Phillip Carlson and Thomas Smith worked as special investigators for the Kane County, Illinois, State’s Attorney’s *463 office. In December 2000, defendant Mary Górecki, the Kane County State’s Attorney, fired Carlson and Smith allegedly because of their speech on matters of public concern, namely, their support of Goreeki’s opponent in the election and their allegations that Górecki was involved in various jobs-for-favors and kickback schemes. Carlson and Smith filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, asserting that Gorecki’s decision to fire them violated the First Amendment. After discovery, Górecki filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that Carlson and Smith occupied policymaking or confidential positions and that she was entitled to qualified immunity. The court denied Gorecki’s motion. She appeals, and for the following reasons, we affirm.
I.
Both Phillip Carlson and Thomas Smith were hired as special investigators by the former Kane County State’s Attorney, David Akemann. As investigators, both Carlson and Smith were routinely called upon, for example, to locate witnesses, serve subpoenas, transport witnesses to court, and interview witnesses. Both were supervised by an Assistant State’s Attorney, John Barsanti. Beginning in 1986, Barsanti supervised investigators in the Kane County State’s Attorneys’ office. According to Barsanti, the main duty of Carlson and Smith was serving subpoenas. Both Barsanti and former State’s Attorney Akemann testified that political affiliation did not matter to the investigator position. The evidence presented shows that neither Carlson nor Smith participated in the poli-cymaking decisions of the office, and that political affiliation was not regarded as important to the job of investigator. Bar-santi emphasized that the investigators were not given discretion in performing their jobs, but that on the rare occasions that the investigators were asked to “investigate” matters, they were instead given specific tasks to accomplish, such as taking a photograph of a building.
Górecki won the election and replaced Akemann as Kane County State’s Attorney. On her first day at work as state’s attorney in December, 2000, she fired 1 Carlson after he had been on the job for four years and Smith after he had been on the job for two years. For purposes of this appeal, it is undisputed that Górecki fired Carlson and Smith because she viewed them as her political enemies and blamed them for an attempt to smear her politically. Carlson and Smith supported Gorecki’s opponent in the primary election, and Górecki blamed Carlson for exposing information regarding Gorecki’s alleged involvement in kickback and jobs-for-favors schemes prior to taking office. 2 Górecki similarly blamed Smith for author *464 ing and circulating a letter criticizing her during the election for Kane County-State’s Attorney. According to Górecki, despite the fact that she shared the same party affiliation as Carlson and Smith, they were her “political enemies.”
After Carlson and Smith were fired, they filed this § 1983 suit against Górecki alleging a First Amendment violation. Gó-recki filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds of qualified immunity, arguing that Carlson and Smith were policymakers or confidential employees. ' Gó-recki admits that she fired Carlson and Smith solely for political reasons, i.e., their public support of her opponent and public criticism of her reputation for honesty. The court granted Carlson and Smith the right to take limited discovery before it ruled on the motion. Carlson and Smith deposed Barsanti, the First Assistant State’s Attorney, and Akemann, the former State’s Attorney.
Górecki, in support of her argument that the plaintiffs were policymakers or confidential employees, relied on the evidence that investigators serve at the pleasure and discretion of the state’s attorney and that statute provides that the state’s attorney has the sole power to appoint, remove, and discipline a special investigator. The state’s attorney is also permitted by statute to assign a special investigator to investigate civil, criminal, and administrative matters and serve as an agent of the grand jury. Of course, any investigation conducted by the special investigator is considered confidential, as are any conversations between the special investigator and the state’s attorney or supervising assistant state’s attorney. Likewise, the assignment involves a position of trust. The court, however, denied Gorecki’s motion for summary judgment by finding that there were material issues of fact in dispute concerning whether the job of special investigator is a policymaking or confidential position.
II.
We review de novo the district court’s decision to deny Gorecki’s motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds.
Beauchamp v. City of Noblesville,
Traditionally, we have referred to this exception for ease of reference as the “policymaking” or “confidential” employee exception because those terms fit the majority of situations where the exception applies.
See Hudson v. Burke,
At the outset, Górecki errs by focusing solely on whether the special investigator position fits within the “policymaker” or “confidential” labels. She ignores the broader and determinative question of whether party or political affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the job.
See Thompson,
Gorecki’s decision to entirely eliminate the special investigator position after firing Carlson and Smith also makes it difficult for Górecki to establish that political affiliation is important to the-job. Compare id. at 433 (considering the job responsibilities of those who replaced the plaintiff investigators who were fired). In addition, the government official in Hudson testified -that he envisioned an expanded role for the investigator position, including additional investigatory duties involving sensitive political information. See id. In contrast, Górecki has failed to submit evidence that the investigators handled sensitive political information or even that she intended to use the job for that purpose in the future. It is possible to infer from Gorecki’s decision to eliminate the special investigator position not only that it was a non-patronage job, but also that the position was not important at all for the functioning of the office.
Turning to Gorecki’s focus on the policymaking and confidential monikers, as stated, we look both to the historical treatment of the job and to the work performed by those who presently hold the position to determine the inherent nature of the job. See
id.; Flenner,
Gorecki’s evidence, at best, shows that the position has the potential to impact policy. This is unhelpful, because all jobs under the authority of the state’s *466 attorney have this potential, depending upon how the state’s attorney uses the position. The special investigator position, like any other job at the state’s attorney office, requires a certain degree of confidentiality. Access to confidential information alone, however, does not mean that the job is confidential for purposes of applying the confidential employee exception to the ban on patronage dismissals. See id. at 665. Access to confidential files by a lower-level employee who, while not a policymaker, is openly politically hostile, may be reason for termination. However, as stated, the potential, speculative uses of the position are not significant in .this case because we are construing the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, and because Górecki has eliminated the position without submitting any evidence that she will resurrect it with a political focus.
Finally, based on this record, Górecki is not entitled to qualified immunity. The cloak of qualified immunity is removed from a government official if the plaintiffs show that the law prohibiting the government official’s conduct was “clearly established.”
Gregorich v. Lund,
Here, the plaintiffs have met their burden because this case is remarkably analogous to
Matlock,
Based on the record, Carlson and Smith had less discretion and responsibility than the legal investigator in
Matlock.
As far as we know from the summary judgment record, the main duties of Carlson and Smith were ministerial functions such as locating witnesses, serving subpoenas, transporting witnesses to court, and interviewing witnesses. On the rare occasions that they were required to submit a report, the report was merely factual and did not contain recommendations. In
Mat-lock,
we rejected the government’s arguments that the investigator was a policymaker because he exercised a great deal of discretion in how he carried out investigations, and we also rejected the claim that the position was confidential because the investigator had unlimited access to confidential files.
See id.
at 662. Essentially, Górecki is making the same argument here. Her claim of qualified immunity fails because the record shows that Carlson and Smith had jobs involving functions more ministerial than the functions of the investigator in
Matlock. See Upton v. Thompson,
In closing, we emphasize the limited nature of our holding that is dictated by the specific and somewhat limited facts of this record. A state’s attorney is clearly not prohibited from utilizing the position of special investigator as a policymaker or confidant so as to make political affiliation an appropriate consideration for the job. Here, the defendant has presented no evidence that the positions the two plaintiffs held rose to a level requiring political sensitivity. The nonessential quality of these *467 jobs is underscored by the fact that Gó-recki saw no need to fill the vacancies created.
III.
The district court properly denied Go-recki’s motion for summary judgment. Górecki has failed to submit sufficient evidence for us to conclude as a matter of law that party affiliation is an appropriate requirement for the special investigator position. Instead, substantial evidence shows that the position involves primarily ministerial tasks such as locating witnesses, serving subpoenas, transporting witnesses to court, and interviewing witnesses. Carlson and Smith have met their burden of identifying closely analogous case law prohibiting a very similar political firing of a legal investigator, and Górecki is thus not entitled to qualified immunity. For these reasons, we Affirm the decision of the district court.
Notes
. Górecki maintains that the position of special investigator, a statutory appointment by the state’s attorney, runs concurrently with the tenure of the appointing state's attorney. Thus, according to Górecki, she did not fire Carlson and Smith, but merely refused to reappoint them as special investigators. Gó-recki does acknowledge, however, that re'gardless of her statutory argument, "holdover” situations are possible. The plaintiffs claim that they were holdover employees and were fired by Górecki on December 1, 2000. This factual dispute is immaterial because
Rutan v. Republican Party of Ill.,
. The exposure of this information led to the Illinois bar authorities’ decision to suspend Górecki from the practice of law for a period of four months in 2003 due to statements she made in violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct.
See In re Gorecki,
