JAMES DICKSON PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs Clara B. Jones and Edward M. Sedwick brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Sheriff Ray M. Dodson for wrongfully discharging them from the Sheriff’s Department because of their political affiliations and expressions. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs on both claims. On Dodson’s motion for judgment n.o.v., the district court upheld the verdict in favor of Jones1 but granted judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the claim by Sedwick. On cross-appeals by the aggrieved parties, we conclude that the court failed properly to apply controlling doctrine in critical respects prejudicial to Sedwick on his claim and to Dodson on Jones’s claim. On that basis we vacate the judgment and remand for limited new trials as to both claims.
I
This controversy arises from an imbroglio of criminal activity and political machination in the Page County, Virginia, Sheriff’s Department in the mid-1970’s. The only undisputed facts of the case are that Jones and Sedwick, two Democratic department employees hired by an incumbent Democratic Sheriff, were “terminated” by the Republican successor to that office. The reasons for the discharges and other issues were hotly disputed by the parties but were resolved by the jury in favor of Jones and Sedwick.
[1331]*1331Sedwiek, a lifelong Democrat active at times in party affairs, joined the Page County Sheriffs Department in 1968 as a regular deputy under the then newly-elected Democratic Sheriff, Kenneth E. Kerk-hoff. Sedwiek and Kerkhoff had been friends before this time, and this friendship plus Sedwick’s meritorious service to the department prompted Kerkhoff to elevate Sedwiek to “Chief Deputy” with a rank of “lieutenant” in 1973. The promotion was more illusory than real, however, because it seemingly entailed nothing more than adding lieutenant’s bars to the collar of Sed-wick’s uniform. Sedwiek was given no additional duties or responsibilities and his salary was unaffected.
In the mid-1970’s, the department was scandalized by allegations that acts of corruption and criminal activity were being committed by members of the department. In January of 1976, the Page County Circuit Court removed Kerkhoff as sheriff and appointed Sedwiek as interim sheriff. One month later, the Circuit Court appointed Dodson, a Republican, to replace Sedwiek as acting sheriff until the regular elections were held in November. The contested discharges in this case took place during the time Dodson was acting sheriff — a time when politics and the Sheriff’s Department were hotly discussed topics in Page County. Dodson was a candidate for the office of sheriff in the November election.
Aware of the political climate prevailing at the time of his ascension to office, Dodson informed all employees of the department that they were to stay out of politics, to concentrate on their work, and to leave political matters to him. Dodson testified at trial that he meant this prohibition to apply only while the employees were on duty; he did not care what political activity the employees engaged in while off duty. Dodson also testified that he abided by his own regulation, campaigning only during off-duty hours and using his personal ear, and that he did not ask his employees to campaign or vote for him.
Dodson retained Sedwiek during this interregnum, and there has not been any question about the adequacy of Sedwick’s professional performance. On September 15, 1976, however, Dodson confronted Sed-wick with allegations that Sedwiek had been actively campaigning against him. Dodson testified that he had been advised that Sedwiek, while on duty, had organized and attended a political meeting at Sed-wick’s home. The meeting, also attended by former Sheriff Kerkhoff, two former deputies, and Norris Richards, another current deputy of the department, was allegedly designed to promote Kerkhoff’s candidacy for sheriff as an independent.
The parties’ recollection of events at this point varied widely. Dodson claimed that he had heard of this meeting only several days before he confronted Sedwiek on September 15. On that day, Dodson first asked Norris Richards about the meeting; Richards allegedly admitted attending the meeting but left once he realized it was a political meeting. (Richards did not testify at trial.) Dodson testified that he did not fire Richards because Richards had been honest with him.
Several hours later, Dodson asked Sed-wick about the meeting. Dodson testified that Sedwiek denied that the meeting ever took place; when told of Richard’s “confession,” Sedwiek became verbally abusive and declared he would do as he pleased and that he hoped Kerkhoff would win the next election for sheriff. Upon hearing this, Dodson handed Sedwiek a previously-typed letter terminating his employment for campaigning against him: “I feel that since you have been campaigning against me I must in all good faith to the Republican Party and myself release you from duty.”2
[1332]*1332Sedwick, not surprisingly, recalled all this differently. Sedwick’s version was that Dodson did ask him about the meeting, but Sedwick never denied (or admitted) attending it. Dodson then asked Sedwick to resign, and when Sedwick refused to do so Dodson presented him with the letter of discharge. Sedwick testified at trial that the meeting was held in late June of 1976— well over two months before Dodson fired him — and that the meeting occurred while Sedwick was off duty. Sedwick also testified that no campaigning or political activity took place; rather, the meeting was simply a social gathering of old friends who engaged in some general conversation about politics while enjoying beer and pretzels out in the carport.
At trial, Dodson claimed that he discharged Sedwick for actively campaigning against him at this political meeting while on duty. Dodson did not know what had actually occurred at the meeting and on cross-examination he stated repeatedly that he did not know whether Sedwick was actually on duty or not. He also made no effort to determine by checking duty logs or other sources whether Sedwick was on or off duty at the time, but rather relied on the word of an informer (who had not attended the meeting).
On September 26, 1976, less than two weeks after Sedwick was fired, Dodson also discharged Clara Jones from the department. Jones had joined the department under Sheriff Kerkhoff in 1970 as a dispatcher, an unsworn position. She was an active Democrat and a supporter of Kerk-hoff even while employed by Dodson. As with Sedwick’s discharge, the parties are in dispute over the circumstances surrounding Jones’s discharge.
Dodson testified that in the late afternoon of September 26, a deputy at the office called him at home to inform him that several women were in the office paying a social visit on Jones. According to Dodson, this was in violation of his policy against non-business visitors loafing in the office. Dodson went to the office to ask Jones about the visitors and Jones replied that she could talk to whom she pleased. During the conversation Jones also said she hoped that Kerkhoff would get re-elected and that she would work for his success. Dodson assumed that Jones was working for Kerkhoff and became “agitated” by her response; he told her that she was fired but refused to give her a letter like the one given to Sedwick.
Jones’s version again differs markedly from Dodson’s. Jones testified that the women came to the office uninvited on the night of the 25th around midnight and that they engaged in some general, non-political conversation with Jones and several others in the office for about fifteen minutes. When Dodson asked her the next day about the visit, he gently remonstrated with her for having the visitors and then inquired who she planned to vote for. When she replied “Kerkhoff,” he got angry and fired her.
Dodson’s claimed reason for firing Jones was for violating the no-visitor rule and then being insubordinate.3 This was dis[1333]*1333puted by Jones’s testimony that she had never been informed of any such policy and had in fact been present when Dodson removed “No Loafing” signs that Kerkhoff had installed in the office. Dodson’s own regulations manual, published several months later, contained no regulation against visitors. And the deputy sheriff who was present with the two uninvited visitors and then informed Dodson also violated the “no visitor” policy by not asking the women to leave, but no adverse action was taken against him.
The court submitted the case to the jury for return of a special verdict.4 The jury specially found that both plaintiffs were performing their work satisfactorily; that they were terminated solely because of their political affiliation or beliefs; that Dodson did not act in good faith in firing them; and that the terminations were not reasonably related to the efficient operation of the department. On this basis damages were awarded to both plaintiffs. On Dodson’s motion for judgment n.o.v. for trial errors, the district court declined to set aside the Jones verdict but granted the motion as to the Sedwick claim on the basis that
because of the close and intimate relationships which exist between a sheriff and his chief deputy, defendant’s discharge of the plaintiff from his position as the chief deputy sheriff of the Page County Sheriff’s Department was properly related to the efficient, effective operation of the Department. No substantial evidence supports the jury’s verdict for plaintiff.
Dodson and Sedwick then took these cross appeals from the respective final judgments against them.
II
These cross-appeals raise difficult constitutional and procedural issues growing out of the claims of two public employees that they have been discharged in violation of first amendment rights. The difficulty is compounded by the fact that controlling doctrine — both substantive and procedural — is still evolving and is by no means yet authoritatively settled in all its critical aspects. Indeed, following trial and our hearing of this appeal, the Supreme Court has made important further refinements or clarifications — both substantive and procedural — in that doctrine. See Connick v. Myers, -- U.S. --, 103 S.Ct. 1684, 75 L.Ed.2d 708 (1983) (5 to 4 decision). Our first task is to draw from the critical Supreme Court decisions culminating in Connick the principles that control decision here, keeping in mind that neither the parties nor the two courts so far engaged in the process had the benefit of Connicks most recent teaching prior to submission of the case to this court.
Without attempting an exegesis of all the relevant decisions — a process recently undertaken in the majority and dissenting opinions in Connick — we draw from those decisions the following principles critical to decision here.
First, the root principle, itself of relatively recent origin, is that a state cannot condition public employment on a basis that infringes the employee’s constitutionally [1334]*1334protected interest in freedom of expression. Keyishian v. Board of Regents, 385 U.S. 589, 605-06, 87 S.Ct. 675, 684-85, 17 L.Ed.2d 629 (1967); see Connick, -- U.S. at --, 103 S.Ct. at 1687.
Second, under this general principle, a public employee may not be discharged5 for the expression of ideas on any “matter of legitimate public concern,” Pickering v. Board of Education, 391 U.S. 563, 88 S.Ct. 1731, 20 L.Ed,2d 811 (1968), whether in a public forum, id., or in private conversation with the employer, Givhan v. Western Line Consolidated School District, 439 U.S. 410, 99 S.Ct. 693, 58 L.Ed.2d 619 (1979), unless the public employer’s “interest in the effective and efficient fulfillment of its responsibilities to the public,” outweighs the employee’s interest in free expression of the ideas. Connick, -- U.S. at-- - --, 103 S.Ct. at 1692-93.
Whether a particular expression was, in the first place, upon a matter of legitimate public concern is a question of law for the courts, id. at -- & n. 7, 103 S.Ct. at 1690 & n. 7; it is not a question of fact. If the expression was not upon a matter of legitimate public concern, no first amendment protection against discharge exists (though other first amendment protections may), id. at --, 103 S.Ct. at 1690.
If the expression was upon a matter of legitimate public concern, the further question whether the employee’s interest in making it may nevertheless be outweighed by the public employer’s “interest in effective and efficient fulfillment of its responsibilities to the public” is also a question of law for the courts, id. at -- n. 10, 103 S.Ct. at 1692 n. 10. Resolution of this question requires striking the proper constitutional balance between the opposing interests, and this in turn requires weighing the degree of “public concern” legitimately had in the particular expression of ideas — as measured by the expression’s content and context — against the degree to which the employee’s conduct is justifiably viewed by the public employer as an actual or threatened disruption of the conduct of government operations for which the employer is responsible. See id. -- U.S. at -- - --, 103 S.Ct. at 1692-93. On this basis, expressive conduct which “[Touches] upon matters of public concern in only a most limited sense ... does not require [a public employer to] tolerate action which he reasonably believe[s] would disrupt [his office], undermine his authority, and destroy close working relationships,” id. at --, 103 5. Ct. at 1693-94 (intra-office questionnaire respecting political pressures felt by fellow employees), while expressive conduct, concededly disruptive to some degree, which touches directly upon matters of grave public concern may not justify another discharge. See, e.g., Pickering (open criticism of public employer’s allocation of public funds and method of informing public of revenue needs).
In making this balancing inquiry, the burden is upon the public employer to convince the court that the balance tips in favor of the governmental interest. Id. at -- n. 10, 103 S.Ct. at 1692 n. 10, 51 U.S.L.W. at 4439 n. 10.
Third, neither may a public employee be discharged solely because of the employee’s political party affiliation, unless the employer can show that affiliation with the employer’s party is essential to the employee’s effectiveness in carrying out the responsibilities of the position held. Branti v. Finkel, 445 U.S. 507, 518, 100 S.Ct. 1287, 1294, 63 L.Ed.2d 574 (1980); Elrod v. Burns, 427 U.S. 347, 96 S.Ct. 2673, 49 L.Ed.2d 547 (1976).6
[1335]*1335Fourth, notwithstanding proof (or concession) that a public employee’s discharge was based at least in part upon overt expressive conduct, party affiliation, or both, an employer may yet avoid liability for violation of protected first amendment rights by proving that the discharge would have been made in any event for reasons unrelated to any exercise of protected first amendment rights. Mt. Healthy City Board of Education v. Doyle, 429 U.S. 274, 97 S.Ct. 568, 50 L.Ed.2d 471 (1977)7 The burden to prove this avoidance defense is upon the public employer. Id. at 287, 97 S.Ct. at 576.
Ill
From this it is obvious that in this type case it makes a great difference — indeed a difference likely to be dispositive — whether a discharge was solely for reasons of raw political patronage (party affiliation alone) or was rather because of one or more specific episodes involving arguably protected “expressive conduct,” or, on the contrary, was not solely for either, being instead, or in addition, for reasons unrelated to first amendment protected activity of either type. The dispositive importance of the actual reasons for a discharge are readily seen.
Raw patronage discharges of the Elrod-Branti type and overt expressive conduct discharges of the Pkkering-Givhan-Connick type may be justified on different bases that are not necessarily congruent. A claim based upon a discharge that is — whether by concession or by proof — a “mixed motive” one of the Mt. Healthy type, will ordinarily be resolved simply by fact-finding that sorts out the motives under the Mt. Healthy “but-for” test, rather than by assessing any proffered justification for a discharge moti[1336]*1336vated only by expressive or associational conduct.
A critical issue in this type case is therefore likely to be the threshold motivational one: for what reason[s] was the employee discharged? If raised by the evidence, this is quintessentially a factual issue. In some cases, e.g., Branti and Pickering, the existence of a single, first amendment related motive — either raw patronage or overt expressive conduct — is essentially conceded, with defense being rested solely upon establishing the appropriate public-interest justification. In others, the evidence may only raise issues respecting the existence of mixed motives — one related, the other unrelated to first amendment protections — with the sole question being whether the unrelated motive was an independently effective one.
Unhappily for ease of disposition here, the situation in the instant case had no such limiting features. The pleadings and evidence here raised every conceivable variant on the motivational themes above identified.8
To the resulting problem of whether the complex motivational issue thereby raised was properly submitted to the jury and, if so, how it was determined, we will return later. We continue now with identification of the further issues presented for decision, depending upon how the threshold motivational issue may have been decided as to each claim.
If it were properly determined, as a matter of fact, that either of the discharges was solely for raw patronage reasons, then the defendant could escape liability for that discharge only by establishing the extremely narrow Branti justification: that affiliation with the public employer’s political party was essential to the employee’s effectiveness in discharging the responsibilities of the position held. Branti, 445 U.S. at 515-16, 100 S.Ct. at 1293. Whether this narrow justification is established presents an ultimate issue of law for the court, paralleling the justification issue in Pickering expressive conduct cases. See Mummau v. Ranck, 687 F.2d 9 (3d Cir.1982) (as matter of law, assistant district attorney subject to patronage discharge).9
If, on the other hand, it were properly determined as a matter of fact that either of the discharges was not solely for patronage reasons but was instead motivated to any significant degree by overt speech activity by the public employee, then the defendant could yet avoid liability for that discharge on either of two bases: (1) that the speech was not, however, upon a “matter of legitimate public concern,” Connick, -- U.S. at --, 103 S.Ct. at 1689; or (2) that though the speech was upon a “matter of legitimate public concern,” the public employer’s interest in the effective and efficient fulfillment of its responsibilities to the public on balance outweighed the employee’s interest in engaging in the speech activity. Id. at --, 103 S.Ct. at 1691-92. Each of these bases for avoidance of liability presents an issue of law for the court, with the burden to establish the factual predicates for each upon the defendant. Id. at -- & n. 10, 103 S.Ct. at 1692 & n. 10.
IV
From the foregoing it is possible to suggest a general model for the trial of cases such as the instant one in which are presented a range of factual and legal issues respecting public employee discharges [1337]*1337arguably violative of the first amendment. Against such a model, the course of trial in this case may then be measured and the specific errors assigned by the parties assessed.
First, where, as here, the evidence raises genuine issues as to the actual reason for an employee’s discharge, that motivational issue must of course be resolved by the trier of fact. On that resolution, all else turns. The evidence may support a variety of alternative findings: that the discharge was solely because of political party affiliation (raw patronage); that it was because of overt activity involving arguably protected speech (either solely or in addition to party affiliation); or that it was for mixed motives, one or more of which implicate first amendment interests (either raw patronage or overt speech) and one or more of which are unrelated to first amendment interests, with the dispositive issue then being whether the discharge would in any event have been made for any of the latter reasons. In a jury case the motivational issue must be presented in a way which clearly differentiates the alternative reasons which may be found on the evidence.10
Second, depending upon the jury’s finding as to the actual reason for discharge, the court must then determine as a matter of law whether a constitutional violation has been established. If discharge solely because of party affiliation is found, this will involve applying the narrow Branti justification test. If a discharge for overt expressive conduct is found, it will involve application of the Pickering-Givhan-Con-nick balancing test. If a mixed motive discharge is found, it will involve a straightforward application of the Mt. Healthy principle to the jury’s determination whether the discharge would have occurred irrespective of the protected activity.
Y
Measured against this model, we believe the district court’s procedures for resolving the dispositive factual and legal issues were sufficiently flawed and prejudicial to the aggrieved parties to require new trials as to each of the claims.
The basic flaw we find as to both claims is the court’s failure to elicit properly specific factual findings of the actual reasons for the two discharges. Most critically, the special verdict submission posing the issue whether the two plaintiffs were “terminated ... solely because of their political affiliation and beliefs” was not sufficiently precise, in light of the evidence adduced, to elicit a proper finding on the critical motivational issue. Neither from the bare text of the issue as submitted nor from the court’s complementary instructions is it possible to determine whether this special verdict submission was intended by the court and presumably then construed by the jury to limit consideration to whether the discharge was solely because of party affiliation, i.e., a raw patronage discharge. If it was so intended and construed (and its strongest indicia tend, though ambiguously, to suggest this) it was not a proper issue submission under controlling legal principles as to either of the discharge claims.11
A
As to deputy Sedwick’s claim, the issue so confined would improperly have limited the jury’s consideration to whether he was discharged solely because of his party affiliation. While the evidence may marginally [1338]*1338have supported such a finding,12 there was also evidence from which the jury could have found that the real reason was not mere party affiliation, but, alternatively or additionally, his specific engagement in forbidden political activity. Both possibilities should have been submitted — clearly differentiated — to the jury. As indicated above, the jury’s resulting finding as between the two possibilities would critically have affected the justification defenses thereby opened to the defendant.
This error in factual issue submission was then compounded by the district court’s grant of judgment n.o.v. against Sedwick, overturning the jury verdict in his favor. This ruling was based on the court’s perception that the verdict did indeed find party affiliation alone the effective reason for Sedwick’s termination.13 On this basis, the court ruled that under the Elrod-Branti test, Sedwick’s discharge was justified because affiliation with the employer’s political party was essential to the effective performance of his duties in this small rural sheriff’s office.14 We hold that in so ruling, the court misapplied the Elrod-Branti test.
The Branti emphasis, which now controls in raw patronage situations, is not upon size, or intimacy of working associations, or needs of discipline, but upon the extent to which the discharged employees engage in policymaking related to “partisan political interests” and have access to confidential information “bearing whatsoever on partisan political concerns.” Branti, 445 U.S. at 519, 100 S.Ct. at 1295. Flatly rejected in Branti was any general notion that mutual trust and confidence could only exist between members of the same political party in an agency of the small size there involved. Id. at 520 n. 14, 100 S.Ct. at 1295 n. 14. But this rejected notion was also relied upon by the district judge here in finding Branti justification for Sedwick’s termination.
Under the Branti test, we do not believe that the duties of deputy sheriffs, no matter what the size of the office, or the specific position of power involved, or the customary intimacy of the associations within the office, or the undoubted need for mutual trust and confidence within any law enforcement agency, could be found to involve policymaking related to “partisan political interests” and to involve access to confidential information “bearing ... on partisan political concerns.” Id. at 519; see Nekolny v. Painter, 653 F.2d 1164, 1170 (7th Cir.1981), cert. denied, 455 U.S. 1021, 102 S.Ct. 1719, 72 L.Ed.2d 139 (1982). On this basis we hold that if Sedwick’s discharge was solely because of his political party affiliation, it could not as a matter of law be justified under the Branti test.
This being so, we might now resolve the Sedwick claim on the merits by directing reinstatement of the verdict and entry of judgment upon it, if we could but be satisfied that party affiliation alone was the reason found by the jury for Sedwick’s discharge. But, as indicated, we cannot be sure. There is the possibility, which we cannot confidently dismiss, that the reason found was not party affiliation alone (or at all), but was instead (or in addition) Sed-wick’s specific political activity about which [1339]*1339Dodson indisputably had earlier challenged him. If this latter reason was the one actually found, either alone or in conjunction with party affiliation, the dispositive legal issue thereby raised would not be a Branti justification, but justification under the Pickering-Givhan-Connick balancing inquiry. And, as indicated, a discharge not justifiable under the narrow Branti test might be so under the more open-ended inquiry mandated by Pickering and its progeny.
The district court did not make the latter inquiry. While under some circumstances we might be disposed to make it in the first instance on an adequately developed appellate record, we do not believe that would be appropriate here. We are not satisfied that the factual predicates for such an inquiry have been developed on the present record; nor that, given post-trial developments, notably the doctrinal refinements in Conniek, it would be fair to hold the parties to the record as earlier made. In this situation, there is no recourse but to vacate the judgment on the Sedwick claim and remand for reopened proceedings designed to resolve the dispositive factual and legal issues in accordance with this opinion.
B
As to Jones’s claim, the vice of the special issue submission was that it invited — and may have produced — a finding that her discharge was solely because of party affiliation when the evidence would not support such a finding. Unlike the evidence respecting Sedwick’s discharge which included Dodson’s flat expression of concern for political party interests, that respecting Jones’s discharge contained nothing comparable. Indeed, the only evidence from which such an inference might have been drawn were the undisputed facts that Jones’s party affiliation was different from Dodson’s and that her job performance up until the altercation immediately preceding her discharge was satisfactory. Weighing heavily against any such inference was the fact that Dodson was not then engaged in any general housecleaning on raw patronage grounds,15 and the evidence strongly suggesting that the discharge was rooted only in the specific altercation leading to it.
This evidence does not suffice, under the test of evidentiary sufficiency we apply to causation-motivational issues, to support an inference that Jones was discharged solely because of her party affiliation. It raises no more than a speculative possibility, short of the reasonable probability that we require. See Lovelace v. Sherwin-Williams Co., 681 F.2d 230, 241-43 & n. 14 (4th Cir.1982).
This being so, a verdict which by reason of ambiguity might have been based on such a finding cannot stand as the basis for judgment. The district court therefore erred in failing, on Dodson’s motion for judgment n.o.v., to set it aside. Applying the same test, we must now correct that error by vacating the judgment and remanding for reopened proceedings. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(d); see also Neely v. Eby Construction Co., 386 U.S. 317, 327-29, 87 S.Ct. 1072, 1079-80, 18 L.Ed.2d 75 (1967) (appellate court, on appeal from denial of motion for judgment n.o.v., may, consistent with Fed.R.Civ.P. 50, grant new trial as alternative to judgment n.o.v.).
C
Without attempting to chart the course of further proceedings in full detail, we offer the following directions and suggestions in the interest of just and expeditious resolution of the two claims upon remand.
1. With respect to Sedwick’s claim, the ^claimant should be allowed — if so disposed — to attempt proof in the alternative that he was discharged solely because of his party affiliation or, alternatively or additionally, that he was discharged for specific exercises of protected “speech.” Of course the defendant should similarly be allowed to show appropriate legal justification for [1340]*1340the discharge if the reason found includes overt speech activity by Sedwiek.16
2. On Jones’s claim, claimant should be limited to attempting proof that she was discharged for specific exercises of protected “speech.” Any issue respecting her discharge solely for reasons of party affiliation has been resolved against her on the merits by our holding, and may not be reopened on remand. Correspondingly, defendant may and need only attempt to show justification under the Pickering-Givhan-Connick inquiry if Jones’s discharge is found to have been because of specific speech activity.
3. On neither claim should defendant be allowed to attempt proof that the discharge was for reasons unrelated to the claimed exercises of first amendment rights. Any issue of unsatisfactory performance originally raised in the case has been resolved against the defendant without error. No Mt. Healthy mixed-motive issue remains in the case. See note 4, supra.
4. To insure the necessary specificity of finding on the motivational issue, the court should submit that issue for resolution by special verdict appropriately drafted in light of this opinion and the evidence adduced on remand.
5. The district court should rule as a matter of law and for the record on any justification defense requiring resolution on remand. The ruling should be in sufficient detail to show the court’s application of the Pickering-Givhan-Connick inquiry to the evidence: i.e., whether particular speech was upon a matter of “legitimate public con-
cern” and, if so, whether the individual interest in expression or the government’s interest in preventing it prevails in the first amendment balance.
6. In making application of the Pickering-Givhan-Connick balancing inquiry to either claim, the court should be particularly guided by the majority opinion in Connick as the most recent authoritative pronouncement of the factors to be considered and the mode of their application to public employee discharge claims.17
VI
On plaintiff-Sedwick’s appeal, the judgment in favor of defendant Dodson is vacated and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
On defendant-Dodson’s appeal, the judgment in favor of plaintiff Jones is vacated and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.