Rоxanne Moffitt Pignanelli ran for the Pueblo School District Board of Education in 2003 but lost the election. A middle school drama teacher at the time, she blamed her employer, Pueblo School District No. 60, for her loss, and sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violations of her constitutional rights. Pignanelli claimed the school district and its representatives, including the superintendent of schools, violated the First Amendment, Equal Protection Clause, and Due Process Clause by causing her to lose the school board election and then failing to renew her one-year teaching contract.
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Defendants on all claims, and Pignanelli appealed. We agree with the district court that the Defendants are entitled to summary judgment. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we therefore AFFIRM.
I. Factual Background
Viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiff-Appellant Pignanelli,
see Clanton
*1216
v. Cooper,
The school district hired Pignanelli in August 2002, to serve as a middle school drama teacher under a one-year contract. District Deputy Superintendent John Mus-so negotiated with Pignanelli for her salary and benefits package, and ultimately placed Pignanelli into a higher pay grade than her educational qualifications and teaching experience supported at the time. Despite this discrepancy, the contract was approved by the school board and Pignanelli began her tenure as a part-time teacher in the district. In August 2003, Pignanelli was rehired, again under a one-year contract, to continue in the same position.
A week after her rehiring, Pignanelli announced her candidacy for the upcoming school board election. One of the issues that developed in the campaign was whether District Superintendent Joyce Bales should be removed. Pignanelli was perceived by some, including Bales, as a Bales-opponent — and someone who would vote for Bales’s removal. Becausе of this perception, Bales sought to discredit Pignanelli’s candidacy and cause her to lose the election. Bales did this by combing through Pignanelli’s personnel file, and then initiating a school board review of her salary and qualifications. On September 23, 2003, at a confidential executive session of the board, Pignanelli’s salary was reduced to the level her experience and education supported.
Soon after the executive session, The Pueblo Chieftain, a local newspaper, reported Pignanelli’s salary rеduction. One of the reporters for the Chieftain made a request under Colorado’s Open Records Act for Pignanelli’s personnel records, which were duly handed over by the board. These records were then made public through publication in the Chieftain. At the same time, both Pignanelli and Superintendent Bales were interviewed by the newspaper for additional, related stories. The controversy over Pignanelli’s salary and her concomitant candidacy for the school board fed intо several stories in the local media up through the election day in November 2003. At the election, the voters chose not to elect Pignanelli.
Despite her election defeat, Pignanelli maintained her position as a part-time teacher through the end of the 2003-2004 school year. At the end of the year, Pignanelli’s part-time drama spot was changed to a full-time language arts, speech, and drama position. Pignanelli was not qualified for this new position, and was not hirеd for it. As she had been working under a one-year contract, the district had no contractual obligation to rehire her.
Based on her failure to obtain office and the loss of her part-time teaching position, Pignanelli determined her constitutional rights had been violated. She therefore brought suit under § 1983 against the school district, Superintendent Bales, and the president of the school board. The district court granted summary judgment to all three Defendants.
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Seegmiller v. LaVerhin City,
Pignanelli appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants on all the claims she raised in the district court. Interpreting her briefing as best we can, Pignanelli alleges she can overcome the summary judgment hurdle on her claims alleging (1) violations of due process, (2) First Amendment employment retaliation, and (3) violations of equal protection. We conclude Pignanelli has waived review of her due process claim by failing to cite any legal authority for the claim in her appellate brief, waived review of her First Amendment retaliation claim by failing to argue it in the district court, and cannot obtain relief on her equal protection claim because it fails on the merits.
A. Due Process
Pignanelli has waived appellate review of any due process claim she may have alleged against the Defendants in the district court. Although Pignanelli asks us to reverse the grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants, she must do more than simply request reversal for us to consider the merits of her claim.
See
Fed. R.App. P. 28(a);
Becker v. Kroll,
B. First Amendment Employment Retaliation
As with her due process claim, we will not consider the merits of Pignanelli’s First Amendment employment retaliation claim. Pignanelli argues for the first time on appeal that she meets the four-step analysis, set forth in
Dill v. City of Edmond,
for public employees asserting a claim of retaliation for exercising their First Amendment rights.
See Dill v. City of Edmond,
By failing to argue
Dill
in the district court, however, Pignanelli has waived review of the issue in this court. We do not review claims on appeal that were not presented below.
Wolfe v. Barnhart,
Because Pignanelli failed to argue her First Amendment employment retaliation claim below, the district court did not have an opportunity to address the claim and we will not consider it for the first time on appeal.
C. Equal Protection
Finally, Pignanelli — essentially repackaging a First Amendment speech right claim — argues two distinct harms were inflicted upon her in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. She complains of (1) her loss in the school board election in November 2003, and (2) her loss of salary and position as a teacher at Pueblo School District No. 60 after the 2003-2004 school year. Both harms, she asserts, result from the Defendants’ “intentional or purposeful discrimination ... designed] to favor one individual or class over another.” Aplt. Br. 30. To put it another way, Pignanelli asserts the Defendants violated the Equal Protection Clause by treating her differently than similarly situated individuals (presumably other district employees) during her run for elected office and in her position as a teacher in the district.
After carefully considering the applicable law, we reject both of the separate, but overlapping grounds Pignanelli says support her equal protection cause of action. First, the three cases she cites in the context of her election loss are so factually distinguishable as to provide no support for a cause of action tied to the loss. Second, clear Supremе Court precedent precludes a public employee from making out an equal protection claim on the sole basis that she was treated differently by her employer.
1. Election Loss
Pignanelli alleges the Defendants violated the Constitution because they “engaged in an effort to defeat her.” Aplt. Br. 29. She complains that Superintendent Bales leaked information to The Pueblo Chieftain in a manner that “suggested an improper, if not salacious, relationship” between her and Deputy Superintеndent Musser and “destroyed Ms. Pignanelli’s candidacy.” Aplt. Br. 20, 8. 1 Because of Bales’s opposition to her candidacy, Pignanelli argues, she did not have a fair chance of winning the election.
A review of the three election cases Pignanelli cites reveals the obvious deficiency in her claim. In fact, the eases she relies
upon
— Snowden
v. Hughes,
In
Snowden v. Hughes,
for example, the facts painted a picture of violations of state election law by the officials charged with administering it. There, petitioner alleged “members of the [Illinois] State Primary Canvassing Board, acting as such but in violation of state law, have ... deprived petitioner of nomination and election as representativе in the state assembly.”
The Seventh Cirсuit cases relied upon by Pignanelli were also based upon alleged misdeeds by state officials that called into question the legitimacy of an election.
See Smith,
The factual differences between the election cases cited by Pignanelli and her own case are vast — -and illustrate the weakness of her legal theory. First, the school district Defendants were not election officials in control of an election; they were public school employees. The Defendants had no contrоl over who got on the ballot or who received votes in the election. Second, Pignanelli was not prevented from actually running for office or receiving votes in an election. She persevered during the campaign, remaining on the ballot and receiving some share of the votes at the polls. Third, Pignanelli makes no allegation of election irregularities or illegalities. The school board election, by all accounts, was fairly run, and voters had a real choice between real candidates.
Cf. Smith,
Finally, any injury suffered by Pignanelli resulted from the voters not electing her rather than the Defendants’ alleged misdeeds in trying to defeat her. The school district voters — not the Defendants — directly caused Pignanelli’s election loss.
Cf. Habecker v. Estes Park,
Pignanelli argues for the adoption of a rule that would subject public employees to liability whenever they speak in favor of or against a candidate for office. But this rule has no basis in the Equal Protection Clause; and further, runs directly contrary to the intent of the First Amendment.
See, e.g., Connick,
Finally, it is worth noting all the information disclosed by the Defendants to The Pueblo Chieftain was public information. *1220 The only documents disclosed were Pignanelli’s resume, job application, and a memorandum written by Musso calculating her salary. At oral argument, Pignanelli conceded that under Colorado law the school board was required to disclose these documents upon request. See Colorado Open Records Act, Colo.Rev.Stat. § 24-72-201, et seq. (2003). Board members were similarly free to give the newspaper certain information stemming from their executive session. Although Colorado law says the record of executive sessions is not open to public inspection, it goes no further than that. See Colo.Rev.Stat. § 24-6-402(2)(d.5)(I)(D) (2003). In short, Pignanelli has failed to show the Defendants acted in contravention of any state law when they released certain information to the Chieftain. Any alleged leak of sensitive information to the newspaper therefore provides no basis for her equal protection claim.
A Job Loss
Separate and apart from her claim based on her loss of the election, Pignanelli also complains of her loss of employment with the school district. Given the Supreme Court’s recent holding in
Engquist v. Oregon Department of Agriculture,
however, her claim based on a “class-of-one” equal protection theory must fail.
See Engquist v. Oregon Dept. of Agrie.,
— U.S. -,
In
Engquist,
an Oregon state employee brought an equal protection claim against the state after she was laid off, alleging she lost her job because of “arbitrary, vindictive, and malicious reasons” directed only at her.
The court of appеals reversed in relevant part, holding the class-of-one theory of equal protection did not apply in the public employment arena. The court reasoned that allowing such suits to proceed would “completely invalidate the practice of public at-will employment.”
Engquist v. Oregon Dept. of Agrie.,
The Supreme Court has long recognized “a crucial difference, with respect to constitutional analysis, between the government exercising ‘the power to regulate or license, as lawmaker,’ and the government acting ‘as proprietor, to managе [its] internal operation.’ ”
Id.
at 2151 (quoting
Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers v. McElroy,
The Equal Protection Clause is concerned with governmental classifications that “affect some groups of citizens differently than others,” especially those in “an identifiable group.”
Engquist,
Following the clear commands of Engquist, it is obvious the equal protection theory Pignanelli relies on to challenge the non-renewal of her employment contract must fail. The board’s decision to allow her contract to lapse rather than rehire her into a position for which she was unqualified does not raise constitutional concerns. Even if the “unequal treatment was not rationally relatеd to a legitimate government purpose,” the board’s decision — acting in its role as proprietor and employer — does not constitute a violation of equal protection. See id. at 2157. In fact, the Supreme Court has “never found the Equal Protection Clause implicated in the specific circumstance where, as here, government employers are alleged to have made an individualized, subjective personnel decision in a seemingly arbitrary or irrational manner.” Id. at 2155; see also id. at 2156 (noting “recognition of a class-of-one theory of equal protection in the public employment context ... is simply contrary to the concept of at-will employment”). In accordance with the Supreme Court’s precedent, we must reject Pignanelli’s theory of unequal treatment.
It is true, as Pignanelli points out, one of our previous decisions has already analyzed the class-of-one equal protection theory in the public employment context.
See Bartell v. Aurora Pub. Schs.,
*1222
To the extent
Bartell
conflicts with
Engquist,
it no longer represents the law. In
Engquist,
the Supreme Court resolved a circuit split involving the scope of the class-of-one theory — and
Bartell
was on the losing side.
See Engquist,
In laying down this rule, we join several other circuits that have already recognized the implications of
Engquist. See, e.g., Appel v. Spiridon,
Finally, even assuming she could have pleaded a valid cause of action, Pignanelli has failed to develop disputed material facts sufficient to survive summary judgment. During the 2002-2003 and 2003-2004 school years, Pignanelli was employed as a part-time drama teacher in one of the district’s middle schools. Responding to changes in federal law, however, the part-time position was eliminated and a new full-time position, covering a wider range of subjects, was created. The' Defendants presented evidence in the district court, which Pignanelli failed to rebut, showing Pignanelli was not qualified for the new position. Therefore, quite apart from her school board candidacy playing a role in her not receiving the new job. she did not get the job because she was not qualified for it. Given these undisputed facts, Pignanelli has failed to tie the loss of her job to an equal protection violation.
In sum, the equal protection claims Pignanelli brought against the Defendants based upon her election loss and her job loss cannot withstand summary judgment.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM. 6
Notes
. Despite her characterization of Defendants' conduct, Pignanelli did not bring state law claims of libel, defamation, or invasion of privacy against them.
. A colloquialism coined by Finley Peter Dunne.
. Tenth Circuit cases have dealt with the class-of-one equal protection theory in other contexts, as well.
See, e.g., Bruner v. Baker,
. For example, based on the facts she alleges, Pignanelli may have, made out a traditional claim of First Amendment employment retaliation.
See, e.g., Deschenie v. Bd. of Ed. of Cent. Consol. Sch. Dist. No. 22,
. The text of this opinion has been circulated to all of the active judges of the court and there is no objection.
. Defendants also argued they were entitled to summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Because we conclude Defendants did not violate the Constitution, we need not resolve this question.
See Saucier v. Katz,
