OPINION
Justice BAER.
We granted allowance of appeal in this case to consider whether Appellant Roy C. Pinto, while on a leave of absence from his position as a Corrections Officer l(CO) to serve a term as Vice President of the Pennsylvania State Corrections Officers Association (Association),1 to which he was elected by [313]*313the membership, was subject to the political activity prohibition of the Civil Service Act, 71 P.S. § 741.905b (hereinafter CSA § 905b),2 and, if so, whether his transmission in his official capacity of a letter informing then-gubernatorial candidate Edward Rendell of the Association’s endorsement of his candidacy and the posting of that letter to the Association website violated the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition. The Commonwealth Court, in a divided en banc opinion, effectively took for granted that Appellant’s status under the arrangement at issue counted as a “paid” leave of absence, notwithstanding that during the period in question he was wholly occupied as an officer of the Association, which ultimately paid every penny of Appellant’s compensation in a “pass-through” arrangement detailed infra. Without material discussion, the court proceeded from this determination to the conclusion that, as a member of the classified service on “paid” leave, Appellant necessarily was bound by the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition. Nevertheless, the Commonwealth Court found that neither transmission of the letter nor [314]*314posting it to the Association’s website violated CSA § 905b. See Pinto v. Civil Serv. Comm’n, 860 A.2d 593 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2004) (en banc).
We find that the question whether Appellant’s leave was “paid” or “unpaid” does not provide an adequate basis to discern whether the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition should apply under the circumstances at bar. Instead, we have determined that the answer lies in other indicia of legislative intent — in particular, the interplay of the CSA and the State Employee Retirement Code, 71 Pa.C.S. § 5302(b)(2) (hereinafter SERC § 5302).3 We hold that the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition did not apply to Appellant while he was on leave to serve as a Vice President for the Association. Our ruling on this question renders it unnecessary for us to consider the corollary question whether transmission or posting to the Association website of the letter informing Governor Rendell of the Association’s endorsement violated the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition.4 Thus, although [315]*315we affirm the result reached by the Commonwealth Court, we do so on a different basis.
We begin with a recitation of the factual background of the case. Appellant, a CO, was elected Vice President of the Association’s Eastern Region and took a leave of absence to work full-time in that capacity beginning on June 1, 2001. Pursuant to the applicable collective bargaining agreement, DOC granted certain specified officers of the Association, including Appellant, “leave without pay for the maximum term of office [in the Association], not to exceed three years.” Pinto, 860 A.2d at 595 (quoting Collective Bargaining Agreement). From June 1 to November 19, 2001, the Association directly compensated Appellant.
On October 15, 2001, however, the Association asked DOC to change the status of Appellant and four other Association officers to “paid” leave of absence as provided by SERC § 5302. The Association also requested that the five officials receive retirement seniority retroactive to the start dates of their respective periods of leave. The Department agreed to both requests. Under their modified status and pursuant to SERC § 5302, DOC paid Appellant the salary and benefits to which he was entitled as a CO, and the Association made up the difference in Appellant’s compensation. DOC, in turn, submitted to the Association a quarterly bill reflecting all expenses incurred on Appellant’s behalf, and the Association reimbursed DOC in full. Accordingly, Appellant effectively “was carried as a DOC employee for retirement seniority purposes,” Pinto, 860 A.2d at 595, but as a practical matter [316]*316the Association was bound to pay all costs DOC incurred on Appellant’s behalf.
Early in 2002, Fred McKillop, an Association lobbyist, sought an advisory opinion from the Chief Counsel of the Commission regarding whether a CO on “paid” leave to serve as an Association officer is permitted under Commission regulations to form a political action committee. The Chief Counsel responded that a CO on paid leave to serve as an Association officer generally is not exempt from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition because the exceptions provided by Commission Rule 103.11(b)5 do not apply to COs on paid leave. The Chief Counsel noted, however, that “classified service employees who are on a regular leave of absence, or leave of absence to take a non-eivil service position, are exempt from the political activity restrictions.” Pinto, 860 A.2d at 595. Thus, in effect, the Chief Counsel determined that the leaves of absence subject to the Commission Rule 103.11 exception are mutually exclusive of any “paid” leave of absence. Notably, the Chief Counsel did not elaborate, however, on how Appellant’s status differed from a “leave of absence to take a non[-]civil service position.”
Later that year, the Association membership voted to endorse the candidacy of now-Governor Edward Rendell. . Appellant, in his official capacity, signed and transmitted to Governor Rendell a letter dated October 7, 2002, conveying [317]*317the Association’s endorsement. On October 8, the letter was posted on the Association website.
On May 1, 2003, the Commission convened an investigatory hearing pursuant to CSA § 951(d) (allowing the Commission, sua sponte, to “investigate any personnel action taken pursuant to this act and, in its discretion, hold public hearings, record its findings and conclusions, and make such orders as it deems appropriate”), 71 P.S. § 741.951(d), to consider the propriety under the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition of Appellant’s transmission to Governor Rendell and posting to the Association website of the letter signaling the membership’s endorsement of Governor Rendell’s candidacy. The Commission determined that only employees on unpaid leave are exempt from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition, and ruled that Appellant, by electing “paid” leave status to protect his retirement seniority under SERC § 5302, remained subject to the prohibition. Thus, the Commission found Appellant subject to disciplinary action pursuant to CSA § 905b(f) and suspended him without pay for five days.
Appellant appealed the Commission’s determination to the Commonwealth Court, which agreed with the Commission that the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition applied to Appellant and others on “paid” leave while serving as officers of the Association. The court ruled that
considering Pinto’s receipt of retirement credits while on leave from his State job as a corrections officer, he is essentially on a paid leave of absence,
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OPINION
Justice BAER.
We granted allowance of appeal in this case to consider whether Appellant Roy C. Pinto, while on a leave of absence from his position as a Corrections Officer l(CO) to serve a term as Vice President of the Pennsylvania State Corrections Officers Association (Association),1 to which he was elected by [313]*313the membership, was subject to the political activity prohibition of the Civil Service Act, 71 P.S. § 741.905b (hereinafter CSA § 905b),2 and, if so, whether his transmission in his official capacity of a letter informing then-gubernatorial candidate Edward Rendell of the Association’s endorsement of his candidacy and the posting of that letter to the Association website violated the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition. The Commonwealth Court, in a divided en banc opinion, effectively took for granted that Appellant’s status under the arrangement at issue counted as a “paid” leave of absence, notwithstanding that during the period in question he was wholly occupied as an officer of the Association, which ultimately paid every penny of Appellant’s compensation in a “pass-through” arrangement detailed infra. Without material discussion, the court proceeded from this determination to the conclusion that, as a member of the classified service on “paid” leave, Appellant necessarily was bound by the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition. Nevertheless, the Commonwealth Court found that neither transmission of the letter nor [314]*314posting it to the Association’s website violated CSA § 905b. See Pinto v. Civil Serv. Comm’n, 860 A.2d 593 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2004) (en banc).
We find that the question whether Appellant’s leave was “paid” or “unpaid” does not provide an adequate basis to discern whether the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition should apply under the circumstances at bar. Instead, we have determined that the answer lies in other indicia of legislative intent — in particular, the interplay of the CSA and the State Employee Retirement Code, 71 Pa.C.S. § 5302(b)(2) (hereinafter SERC § 5302).3 We hold that the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition did not apply to Appellant while he was on leave to serve as a Vice President for the Association. Our ruling on this question renders it unnecessary for us to consider the corollary question whether transmission or posting to the Association website of the letter informing Governor Rendell of the Association’s endorsement violated the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition.4 Thus, although [315]*315we affirm the result reached by the Commonwealth Court, we do so on a different basis.
We begin with a recitation of the factual background of the case. Appellant, a CO, was elected Vice President of the Association’s Eastern Region and took a leave of absence to work full-time in that capacity beginning on June 1, 2001. Pursuant to the applicable collective bargaining agreement, DOC granted certain specified officers of the Association, including Appellant, “leave without pay for the maximum term of office [in the Association], not to exceed three years.” Pinto, 860 A.2d at 595 (quoting Collective Bargaining Agreement). From June 1 to November 19, 2001, the Association directly compensated Appellant.
On October 15, 2001, however, the Association asked DOC to change the status of Appellant and four other Association officers to “paid” leave of absence as provided by SERC § 5302. The Association also requested that the five officials receive retirement seniority retroactive to the start dates of their respective periods of leave. The Department agreed to both requests. Under their modified status and pursuant to SERC § 5302, DOC paid Appellant the salary and benefits to which he was entitled as a CO, and the Association made up the difference in Appellant’s compensation. DOC, in turn, submitted to the Association a quarterly bill reflecting all expenses incurred on Appellant’s behalf, and the Association reimbursed DOC in full. Accordingly, Appellant effectively “was carried as a DOC employee for retirement seniority purposes,” Pinto, 860 A.2d at 595, but as a practical matter [316]*316the Association was bound to pay all costs DOC incurred on Appellant’s behalf.
Early in 2002, Fred McKillop, an Association lobbyist, sought an advisory opinion from the Chief Counsel of the Commission regarding whether a CO on “paid” leave to serve as an Association officer is permitted under Commission regulations to form a political action committee. The Chief Counsel responded that a CO on paid leave to serve as an Association officer generally is not exempt from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition because the exceptions provided by Commission Rule 103.11(b)5 do not apply to COs on paid leave. The Chief Counsel noted, however, that “classified service employees who are on a regular leave of absence, or leave of absence to take a non-eivil service position, are exempt from the political activity restrictions.” Pinto, 860 A.2d at 595. Thus, in effect, the Chief Counsel determined that the leaves of absence subject to the Commission Rule 103.11 exception are mutually exclusive of any “paid” leave of absence. Notably, the Chief Counsel did not elaborate, however, on how Appellant’s status differed from a “leave of absence to take a non[-]civil service position.”
Later that year, the Association membership voted to endorse the candidacy of now-Governor Edward Rendell. . Appellant, in his official capacity, signed and transmitted to Governor Rendell a letter dated October 7, 2002, conveying [317]*317the Association’s endorsement. On October 8, the letter was posted on the Association website.
On May 1, 2003, the Commission convened an investigatory hearing pursuant to CSA § 951(d) (allowing the Commission, sua sponte, to “investigate any personnel action taken pursuant to this act and, in its discretion, hold public hearings, record its findings and conclusions, and make such orders as it deems appropriate”), 71 P.S. § 741.951(d), to consider the propriety under the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition of Appellant’s transmission to Governor Rendell and posting to the Association website of the letter signaling the membership’s endorsement of Governor Rendell’s candidacy. The Commission determined that only employees on unpaid leave are exempt from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition, and ruled that Appellant, by electing “paid” leave status to protect his retirement seniority under SERC § 5302, remained subject to the prohibition. Thus, the Commission found Appellant subject to disciplinary action pursuant to CSA § 905b(f) and suspended him without pay for five days.
Appellant appealed the Commission’s determination to the Commonwealth Court, which agreed with the Commission that the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition applied to Appellant and others on “paid” leave while serving as officers of the Association. The court ruled that
considering Pinto’s receipt of retirement credits while on leave from his State job as a corrections officer, he is essentially on a paid leave of absence, since pursuant to [SERC § 5302(b)(2) ], an individual in [Appellant’s] position could only receive retirement credits if he is a state employee on paid leave.
Pinto, 860 A.2d at 596-97 (emphasis added). Having found that the prohibition applied, however, the court failed to find evidence of record to support the Commission’s finding that transmission of the letter in question to Governor Rendell coupled to the posting of that letter to the Association website constituted prohibited political activity under CSA § 905b. Instead, the court determined that the letter was sent “solely for informational purposes and not as part of any official [318]*318campaigning activities,” id. at 597, and emphasized that Appellant appeared to have had no knowledge that the letter had been made public -via the Association website.6 Thus, the court reversed the Commission’s order suspending Appellant without pay.7
Both parties accede in full to the Commonwealth Court’s emphasis on the distinction between paid and unpaid leaves of absence, and argue as though the distinction has dispositive effect on this case. The characterization of the Appellant’s leave, the parties appear to agree, controls whether Commission Rule 108.11(b) applies to Appellant in this case. As noted, Commission Rule 103.11(b) excepts from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition “the classified service employe ... who is on a regular leave of absence, or leave of absence to take a non[-]civil service position,” but explicitly does not except “[a]n employe on another type of leave of absence.” 4 Pa.Code § 103.11(b). There appears to be no dispute that “regular leave of absence,” as used in Rule 103.11(b), shares a definition with “leave of absence” pursuant to Commission Rule 91.3, which defines “leave of absence” as “[a] temporary interruption of employment for which the [319]*319employe is given a specified period of leave without pay for purposes such as illness, school attendance, cyclical employment, military duty or training or employment in a non[-]civil service position.” 4 Pa.Code § 91.3 (emphasis added).8
Appellant disputes the Commonwealth Court’s reliance on the first sentence of SERC § 5302 for the proposition that Appellant’s leave necessarily was “paid” for purposes of Commission Rule 103.11(b). See 71 Pa.C.S. § 5302(b)(2) (protecting the retirement credit of “[a]n active member on paid leave ” to serve as an elected officer of an employee organization (emphasis added)). Appellant argues that SERC § 5302, read in its entirety, does not in fact identify him as “paid” for purposes of the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition and the Commission Rules. Appellant notes that his leave was effectively “unpaid” under Commission Rule 103.11(b) because, ultimately, the Association reimbursed DOC for all costs of his employment for the duration of his leave of absence to work full-time as an Association officer. Because he was “unpaid,” he qualified for the first exception articulated in Commission Rule 103.11(b), as a party on a “regular leave of absence.”
The Commission, conversely, argues that SERC § 5302 dictates that Appellant’s status was “paid” for the relevant purposes. It maintains that, by its terms, SERC § 5302 demands that a party seeking its benefit adopt “paid” status. Further, the Commission emphasizes that Appellant affirmatively sought to have his status changed from “unpaid” to “paid” in order to claim the retirement credit made available by SERC § 5302 and cannot now be heard to complain about the consequences of that choice. The Commission agrees with Appellant that the “regular leave of absence” exempted by Commission Rule 103.11(b) from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition is “unpaid,” per Commission Rule 91.3, but disagrees with Appellant that the “pass-through” compensa[320]*320tion arrangement changed the status of Appellant’s leave of absence to “unpaid.” Rather, the Commission maintains that retirement seniority is tantamount to compensation, and Appellant’s leave therefore was “paid” both as a practical matter and as a matter of law.9 The Commission contends that Appellant’s leave therefore qualified as “another type of leave of absence” under Commission Rule 103.11(b), and that he therefore was not entitled to the benefit of the exception to the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition afforded members of the classified service on regular leaves of absence and leaves of absence to take non-civil service employment. Thus, the Commission maintains that the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition applied and the Commonwealth Court did not err in so ruling.
Our standard of review of Commission disciplinary decisions requires us to determine whether the Commission has violated a party’s constitutional rights, erred as a matter of law, or relied on findings of fact unsupported by substantial evidence of record. See Pennsylvania Game Comm’n v. State Civil Serv. Comm’n, 561 Pa. 19, 747 A.2d 887, 890-91 (2000). Appellant’s principal challenge contests the propriety of the Commission’s application of the law. As with all questions of [321]*321law, our standard of review is de novo and the scope of our review is plenary. Craley v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 586 Pa. 484, 895 A.2d 530, 539 n. 14 (2006).
In interpreting statutes, our object is to ascertain and effectuate legislative intent. Id. at 539 (citing 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(a)). We construe every statute, where possible, to give effect to all of its provisions. Id. When the words of a statute are not clear, we may glean the intent of the legislature by consulting, inter alia, the occasion and necessity for the statute; the mischief to be remedied; the object to be attained; and the consequences of a particular interpretation. 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(c); see Commonwealth, Higher Ed. Assistance Agcy. v. Abington Mem. Hosp., 478 Pa. 514, 387 A.2d 440, 444 (1978) (Opinion Announcing the Judgment of the Court). We also presume that the legislature does not intend an absurd or unreasonable result, 1 Pa.C.S. § 1922(1), and that it intends the entire statute to be effective and certain. Id. § 1922(2). Except for enumerated categories of statutes not implicated in this case, we must liberally construe statutes to effectuate their objects and promote justice. Id. § 1928(c). Another rule of construction evidently overlooked by the court below has particular bearing on this case. Section 1932, “Statutes in pari materia,” provides:
(a) Statutes or parts of statutes are in pari materia when they relate to the same persons or things or to the same class of persons or things.
(b) Statutes in pari materia shall be construed together, if possible, as one statute.
Id. § 1932; see Royal Indem. Co. v. Adams, 309 Pa.Super. 233, 455 A.2d 135, 141 (1983).
The difficulty we find in the parties’ respective approaches to this issue is their unremitting focus on the paid-unpaid distinction, and their mutual and conspicuous failure to consider in any detail the second category of excepted parties under Commission Rule 103.11(b). Rule 103.11(b) explicitly exempts from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition a party “on a leave of absence to take a non[-]civil service [322]*322position,” a category that, by its terms, appears far more applicable to the circumstances of the instant case than the competing provisions — “regular leave of absence” and “another type of leave of absence” — that the parties spend their energy discussing. Although generally we defer to an administering agency’s interpretations of its own regulations, see Commonwealth, Dep’t of Pub. Welfare v. Forbes Health Sys., 492 Pa. 77, 422 A.2d 480, 482 (1980), here we would not so much be deferring to an interpretation as we would be deferring to the Commission’s failure to interpret the relevant administrative language. Beginning with the Commission’s Chief Counsel’s advisory opinion, and at every stage of litigation since, the Commission simply has failed to explain why Appellant does not fit the exception provided for leaves of absence to take a non-civil service position.10
We begin, however, with the relevant statutory law and what it reveals about the intent of the legislature. The only provision we face in this case that speaks directly to the instant pass-through arrangement is found neither in the CSA nor in its regulations, but in SERC § 5302, which provides for the continued accrual of retirement credit for “[a]n active member on paid leave granted by an employer for purposes of serving as an elected full-time officer for a Statewide employee organization which is a collective bargaining representative under the ... Public Employe Relations Act” provided, inter alia, “that the Statewide employee organization shall fully reimburse the employer for all expenses and costs of such paid leave.” 71 Pa.C.S. § 5302(b)(2). Thus, SERC § 5302 provides compelling evidence that the legislature intended to [323]*323prevent adverse consequences from befalling individuals who opt to take a leave of absence to serve a term as an elected officer of a statewide employee organization by preserving the status quo for the duration of that term.11 Moreover, the plain language of SERC § 5302, in anticipating leave, full-time employment, and an outside source of compensation, reflects the legislature’s understanding that the specified situation involves a temporary leave of absence from a civil service position “to take a non-civil service position,” which is excluded from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition by Commission Rule 103.11.
This does not end our inquiry, however, because SERC does not speak directly to the application of the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition to parties who seek the benefit of the SERC provision. Because the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition and SERC § 5302 both appear under Title 71, “State Government,” and this case presents a circumstance at the nexus of the two statutes, we read them in pari materia as statutes affecting the same class of individuals (members of, or members on leave from, the classified service) as to the same subject matter (the mechanisms and consequences of leave to serve as an elected officer of a statewide employee organization). Cf. Shafer v. State Employes’ Retirement Bd., 548 Pa. 320, 696 A.2d 1186, 1191 (1997).
Pennsylvania courts consistently have held that the Commission has a legitimate interest in regulating the conduct of its members to ensure the integrity of the classified service. See Duffy, 86 A. at 1078; Replogle v. State Civil Serv. Comm’n, 657 A.2d 60, 62 (Pa.Cmwlth.1995) (“The [Civil Service] Act’s prohibitions on political activity ... reflect the state’s interest in shielding its civil servants from potential insidious pressures.”); Commonwealth v. Stauffer, 309 Pa.Super. 176, 454 A.2d 1140, 1144 (1982) (“[T]he government may [324]*324place restrictions on the political activities of its employees in order to maintain their integrity and impartiality and thereby promote efficiency in the civil service.”); Wasniewski v. State Civil Serv. Comm’n, 7 Pa.Cmwlth. 166, 299 A.2d 676, 680 (1973) (“[T]he holding of a public office depends on the favor of the people or the appointing power, which favor may be coupled with reasonable conditions for the public good.”). None of these cases, however, involved the situation before us, in which a member of the classified service takes a leave of absence to assume a full-time position as an elected officer of an employee organization in an arrangement effectively blessed by the legislature in its protection of continuing retirement security and bargained for by the employer as evidenced in the corollary provision contained in the relevant Collective Bargaining Agreement. Indeed, none of the above cases involved the imposition of discipline on a civil service member on a leave of absence, whether paid or unpaid, for any purpose.
With these competing considerations in mind, to rule in favor of the Commission we must conclude that the legislature intended that one may serve temporarily as an officer of an employee organization while accruing credited service time for his pension, per SERC § 5302, and that the Association is free to take public positions on partisan political matters as conceded by the Commission, but that no officer of the Association who is on leave pursuant to the dispensation specifically carved out for that purpose by SERC § 5302, no matter how high in rank, may involve himself in the Association’s political activity. In support of this tortuous inference, the Commission offers only a strained reading of its administrative language — Commission Rules 91.3, defining “leave of absence” exclusively as an unpaid leave, and 103.11(b), excluding from the political activity prohibition, a party who is on a “regular leave of absence”12 or a “leave of absence to take a non[-]civil [325]*325service position,” which the Commission by and large ignores rather than distinguishing it from the facts at bar.
The problems with this approach are both textual and practical. Textually, Commission Rule 103.11(b) specifically excepts from the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition a member “who is on a regular leave of absence, or leave of absence to take a non[-]civil service position.” 4 Pa.Code § 103.11(b). The Commission does not, and indeed cannot, maintain that the full-time employment Appellant took with the Association is other than a “non[-]civil service position.” The Commission’s failure to provide a basis for us to rule that this exception, which on its face appears to describe the instant situation, does not apply, or to provide any persuasive argument that we should instead construe Appellant’s leave as “another type of leave of absence” and thus excluded from the Rule 103.11(b) exception, is nearly fatal to its argument.
The practical problems with the Commission’s position are no less considerable. At the heart of the Commission’s argument lies a highly problematic proposition: that Appellant qualified for the § 103.11(b) exception for parties on a “regular leave of absence,” but upon opting to enjoy the benefits of SERC § 5302 thereby so transformed his situation as to disqualify him from the exception. Indeed, the only functional difference between these statuses, by the Commission’s own account, was who signed Appellant’s checks, as it is undisputed that the Association ultimately paid all of Appellant’s employment costs. Moreover, the Commission does not explain how the status change under the circumstances sub judice modified Appellant’s conduct or otherwise threatened or reflected poorly on the integrity of the classified service. Absent such an explanation, the Commission’s position is substantially a call for rote application of its interpretation of its own administrative rules to effectuate divergent results in materially indistinguishable circumstances. We will not answer that call.13
[326]*326On balance, we find it difficult to imagine that the legislature intended to free a member of the classified service to take a temporary leave to serve as an elected officer of an employee organization but did not intend him to be free to serve as a spokesman for that organization unfettered by the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition. Section 5302 of SERC bespeaks the legislature’s intention that members of the civil service be free to pursue terms of employment as elected officers of labor unions without sacrificing tenure for purposes of retirement benefits, which above all suggests an intention not to discourage members from pursuing such employment. To permit someone to take such a position but impose a limitation on his speech broad enough to compel him to look over his shoulder and second-guess virtually every public act or statement he makes in that capacity would be absurd and would disserve the manifest intent of the legislature.
Accordingly, in giving effect to all statutory and administrative provisions before us consistently with their terms, we take Commission Rule 103.11(b) at face value. We hold that Appellant falls within the exception provided for a party who takes a leave of absence, whether paid or unpaid, to serve as an Association Officer, which we find qualifies as “full-time employment in a non[-]civil service position.” Thus, the CSA § 905b political activity prohibition did not apply to Appellant, and no impropriety could have attached to Appellant’s endorsement, transmission, and posting to the Association website of a letter informing Governor Rendell of the Association’s support of his gubernatorial candidacy.
The order of the Commonwealth Court is affirmed.
[327]*327Chief Justice CAPPY and Justice CASTILLE and EAKIN join the opinion.
Former Justice NIGRO did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
Justice SAYLOR concurs in the result.
Justice NEWMAN files a dissenting opinion.