This is the second time this case has been before us and we are again confronted with the issue whether the plaintiff, Dorothea Yoggerst, received a reprimand from her public employer in violation of the First Amendment. The district court dismissed Yoggerst’s complaint on remand from our first decision, and we affirm.
I.
A complete recitation of the facts can be found in our first dеcision.
See Yoggerst v. Stewart,
Dorothea Yoggerst was an employee of the Illinois Governor’s Office of Manpower and Human Development (“GOMAHD”). The present defendants were Yoggerst’s supervisor, Miсhael Hedges, and GOM-AHD’s supervisor of personnel activities, James McDonough.
On April 26 and 27, 1978, unconfirmed reports circulated that the Director of GOMAHD, L.W. Murray, had been discharged by Governor Thompson. An article to this effect appeared on April 27 in the morning edition of the Chicago Sun-Times. On the morning of April 27, Yoggerst made a telephone call to a fellow emplоyee, Linda Coker, seeking information about a work-related matter. The first thing Yoggerst said to Coker, however, was “Did you hear the good news?” This question obviously referred to the reports оf Murray’s termination. As a result of this remark, Yoggerst received an oral reprimand from Hedges, telling her that her behavior was unprofessional and had disrupted the office. Subsequently, a written mеmorandum of the oral reprimand was placed in Yoggerst’s personnel file by McDonough, though no copy of the memorandum was sent to the Department of Personnel (where presumably Yoggerst’s permanent personnel file was maintained). Yoggerst resigned from GOMAHD effective June 15, 1978, citing the infringement of her First Amendment rights as her reason for leaving.
Yoggerst filed § 1983 actions agаinst four employees of GOMAHD. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of two defendants and dismissed the complaint against the other two defendants. On appeal, we affirmed the district cоurt’s judgment with respect to two of these defendants. See Yoggerst I, supra. We reversed the district court’s judgment, however, with respect to Hedges and McDonough and remanded the case for further procеedings. Specifically, we stated:
It is possible that further evidence may demonstrate either (1) that no constitutional right has been infringed, or (2) that the speech at issue here was not prоtected by the First Amendment and, *295 possibly, (3) that no damage was done. But certainly we cannot say that any of these propositions is determinable at this time as a matter of summary judgment.
Yoggerst I,
Following our remand, the Supreme Court decided
Connick v. Myers,
II.
Public employees do not abandon their First Amendment rights when they enter the workplace. On the other hand, public employers do not lose their ability to control behavior and speech in the workplace merely because they are governmental bodies subject to the restraints of the First Amеndment. In
Pickering v. Board of Education,
The Supreme Court most recently addressed the First Amendment rights of public employees in
Connick v. Myers,
The district court held on remand that the speech involved here failed to clear the first hurdlе: it did not address a matter of public concern. We agree.
A.
Before we analyze the district court’s holding, we must address briefly the effect of our Yoggerst I decision. There, we held that the Pickering balancing test applied, and, in discussing the application of that test, we noted:
[Yoggerst’s] casual comment did involve a matter of some public concern (as evidenced by continuing media speculation cоncerning the Director’s tenure), and, we believe, First Amendment protection *296 should be available absent countervailing negative impacts on the employment relationship.
Yoggerst I,
B.
While
Connick
mandates that we examine the content, form, and context of speech to determine whether, as a matter of law, it can be characterized as speech on a matter of public concern, we believe that the content factor is most important in making this determination.
Cf. Givhan v. Western Line Consolidated School District,
Yoggerst stated, “Did you hear the good news?” The operative word in this statement is “good.” The obvious import of Yoggerst’s speech was that she disliked the Director and shе would be pleased to see him leave GOMAHD. In fact, Yoggerst testified at a deposition that this was her attitude toward the Director. Whether the Director was qualified for his office would be a matter of public interest and concern. Yoggerst made no suggestion in her statement, however, that Murray was an ineffective administrator, that he failed to discharge his duties, or that hе had committed some wrongdoing or a breach of the public trust; publication of the remark would provide no basis for determining his qualifications for continuing in public office.
Cf. Connick v. Myers,
The context in which Yoggerst spoke does not alter our conclusion as to the proper characterization of her remark. It is clear that the rumors that Murray would be fired — a matter of obvious public interest and concern — were the impetus for Yoggerst’s remarks to Coker. It does not follow, however, that Yoggerst’s stаtement can be characterized as speech on a matter of public concern just because such a concern provided the impetus for speaking. For instanсe, a comment on the morning following a presidential news conference that the President has no gray hair may have been spurred by the news conference, but it is not speech on a matter of public concern. Moreover, if Yoggerst had told Coker three days before the rumors began that she did not get along well with the Director, the message would certаinly not involve a matter of public interest. The content of Yoggerst’s speech was clearly about her relationship with the Director, a matter of no public concern; the fact that she spoke at a time when the Director’s continued tenure in office was a matter of public interest does not alter this characterization.
*297 We must concur, therefore, with the district court that the complaint should have been dismissed.
III.
For the reasons expressed above, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
