Sean T. Haddon by petition seeks review of the final decision of the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), which held that neither Mr. Haddon’s separation from employment at the Executive Residence at the White House (“Executive Residence”) nor the Executive Residence’s subsequent refusal to rehire him was in retaliation for Mr. Haddon’s exercise of protected rights. The Executive Residence by cross petition challenges the final decision of the EEOC that the Executive Residence engaged in reprisal discrimination against Mr. Had-don when it temporarily rescinded his access to the White House.
For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the EEOC’s decision that the Exec *1355 utive Residence did not discriminate against Mr. Haddon when it discharged him and subsequently decided not to rehire him. We reverse the EEOC’s decision that the Executive Residence violated Mr. Haddon’s rights when it temporarily rescinded his access to the White House.
I
Mr. Haddon began working as an assistant chef at the Executive Residence in July 1988. He alleged that, beginning around January 1992, he was discriminated against by Chief Usher Walters because of his engagement to an African American woman. Mr. Haddon alleged that he was passed over for a promotion to First Assistant Chef (or “Sous Chef’) in 1992 because of this discrimination. Mr. Haddon filed an EEO complaint in April 1993, alleging that this discriminatory reason prevented him from being promoted.
Around the time of his EEO complaint, Mr. Haddon filled out a background check form for updated security clearance on April 6, 1993. On May 20, the White House Counsel’s Office requested a Level II background investigation on Mr. Had-don. On May 27, 1993, the Washington Field Office of the FBI received a message from the FBI Headquarters requesting a Level II background investigation of Mr. Haddon. This message mentioned an “unspecified derogatory issue” related to Mr. Haddon’s employment at the Executive Residence and suggested that Walters would be a good person to talk to because he had knowledge of the matter.
FBI Agent Sculimbrene began investigating the matter on June 7. He talked with Walters and a number of other Executive Residence employees during the course of the investigation.. Some of Mr. Haddon’s co-workers referred to him as unstable or strange, and on June 16 one of them discussed threats that Mr. Haddon had allegedly made against the President.
On June 16, Sculimbrene met with Walters again to discuss his findings and whether Mr. Haddon might pose a threat to the First Family. Sculimbrene then talked with a White House Secret Service Agent, sharing the information he had learned, after which Mr. Haddon’s White House pass was temporarily revoked beginning June 16, 1993. Mr. Haddon was escorted out of the Executive Residence by Secret Service Agents. The Secret Service then conducted an investigation to determine whether Mr. Haddon' was a threat to the First Family, ultimately concluding that he was not.' His White House pass was restored to him on June 18, and he returned to work the following day.
The next major chain of events began in 1994, when the Executive Chef was asked to resign from his position, and the entire current kitchen staff was informed that they were being dismissed so the new Executive Chef could hire his own staff. In the end, all the former kitchen staff except for Mr. Haddon was rehired. Mr. Haddon did interview for a position with the new Executive Chef, who was not impressed by Mr. Haddon’s interview and declined to recommend him for a position.
While Chief Usher Walters was the person vested with final hiring authority, Walters stated that he made his decision not to hire Mr. Haddon because the new Executive Chef had not recommended him. However, it appears that Walters harbored some personal animosity toward Mr. Had-don, as evidenced by a memorandum entitled “Thoughts on White House Kitchen Staffing” that Walters had written in November 1993. This memorandum detailed Walters’ thoughts on White House kitchen renovation and staffing, and it recommended the termination of Mr. Haddon (“Chef Haddon must go!”).
*1356 After he was discharged and not rehired, Mr. Haddon filed another EEO complaint, alleging: (1) that he was denied a promotion because of his relationship with an African American woman, (2) that the temporary suspension of his White House pass was in retaliation for his first EEO complaint, and (3) that the reason for his discharge was also retaliatory. The Executive Residence denied the allegation of discrimination and cited security issues arising from Mr. Haddon’s alleged threats as the motivation for the suspension. Furthermore, the Executive Residence then claimed that even if Mr. Haddon had never brought an EEO complaint, he still would have been discharged and not rehired. According to the Executive Residence, Mr. Haddon had violated the First Family’s privacy by speaking to the media, made false allegations against his co-workers, filed lawsuits against his co-workers, and made threats against his co-workers. Combined with Mr. Haddon’s poor relationship with his co-workers and his poor job performance, these acts sufficed to make Mr. Haddon unfit for continued employment with the Executive Residence.
The Administrative Judge (“AJ”) to whom Mr. Haddon’s complaint was assigned conducted a three-day hearing in October 1997. The AJ concluded that the refusal of the Executive Residence to promote Mr. Haddon, and its decision to remove and not rehire him, were neither discriminatory nor in reprisal for his having earlier filed an EEO complaint. The AJ explicitly found that even if Mr. Had-don had never filed an EEO complaint, the Executive Residence would have removed him and not rehired him. The AJ did rule in Mr. Haddon’s favor on his complaint that his access to the White House had been stripped in reprisal for his earlier filing of an EEO complaint. The findings of fact and conclusions of law made by the AJ are contained in his written decision dated December 2,1997.
Both parties timely appealed the initial decision of the AJ to the EEOC, and on March 2, 2001, the EEOC issued its final decision, in which it affirmed the previous decisions of the AJ. On timely petition and cross petition, the parties appeal to this court. Mr. Haddon presses only his claim of unlawful discrimination in connection with his discharge from his position and the Executive Residence’s decision not to reemploy him. His claim of discrimination regarding his failure to achieve promotion to Sous Chef is waived, and therefore will not be discussed further.
II
This case arises under 2 U.S.C. § 1219, part of the Government Employee Rights Act of 1991, 2 U.S.C. §§ 1201-1224, which has since been repealed. However, the statute still applies to eases, such as this one, that were pending before October 7, 1997, the effective date of the repeal. See Presidential and Executive Office Accountability Act, Pub.L. No. 104-331, § 5(a)-(b), 110 Stat. 4072 (1996). Section 1219 applies to presidential appointees and extends the anti-discrimination protection of 2 U.S.C. § 1202 to them. Section 1202 requires that all personnel actions be made free from discrimination based on “race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, within the meaning of section 2000e-16 of Title 42.” Section 2000e-16 is part of Title VII, so section 1219 in effect subjects personnel actions involving presidential appointees to certain requirements of Title VII.
Under 2 U.S.C. § 1219(a)(3)(A), a party may appeal a final order of the EEOC to this court. However, there is a question of whether 2 U.S.C. § 1219 extends to claims of retaliation. Section 2000e-16, the anti-discrimination provision of Title VII incorporated by sections 1202 and 1219, is silent
*1357
about retaliation claims, dealing only with discrimination based on race or gender. The section of Title VII that deals with retaliation claims is 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3, which is mentioned in neither 2 U.S.C. § 1202 nor 2 U.S.C. § 1219. This appears to suggest that this court may lack jurisdiction over a retaliation claim made by a presidential appointee. However, as noted by the Executive Residence, which is not challenging jurisdiction, other courts have held that Congress incorporated the retaliation prohibition from section 2000e-3 into section 2000e-16.
See Ayon v. Sampson,
Ill
Our standard of review is set out in 2 U.S.C. § 1219(a)(3)(C). We must set aside a final order if it is: (1) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not consistent with law, (2) not made consistent with required procedures, or (3) unsupported by substantial evidence. Id. Otherwise, we must affirm the decision of the EEOC.
We must contend with and decide two issues. First is whether the EEOC was correct in affirming the AJ’s decision that the Executive Residence did not retaliate against Mr. Haddon when it discharged him and did not rehire him. To determine this we must consider both the correct legal standard for burden of proof and whether the Executive Residence’s reasons for discharging Mr. Haddon violated his constitutional rights. The second issue before us is whether the EEOC was correct in affirming the AJ’s decision that the Executive Residence retaliated against Mr. Haddon when it escorted him from the White House and temporarily suspended his White House pass. Since Mr. Haddon may only complain about discriminatory acts in connection with adverse personnel actions,
see Hashimoto v. Dalton,
Legal Standard for Burden of Proof
Mr. Haddon alleges that the Executive Residence discharged him and subsequently declined to rehire him in retaliation for his filing of an EEO complaint. He claims that the ÁJ erroneously evaluated this issue under the prima facie case/burden shifting approach set forth in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
In
Price Waterhouse,
the Supreme Court held that Title VII was “meant to condemn even those decisions based on a mixture of legitimate and illegitimate considerations.”
The evidence that Mr. Haddon sets forth as “direct evidence” of retaliation is not terribly direct at all, and does not qualify under any of the definitions of direct evidence. Mr. Haddon first points to a memorandum from Walters to the First Lady’s Chief of Staff entitled “Thoughts on White House Kitchen Staffing” that refers to the EEO complaint. However, Walters, in testimony the AJ found credible, said the memorandum was intended only to make the First Lady’s Chief of Staff aware of the circumstances and express his disagreement with Mr. Haddon’s allegations. This memorandum gave Walters’s opinions on the strengths and weaknesses of the kitchen staff and recommended that they all be dismissed so the new chef could select his own staff. In the memorandum, Walters referred to Mr. Haddon as a problem that “must go.” Nothing in the memorandum appears discriminatory or retaliatory on its face. It is not direct evidence.
*1359 Mr. Haddon’s assertion that statements by new Executive Chef Scheib qualify as direct evidence is also incorrect. First, it was Walters rather than Scheib who made the final hiring decision; Scheib made only recommendations. Second, the AJ credited Scheib’s testimony that he did not consider the EEO complaint in his decision not to recommend Mr. Haddon for a position. All the evidence pointed to by Mr. Haddon requires some inferences to get at a retaliatory motive for his discharge and does not qualify as direct evidence. Therefore it was not error to apply the McDonnell Douglas approach rather than the Price Waterhouse approach.
Under the
McDonnell Douglas
framework, the plaintiff must first make out a prima facie case of discrimination.
McDonnell Douglas,
Under the McDonnell Douglas approach, the AJ concluded that Mr. Had-don’s discharge was not retaliatory, determining that Mr. Haddon had successfully made out a prima facie case but that the reasons asserted by the Executive Residence were legitimate and not pretextual. However, even if the AJ erred by applying the McDonnell Douglas test instead of the Price Waterhouse test, the AJ also made an explicit finding that the “[respondent has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that even if Complainant had never brought an EEO complaint, he would have been separated.” This finding shows that the Executive Residence’s action would have satisfied the Price Waterhouse standard that Mr. Haddon advocates. While the EEOC opinion did not discuss which evidentiary standard was proper, the EEOC reviewed the AJ’s fact findings thoroughly and concluded that the decision was supported by the evidence, noting the AJ’s finding that “even though the Chief Usher wanted complainant removed, the preponderance of the evidence showed that complainant would have been removed for other reasons as well.” We find no error in this decision and affirm.
The judicial estoppel argument that Mr. Haddon makes in his reply brief is without merit. He argues that the Executive Residence cannot assert that the
Price Water-house
standard still apples in mixed-motive retaliation cases despite changes to Title VII in 1991 that apparently made the standard more difficult to meet. However, Mr. Haddon is actually arguing
for
application of the
Price Waterhouse
standard, so we fail to see why he is contesting this point. Regardless, judicial estoppel would not apply in this case. The Executive Residence did originally argue in court that Mr. Haddon could not bring a straight Title VII claim, and won that case.
See Haddon v. Walters,
First Amendment Claim
Mr. Haddon alleges that some of the reasons given by the Executive Residence for discharging and then not rehiring him were not legitimate reasons because they violated his constitutional rights. In this regard, he points to statements he made about the First Family in the media and the lawsuits he filed against his co-workers. Mr. Haddon claims that the statements he made to the media (in interviews with The Washington Post and radio stations) were protected First Amendment speech for which he may not be terminated. The statements he made dealt with the First Family’s food preferences, the staffs refusal to heed the President’s food allergies, the President’s lateness for dinner, and the poor service the staff was giving the First Family.
In order for a public employee’s speech to qualify for First Amendment protection, this court has noted that:
The Supreme Court of the United States has established a two-part test to determine whether the speech of a public employee is protected under the First Amendment. The court must determine whether the speech addresses a matter of public concern and if so, whether the government’s interest in the effective and efficient fulfillment of its responsibilities outweighs the employee’s right to speak.
Henry v. Dep’t of the Navy,
Mr. Haddon argues that “[i]ntentionally poor service by government employees, and serving foods which adversely affect the health of the President ... are unquestionably matters of public concern.” However, under this logic, nearly any private detail concerning the First Family could be turned into a matter of public concern. That cannot be the law. Further, Mr. Haddon’s public statements went beyond simply expressing his concern for the President’s health and the poor service given to the President by the staff. He also discussed the President’s lateness for meals and related details of specific incidents that would seem unnecessary to a discussion of the President’s health or the staffs poor service. We conclude that the *1361 statements Mr. Haddon made to the media are not related to matters of public concern and are thus not statements for which a public employee is entitled to protection under the First Amendment.
Even if we were to conclude that Mr. Haddon’s statements related to matters of public concern, the balancing of interests required by the second part of the First Amendment test this court articulated in
Henry
favors the Executive Residence. If the “interest of the agency as employer in promoting the efficiency of the public service it performs ... outweigh[s] [the employee’s] interest in speaking on a public issue without fear of retaliatory dismissal,” then the employee’s speech is not protected.
Brown v. Dep’t of Transp., Fed. Aviation Admin.,
Even if an employee’s speech is- on a matter of public concern, a government employer is entitled to restrict that speech if it can carry its burden of proving that the interest of the public employee as a citizen in commenting on the matter is outweighed by the interest of the state, as employer, in promoting effective and efficient public service.
Gustafson v. Jones,
As a second leg of his First Amendment argument, Mr. Haddon points to the suits he filed while serving at the Executive Residence and argues these suits cannot be used as legitimate reasons for his discharge. Those suits fall in two categories: first, his two EEO complaints, and second, civil suits that he brought against co-workers in the Executive Residence. Suits in the second category did not involve the EEO complaints.
The Executive Residence cited the suits brought by Mr. Haddon as one of the reasons it would have dismissed and not rehired him, because of the disruption caused in the workplace after the filing of the suits — not because the suits themselves were filed. Mr. Haddon does not take issue with the allegation by his employer that his many lawsuits did indeed disrupt affairs in the workplace. Instead, he contends that the ripple effect on workplace morale and efficiency resulting from the filing of the lawsuits is irrelevant in law, and that even if such ripple effects flow from the filing of the lawsuits, the Executive Residence cannot claim an innocent, non-EEO related motive in defending its decision to remove and not rehire him.
We agree with Mr. Haddon that insofar as his argument is connected to the filing of the EEO complaints, he has some authority on his side. The Fourth Circuit has held that an agency cannot claim as an innocent reason for adverse action collateral consequences of the filing of EEO complaints.
See Curl v. Reavis,
The significant disruption caused in the Executive Residence by Mr. Haddon’s lawsuits, however, ensued more from the suits he brought against named co-workers, who necessarily were distracted and even perhaps distraught by the filing of
*1362
the suits and the evident workplace debate thereby engendered. These suits are not EEO-related. For example, the suit Mr. Haddon filed against one co-worker stemmed from that co-worker’s alleged threat to cause Mr. Haddon physical harm. Mr. Haddon cites us no precedent, and our independent research has found none, to support the proposition that an employer may not take account of disruption caused by non-EEO complaints when making decisions as to whether the filer of the complaints has created a workplace situation that is adverse to efficient accomplishment of legitimate workplace objectives. Indeed, precedent points in the other direction, holding that the preservation of close working relationships and prevention of “disruption” in the workplace can vitiate claims of First Amendment infractions when employees complain publicly about working conditions.
Connick,
When it comes to EEO complaints themselves, the law may be generously protective of the EEO filing. But when the employee engages in garden-variety civil litigation against co-workers, we see no concomitant policy reason to enlarge the umbrella of protection for the employee. So long as the employer has not taken action against the employee solely for having filed lawsuits, which is not alleged with regard to any of the suits here, we think Mr. Haddon’s First Amendment challenge pales to insignificance. Though there may be a kernel of truth in his allegation that the workplace furor caused by the EEO complaints is irrelevant, this kernel cannot overcome the Executive Residence’s legitimate consideration of the aftermath of the other complaints to form a view about the viability of Mr. Haddon’s career in the Executive Residence.
Adverse Employment Action
If the removal of Mr. Haddon from the White House and suspension of his pass does not qualify as an actionable adverse employment action, then the finding that this act was retaliatory must be reversed. The Executive Residence argues that the AJ erred in not requiring Mr. Haddon to show that the suspension of his White House pass qualified as an adverse employment action, and that the EEOC erred in failing to address the issue and correct it. We agree. The AJ, relying on
United States Postal Service Bd. of Govs. v. Aikens,
This court generally addresses adverse employment actions in the context of appeals from the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB), where adverse employment actions are defined by statute. However, the adverse employment action at issue in this case arises under 2 U.S.C. § 1219, which incorporates Title VII law. Therefore we will look to how other circuits have defined what qualifies as an adverse employment action in Title VII cases. An adverse employment action is “a tangible change in working conditions that produces a material employment disadvantage.”
Gagnon v. Sprint Corp.,
Internal investigations such as the one at issue here generally do not qualify as adverse employment actions.
See, e.g., Von Gunten v. Maryland,
Although MSPB law does not apply to this case, it does provide an extensive body of precedent that may be looked to for analogy. An analogy to MSPB law here suggests that Mr. Haddon’s removal and two-day suspension of his pass did not qualify as an adverse employment action. Under the law applicable to most federal employees, only a suspension of greater than fourteen days qualifies as an adverse employment action entitling the employee to petition the MSPB for review.
See 5
U.S.C. § 7512 (2000);
Jennings v. Merit Sys. Prot. Bd.,
CONCLUSION
On the first issue, whether the EEOC applied the correct legal standard when it determined that the Executive Residence had not discriminated against Mr. Haddon when he was discharged from his position and not rehired, we conclude that the answer is yes. On the second issue, whether the EEOC was correct in affirming the AJ’s decision that the Executive Residence retaliated against Mr. Haddon when it escorted him from the White House and temporarily suspended his White House pass, we conclude that the answer is no. An actionable adverse employment action is required to find illegal retaliation, and the action here was not an actionable adverse employment decision. Accordingly, we affirm-in-part and reverse-in-part the decision of the EEOC.
COSTS
No costs.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART AND REVERSED-IN-PART.
