This case is before us for the second time. The first time we held that Judge Svetanoff was not immune from being sued under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983 for race discrimination and for violations of the first and fourteenth amendments in connection with the termination of the plaintiff, a court reporter.
McMillian v. Svetanoff,
I.
Harriett McMillian was hired by the Superior Court of Lake County, Indiana, as a court reporter in February, 1973 and was assigned to courtroom 4. Ms. McMillian was the first, and only, black person to hold the position of court reporter in Lake County. By all indications, Ms. McMillian’s work record was spotless.
*188 In 1981, Gerald Svetanoff (hereinafter “Judge Svetanoff”), a white male, was appointed by Governor Robert D. Orr, a Republican, to be a judge in the Superior Court of Lake County and was assigned to courtroom 4, Judge Svetanoff, upon assuming office, terminated the employment of all of the court personnel associated with courtroom 4 including the plaintiff. 1 At the time, Ms. McMillian was the only black person assigned to courtroom 4.
In place of the plaintiff, Judge Svetanoff hired Emily Trgovich, a white female, as his court reporter. Judge Svetanoff was familiar with Ms. Trgovich and her work because she had previously worked as a secretary at a law firm with which the judge was associated. Judge Svetanoff, in an interrogatory answer, explained his decision to hire Ms. Trgovich this way:
My present reporter, Emily Trgovich, had the skills required for the position of reporter. Moreover, I was familiar with her work and her skills.... Along with the skills of the job, her personal qualities were well suited to the position. These included an ability to relate well with people and to work cooperatively with others, as well as the ability and disposition to attend to the details of the job without strict supervision: that is, she had a great deal of initiative.
Judge Svetanoff also replaced the other personnel formerly associated with courtroom 4, with the exception of Mary Slafin-dor, a white woman, who was re-hired for her former position. Other facts which are salient to this appeal will be developed as required.
Shortly after learning that she had been terminated, Ms. McMillian filed this action in federal district court. Ms. McMillian’s complaint alleged that her termination violated federal law in three discrete ways. First, she alleged that she was terminated by Judge Svetanoff because of her race in violation of the fourteenth amendment and 42 U.S.C. § 1981. Second, Ms. McMillian claimed that her termination was motivated by her affiliation with the Democratic Party and thus violated her first amendment right to freedom of association. Finally, Ms. McMillian averred that her firing violated the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment because Judge Sveta-noff failed to provide her with a pre-termi-nation hearing. The district court granted summary judgment to Judge Svetanoff on each of these claims and Ms. McMillian has appealed.
We review the district court’s decision to grant summary judgment
de novo
and utilize the same standard of decision-making as that employed by the district court.
Christianson v. Colt Industries Operating Corp.,
We recognize that summary judgment is frequently inappropriate in discrimination cases because intent, and therefore credibility, is often a crucial issue. Nevertheless, we have recently made clear that while we approach the question of summary judgment with “special caution” in discrimination cases,
Beard v. Whitley County REMC,
II.
Ms. McMillian claims that she was terminated from her position as a court reporter because of her race in violation of the fourteenth amendment and § 1981. We analyze such claims by utilizing the well-known shifting burdens test of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
“that he or she is a member of a protected class, that he or she is otherwise similarly situated to members of the unprotected class, and that he or she was treated differently from members of the unprotected class.”
Collins v. State of Illinois,
In this case it is uncontested that Ms. McMillian can successfully establish a prime facie case of race discrimination. Ms. McMillian is black and therefore a member of a protected class. There is no dispute that Ms. McMillian was highly qualified for the job of court reporter and had been performing that job satisfactorily at the time she was fired. Finally, unlike Mary Slafindor, a white person who was re-hired to her former position by Judge Svetanoff, Ms. McMillian was terminated, and not re-hired, upon the start of Judge Svetanoff’s tenure. Thus, the burden of production shifted to Judge Svetanoff to articulate a legitimate non-discriminatory reason for the plaintiffs discharge.
In this case, Judge Svetanoff has articulated a legitimate non-discriminatory reason for the plaintiffs discharge. Judge Svetanoff stated, in answer to plaintiffs interrogatories, that he terminated Ms. McMillian because he wished to hire Emily Trgovich, a woman with whom the judge had successfully worked in the past. That explanation is a legitimate reason for plaintiffs termination. An employer, even a public employer such as the judge, is free to choose among qualified candidates so long as that choice is not based on unlawful criteria.
Burdine,
The plaintiff was unable to produce any evidence to rebut Judge Svetanoff s articulated reason for the termination. Ms. McMillian provided no evidence to show either that Judge Svetanoff was not familiar with Ms. Trgovich’s work or that Judge Svetanoff and Ms. Trgovich did not actually work well together. Also, the plaintiff failed to produce evidence to show that her termination was actually based on a discriminatory motive. First, Ms. McMillian pointed out that Mary Slafindor was re
*190
hired while she was not. Yet it was undisputed that Mary Slafindor was terminated along with the rest of the former staff and was reinstated only because she was the only person to apply for her former position. Second, plaintiff claimed that several previous encounters between Judge Sveta-noff and herself evidenced his racial animus. For example, plaintiff alleged that while she was a court reporter and Judge Svetanoff was in private practice, the judge entered courtroom 4 to ask a question. Ms. McMillian alleges that she gave the judge the answer but that, not trusting her answer, he then asked a white bailiff who was present in the court the same question. This episode at best exemplifies the plaintiffs subjective belief that Judge Svetanoff was racially biased. Such subjective beliefs of the plaintiff, however, are insufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact.
See Andre v. Bendix Corp.,
In sum, because Ms. McMillian was unable to create any genuine issue of material fact as to the veracity of the defendant's articulated non-diseriminatory reason for terminating her, summary judgment was appropriately granted on the race discrimination claim.
III.
Ms. McMillian next argues that the district judge erred in granting summary judgment to Judge Svetanoff on her claim of discrimination based on political affiliation. In her complaint, plaintiff alleged that Judge Svetanoff, a Republican, fired her from her job because she was a Democrat, in violation of the first amendment. It is undisputed that this allegation states a cause of action under § 1983. In
Elrod v. Burns,
The burden of proving that the termination was motivated by political affiliation is borne, initially, by Ms. McMillian. Specifically, Ms. McMillian had the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that her “political affiliation was a motivating factor in bringing about the discharge.”
Patkus v. Sangamon-Cass Consortium,
*191 In this case, the district court held that Ms. McMillian did not raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether her political affiliation was a motivating factor in her dismissal. Judge Svetanoff, in support of his motion for summary judgment, contended that he was not a Republican, but in fact was a Democrat before taking the bench and an independent after his appointment. This contention was supported by his answers to plaintiffs interrogatories and by copies of his certified voting record which showed that he had voted in the Democratic primary in every election between 1960 and 1988. 4
In response to this evidence, Ms. McMilli-an failed to set forth specific facts to show that there is a genuine dispute about the defendant’s political affiliation. Ms. McMillian stated that the basis for her claim was her perception that Judge Sveta-noff was a Republican. Her only evidence to support that assertion was that Judge Svetanoff was appointed by a Republican governor and that she had seen a voting card of Judge Svetanoff which she claims showed he voted in the 1980 Republican primary.
The district court found this evidence insufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to the motivation for plaintiffs termination and we agree. Plaintiffs subjective belief that she was terminated because of her affiliation with the Democratic Party does not raise a genuine issue of material fact in the face of defendant’s documentary evidence.
Hermes,
IV.
Ms. McMillian’s final claim is that she was denied due process in violation of the fourteenth amendment when she was fired without a pre-termination hearing. The district court granted summary judgment on this claim because it found that Ms. McMillian had no property interest in her job as a court reporter and thus no constitutional right to a hearing before her termination. We agree with the district court that summary judgment was appropriate because Ms. McMillian was unable to show that she had any property interest in her job as a court reporter.
To have a property interest in public employment, a person must have more than a unilateral expectation of continuing in the job, he or she must have “a legitimate claim of entitlement” to the job.
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Ms. McMillian was an employee at will under Indiana law. The only state statute which touches on her tenure states that “court reporters ... shall serve at the pleasure of [the] senior judge.” Ind.Code § 33-5-29.5-8(a) (1983). Since she was an at-will employee, Ms. McMillian had no constitutionally protected property interest in retaining her position as a court reporter.
V.
For the reasons discussed above, we Affirm the grant of summary judgment to Judge Svetanoff on each of the claims made by the plaintiff.
Notes
. As we stated in our previous opinion: "In practice each judge employs the staff for his or her own courtroom subject to the approval of the senior judge. Court reporters serve a particular judge, but are occasionally rotated through other chambers and also do work for other attorneys."
McMillian,
. The Court also held that no violation of the first amendment occurs if the person who is terminated occupies a policymaking position or a position of confidence.
Elrod,
. The analytical framework we have used in deciding cases of discrimination based on political affiliation was derived from
Mt. Healthy City School District Bd. of Ed. v. Doyle,
In a recent case, the Court has held that the
Mt. Healthy
framework should be applied to Title VII cases where the defendant has both legitimate and illegitimate reasons for the action taken.
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
— U.S. -, -,
In any event, we need not decide the issue because Ms. McMillian would fare no better even if we did employ the McDonnell Douglas/Burdine framework. To prove a prima fa-cie case, Ms. McMillian would, we assume, at the very least, have to show that Judge Sveta-noff had an opposing political affiliation. As we will discuss, Ms. McMillian has failed to make that showing and thus, under the McDonnell Douglas/Burdine framework, was not able to establish a prima facie case.
. There is no requirement in Indiana that a person register to vote by party. Thus, the only official indication of a person’s party preference is his or her choice of party primary.
