is interlocutory, we have jurisdiction to review the district court’s decision on qualified immunity pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
III. DISCUSSION
Our procedure in assessing qualified immunity is well-established. Government officials acting within their discretionary authority are ineligible for qualified immunity from suit when the facts “[t]aken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury ... show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right” and “the right was clearly established.”
Saucier v. Katz,
We have already determined, in an earlier appeal in this case, that “it is apparent that the defendants were acting within the scope of their discretionary authority.”
See Bennett v. Hendrix,
A. Violation of a Constitutional Right
The precise test for determining whether the defendants’ actions violated the plaintiffs’ rights against retaliation is an issue of first impression in this Circuit. We first survey the law of other Circuits. To state a retaliation claim, the commonly accepted formulation requires that a plaintiff must establish first, that his speech or act was constitutionally protected; second, that the defendant’s retaliatory conduct adversely affected the protected speech; and third, that there is a causal connection between the retaliatory actions and the adverse effect on speech.
Constantine v. Rectors and Visitors of George Mason Univ.,
The other Circuits apply an objective test: “a plaintiff suffers adverse action if the defendant’s allegedly retaliatory conduct would likely deter ‘a person of ordinary firmness’ from the exercise of First Amendment rights.”
Constantine,
The defendants point to other cases applying a subjective test, under which the plaintiffs would have to show that they were actually chilled in the exercise of their First Amendment rights.
See Curley v. Village of Suffern,
First; although their decisions are not binding on us, we find the fact that every other Circuit has adopted the objective “ordinary firmness” test to be persuasive. Even accepting the defendants’ premise that a few scattered cases applying a subjective “actual chill” test amounts to a “circuit split,” the vast majority of cases apply the objective test.
5
We agree with the courts that have called the “ordinary firmness” test “well established,”
Garcia,
Second, we are persuaded not only by the number of courts applying the “ordinary firmness” test, but by the reasoning of those decisions as well. An objective standard provides notice to government officials of when their retaliatory actions violate a plaintiffs First Amendment rights. In contrast, “a subjective standard would expose public officials to liability in some cases, but not in others, for the very
*1252
same conduct, depending upon the plaintiffs will to fight.”
Constantine,
The defendants contend that “something more than the mere retaliatory act is necessary to give rise to an actionable claim.”
Appellants’ Brief
at 12. They are correct, but as we have explained, the “something more” is an adverse affect, and “adverse effect” depends on context. Specifically, private citizens must establish that the retaliatory acts would deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising his or her First Amendment rights. The defendants’ reliance on retaliation cases in the public employment context is misplaced, because different interests are at stake there. In the employment context, the required adverse action in a retaliation claim is an “adverse employment action.”
See Stavropoulos v. Firestone,
Determining whether a plaintiffs First Amendment rights were adversely affected by retaliatory conduct is a fact intensive inquiry that focuses on the status of the speaker, the status of the retaliator, the relationship between the speaker and the retaliator, and the nature of the retaliatory acts. See Thaddeus-X v. Blatter,175 F.3d 378 , 398 (6th Cir.1999) (“[T]he definition of adverse action is not static across contexts.”). For example, in the public employment context, the speaker is the employee and the retaliator is the public employer. The employment relationship between the speaker and retaliator creates competing interests between “the interests of the [public employee], as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern and the interest of the [government], as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.”
Suarez Corp. Indus. v. McGraw,
The balance of interests is different when the plaintiff is a private citizen, and those interests require at least as much protection against retaliation for a private citizen as they would for a public employ
*1253
ee.
6
See Thaddeus-X,
In sum, language from the cases, including our decision in Stavropoulos, requiring an adverse employment action in order for a public employee to state a retaliation claim does not necessitate that a private citizen plaintiff plead more than that the defendant’s retaliatory acts are such as would chill a person of ordinary firmness. As we have stated, for private citizen plaintiffs, the objective test allows for a “weeding out” function when the injuries complained of are trivial or amount to no more than de minimis inconvenience in the exercise of First Amendment rights.
The defendants next assert that the “ordinary firmness” test allows plaintiffs to state a claim even when they have not suffered an injury sufficient to give them standing to sue. We disagree. The plaintiffs’ claim depends not on the denial of a constitutional right, but on the harassment they received for exercising their rights. “The reason why such retaliation offends the Constitution is that it threatens to inhibit exercise of the protected right.”
Thaddeus-X,
The defendants’ reliance on
Laird v. Tatum,
However, the
Laird
Court noted that, “[i]n recent years this Court has found in a number of cases that constitutional violations may arise from the deterrent, or ‘chilling,’ effect of governmental regula
*1254
tions that fall short of a direct prohibition against the exercise of First Amendment rights.”
Id.
at 11,
As a final reason for approving of the objective standard, we note that it is consistent with statements in our own cases, even though we have not explicitly adopted the “ordinary firmness” test. In
Cate v. Oldham,
For all of the foregoing reasons, today we expressly adopt the following standard: A plaintiff suffers adverse action if the defendant’s allegedly retaliatory conduct would likely deter a person of ordinary firmness from the exercise of First Amendment rights.
We now apply this standard to the plaintiffs’ allegations, and readily conclude that the plaintiffs have alleged facts that a jury could find would deter a person of ordinary firmness from the exercise of First Amendment rights. In Judge Posner’s words, “[t]he effect on freedom of speech may be small, but since there is no justification for harassing people for exercising their constitutional rights it need not be great in order to be actionable.”
Bart,
The alleged retaliatory acts complained of here include a prolonged and organized campaign of harassment by local police officers. Taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the record is replete with instances where the defendants followed, pulled over, cited, intimidated, or otherwise harassed the plaintiffs. The defendants allegedly accessed confidential government databases containing information on the plaintiffs, attempted to obtain arrest warrants against the plaintiffs without probable cause, and produced and mailed *1255 to Forsyth County residents flyers depicting the plaintiffs as criminals terrorizing the county.
Other courts applying the “ordinary firmness” test have concluded that similar or less harassing acts constitute an adverse effect.
See Garcia,
Additionally, the plaintiffs testified that they were, in fact, actually chilled in the exercise of their rights because they did not participate in the 2000 election to the degree they would have but for the defendants’ alleged actions. We note that “[t]he question is not whether the plaintiff herself was deterred, though how plaintiff acted might be evidence of what a reasonable person would have done.”
Garcia,
B. Clearly Established Law
The final step in the qualified immunity inquiry is determining whether the law was clearly established so as to put the defendants on notice that their behavior violated the plaintiffs’ rights. A right is clearly established if, in light of already-existing law, the unlawfulness of the conduct is “apparent,”
see Anderson v. Creighton,
This Court and the Supreme Court have long held that state officials may not retaliate against private citizens because of the exercise of their First Amendment rights.
See Cate,
Because this Court has held since at least 1988 that it is “settled law” that the government may not retaliate against citizens for the exercise of First Amendment rights,
Ga. Ass’n of Educators,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that, taking the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the defendants’ “conduct violated a constitutional right” and that “the right was clearly established.”
Saucier,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We present the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the party opposing summary judgment.
Young v. City of Palm Bay,
. The court granted summary judgment for the defendants as to the claims brought by plaintiff Tammy Bennett, and she is not a party to this appeal. Likewise, the district court granted summary judgment on the plaintiffs' claims against the additional defendants. Thus, the only issue before us is the entitlement of Hendrix, Singletary, and Waters to qualified immunity.
. In the district court, the defendants conceded the first prong, that the plaintiffs' support for the 1998 referendum was protected speech. In addition, the defendants have never pointed to any indication in the record that they would have undertaken their allegedly retaliatory actions even absent the plaintiffs' speech. Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the plaintiffs have shown that there exists at least a genuine issue of material fact as to the third (causation) prong.
. The defendants also cite
Sullivan v. Carrick,
. We note that cases from the Second Circuit appear to take contradictory positions.
Compare Washington v. County of Rockland,
. We note that several courts have applied the "ordinary firmness” test even in the prison context. It follows that a private citizen, not subject to the expected deprivations of prison life, deserves at least as much protection from retaliation. See
Mitchell,
