Muslow v. LA State Univ & Agri ( 2023 )


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  • Case: 22-30585         Document: 00516871664             Page: 1      Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    ____________
    August 24, 2023
    No. 22-30585                               Lyle W. Cayce
    ____________                                     Clerk
    Katherine Muslow; Meredith Cunningham,
    Plaintiffs—Appellants,
    versus
    Louisiana State University and Agricultural and
    Mechanical College, Board of Supervisors; Thomas
    Skinner, in his individual capacity; Larry Hollier; John
    Harman; Carlton Jones, III, also known as Trey Jones,
    Defendants—Appellees.
    ______________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 2:19-CV-11793
    ______________________________
    Before King, Smith, and Elrod, Circuit Judges.
    Per Curiam: *
    Katherine Muslow and Meredith Cunningham, the plaintiffs-
    appellants, brought numerous gender discrimination and retaliation claims
    against their former employer and some of its employees, the defendants-
    appellees, after their positions were terminated as part of a university-wide
    _____________________
    *
    This opinion is not designated for publication. See 5th Cir. R. 47.5.
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    No. 22-30585
    consolidation. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the
    defendants on all claims, which Muslow and Cunningham appeal. Finding
    that one of Muslow’s and Cunningham’s allegations of retaliation against
    their employer, the university, should have survived, we REVERSE in part
    the district court’s summary judgment. We otherwise AFFIRM the
    judgment of the district court and REMAND the case for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I.
    Plaintiffs-appellants Katherine Muslow and Meredith Cunningham
    (“Plaintiffs”) served the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center
    in New Orleans (“LSUHSC”) as, respectively, General Counsel from 2002
    to 2019 and part-time staff attorney from 2014 to 2019. LSUHSC houses the
    Louisiana State University system’s schools of medicine, dentistry, and
    public health, among others, and is governed by the Board of Supervisors for
    Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College
    (“LSU”). In mid-2019, Plaintiffs’ positions were retired from LSUHSC as
    part of LSU’s consolidation of its legal team, and this employment dispute
    arose shortly thereafter.
    LSU formally began its consolidation of all legal positions outside of
    the LSU Office of General Counsel (“OGC”), including Muslow’s and
    Cunningham’s positions at LSUHSC, with its December 10, 2018 revision
    of Permanent Memorandum-72 (“PM-72”), which provided that
    “University employees with legal degrees, but working outside of the Office
    of General Counsel, are not authorized to provide legal advice to or on behalf
    of [LSU].” However, Muslow was aware of this consolidation as early as
    August 6, 2018, when she received a message discussing the imminent
    integration of LSUHSC legal functions into OGC, of which she made
    Cunningham aware the next day. Thomas Skinner, Vice President of Legal
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    Affairs and General Counsel at OGC, later contacted Muslow on December
    19, again notifying her of the consolidation and outlining the plan to transition
    her position to OGC at the same compensation level she received at
    LSUHSC. Several weeks later, on January 8, 2019, Plaintiffs met with
    Skinner and Carlton “Trey” Jones, III, OGC Deputy General Counsel, to
    discuss the consolidation and their upcoming transfer to OGC.
    On January 18, OGC’s business manager reached out to Muslow and
    Cunningham to facilitate the transfer of their positions to OGC. They were
    informed that, to get set up in LSU’s system, they would “have to go through
    the entire recruiting process, from the job application through collecting all
    of the documents required for new employees.” As part of that process, they
    would have to provide “[a] transcript and completed employment contract”
    “to move forward with processing the Hire transaction.” On January 22,
    Plaintiffs were provided with unexecuted employment contracts for
    signature that listed effectives dates of February 1, 2019. The contracts
    offered Muslow and Cunningham appointments at the same rank they held
    at LSUHSC and the same salary: $227,520 for Muslow and $76,500 for
    Cunningham at 60% part-time employment.
    Muslow and Cunningham submitted the requested job applications
    but did not execute their employment contracts. This was despite multiple
    reminders from OGC’s business manager, including a February 12 message
    to Cunningham—which Cunningham shared with Muslow—that LSU was
    “trying to time the termination and hire transactions so there is not a lapse
    in pay or benefits.” Instead, Muslow emailed Skinner on February 15,
    copying Cunningham, and requested that Plaintiffs’ salaries be revisited
    before they executed the proposed employment contracts. She asked that,
    based on the findings of LSUHSC’s 2017 Unclassified Employee Market
    Study (the “Study”), their salaries should be increased to $375,000 for
    Muslow and to $204,748 (at 80% part-time employment) for Cunningham.
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    The Study had been conducted by LSUHSC in 2017 to evaluate and
    update the pay structure for unclassified positions such as those then held by
    Muslow and Cunningham. As part of the Study, LSUHSC created a job
    worth hierarchy wherein every unclassified position was assigned a relative
    pay grade within the LSUHSC pay grid, which defined the amount of pay an
    employee would receive. Positions were also categorized, based on certain
    characteristics, into “job families”: jobs within each family purportedly
    required “similar knowledge, skills and abilities (competencies).”
    The Study placed the staff attorney position in the “Administrative
    Professional Non-Clinical” job family and the N37 pay grade, corresponding
    to a salary range of $119,736 (minimum), $162,242 (midpoint), and $204,748
    (maximum). As a staff attorney, Cunningham was tasked with providing or
    assisting in the provision of legal counsel to LSUHSC; participating and
    assisting in litigation; reviewing, preparing, and approving contracts;
    assisting in reviewing, drafting, and modifying policies and procedures; and
    assisting in developing training materials and conducting training on legal
    matters. The position required a Juris Doctor degree and membership in, or
    eligibility for admission to, the Louisiana State Bar, as well as five years of
    relevant legal experience. Cunningham’s annualized salary at the time of the
    Study, $127,500, exceeded the N37 pay grade minimum.
    The General Counsel position was placed in the “Leadership” job
    family and the N43 pay grade, corresponding to a salary range of $227,520
    (minimum), $315,116 (midpoint), and $402,711 (maximum). As General
    Counsel, Muslow had several responsibilities, including providing strategic
    support and legal guidance for LSUHSC; acting as advisor on legal matters;
    performing administrative filings; conducting research and analysis of
    current and critical legal issues; and working to ensure organizational
    compliance with federal, state, and local laws and regulations. She was
    required to possess a Juris Doctor degree, a license to practice law in
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    Louisiana, and three years’ experience as a practicing attorney. As part of this
    role, she supervised one part-time attorney, Cunningham. At the time of the
    Study, Muslow earned $182,475, such that her salary did not meet her
    position’s pay grade minimum. To correct this disparity, Muslow’s base pay
    was increased to $227,520, the N43 pay grade minimum, effective July 1,
    2017.
    The Study was not the only support on which Muslow relied in
    making her request that her and Cunningham’s salaries be revisited: she also
    stated in her message to Skinner that such salary adjustments were “overdue
    and necessary to ameliorate an environment at the [LSU]HSC that has not
    seemed historically to view equity as potentially a gendered issue.” Three
    days—and only one business day—later, LSU rescinded both offers pending
    further review because, Muslow and Cunningham were told, “[n]o signed
    copy [of each respective employment contract] has been received and the
    effective date has passed.”
    On March 1, Muslow emailed Skinner and Larry Hollier, LSUHSC’s
    Chancellor, requesting a status update regarding Plaintiffs’ transfers to
    OGC. An hour later, Skinner emailed Hollier, restating OGC’s plan to hire
    two OGC attorney positions to be stationed at LSUHSC and retire existing
    LSUHSC counsel positions and stating that Plaintiffs’ offers were rescinded
    “after neither executed the [employment] contracts.” He also indicated that
    OGC intended to advertise the General Counsel and staff attorney positions,
    for which Muslow and Cunningham could apply and would receive the same
    consideration as any other applicant. Hollier then forwarded Skinner’s email
    to Plaintiffs and added that, “[i]n accordance with revised PM-72,
    [LSUHSC] will retire [its] existing legal positions by June 30, 2019.”
    Muslow replied on March 6, reiterating her and Cunningham’s position and
    seeking confirmation that they were “active candidates” for the OGC
    positions.
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    Several weeks later, Hollier again notified Muslow and Cunningham
    that their positions at LSUHSC would be retired and their employment
    terminated on June 30 and invited them to apply for the new OGC positions.
    Then, on March 26, Muslow filed a complaint with the United States Equal
    Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). She stated her belief
    that she was discriminated against by LSU based on, inter alia, her gender
    and age. In her view, she was “historically underpaid compared to [her] male
    peers” as evidenced by the Study and her offer of transfer to OGC was
    rescinded after she “requested a salary review to bring [her] salary in
    compliance with the data” in the Study. In a supplemental letter to the
    EEOC, signed by Muslow and Cunningham, Plaintiffs indicated that
    Muslow’s original submission was also brought on Cunningham’s behalf.
    The letter also clarified that, as of March 26, “no steps to centralize [LSU’s
    legal] operations ha[d] been taken (e.g., no meetings, plans for workflow,
    consolidation of documents, remote support to our campus, etc.).”
    Plaintiffs never applied for the advertised OGC positions, and
    Muslow told Jones—after he asked if Plaintiffs would nonetheless like to be
    considered for the positions—that, “[u]nless [her] position [was] going to be
    compensated as dictated by the market study done at [LSUHSC], . . . you do
    not have my permission to treat me as an ‘applicant’ for a position I have held
    going on eighteen years now. [Cunningham] concurs.” Cunningham’s at-
    will employment eventually ended on June 30, and Muslow’s employment
    ended on July 15. Following Muslow’s termination, OGC hired Louis
    Colletta as LSUHSC Chief Counsel at an annual salary of $182,500, while
    the staff attorney position was never filled.
    Muslow and Cunningham filed suit in the Eastern District of
    Louisiana on July 22, 2019, against LSU, Hollier, Skinner, and Jon Harman,
    LSUHSC’s Vice Chancellor of Finance and Administration, with Jones later
    added as a defendant in an amended complaint (collectively, “Defendants”).
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    Following motion practice, several claims remained at the summary
    judgment stage: (1) gender discrimination in violation of Title VII against
    LSU; (2) gender discrimination in violation of 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     against
    Harman and Hollier; (3) gender discrimination in violation of the Equal Pay
    Act against LSU, Hollier, Harman, and Skinner; (4) retaliation in violation
    of Title VII against LSU; and (5) retaliation in violation of the Equal Pay Act
    against LSU, Hollier, Skinner, and Jones.
    The district court granted summary judgment for Defendants on all
    counts. On appeal, Muslow and Cunningham argue that the district court
    erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Defendants on their various
    gender discrimination and retaliation claims. They also request that the case
    be reassigned on remand because the district court, in their view, improperly
    discredited evidence and expressed disdain for their claims.
    II.
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
    Watkins v. Tregre, 
    997 F.3d 275
    , 281 (5th Cir. 2021). We shall affirm “if the
    movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a),
    viewing all evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant and
    drawing all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor. Watkins, 997 F.3d at
    281. At the same time, “[t]he party opposing summary judgment is required
    to identify specific evidence in the record and to articulate the precise manner
    in which that evidence supports his or her claim.” Diaz v. Kaplan Higher
    Educ., L.L.C., 
    820 F.3d 172
    , 176 (5th Cir. 2016) (alteration in original)
    (quoting Ragas v. Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co., 
    136 F.3d 455
    , 458 (5th Cir. 1998)).
    III.
    We first consider Plaintiffs’ claims of gender discrimination against
    LSU, Harman, and Hollier under Title VII and 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , and then
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    we consider their corresponding claims against LSU, Harman, Hollier, and
    Jones under the Equal Pay Act.
    Title VII prohibits employers from intentionally discriminating
    against individuals with respect to compensation, terms, conditions, or
    privileges of employment because of their gender or membership in another
    protected class. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). Section 1983 has a wider reach,
    though it similarly prohibits parties acting under color of state law from
    violating federal anti-discrimination laws. See Whiting v. Jackson State Univ.,
    
    616 F.2d 116
    , 121 (5th Cir. 1980). In this way, Title VII and § 1983 are
    “parallel causes of action” requiring essentially the same inquiry. Lauderdale
    v. Tex. Dep’t of Crim. Just., 
    512 F.3d 157
    , 166 (5th Cir. 2007). Both require
    that a plaintiff show, as part of her prima facie case, that she was a member
    of a protected class who was paid less than a non-member for work requiring
    “substantially the same responsibility.” Mitchell v. Mills, 
    895 F.3d 365
    , 370
    (5th Cir. 2018) (quoting Taylor v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 
    554 F.3d 510
    , 522
    (5th Cir. 2008)). Then, pursuant to the burden-shifting framework outlined
    in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
    411 U.S. 792
     (1973), the burden shifts
    to the employer to articulate a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its
    actions. Taylor, 
    554 F.3d at 522
    . Thereafter, the plaintiff must show that the
    employer’s proffered explanation is pretextual. 
    Id.
    To satisfy her burden at the prima facie stage, a plaintiff must establish
    that her circumstances are “‘nearly identical’ to those of a better-paid
    employee who is not a member of the protected class.” 
    Id. at 523
    ; see also
    Mitchell, 
    895 F.3d at
    370–71. “In making this determination, a variety of
    factors are considered, including job responsibilities, experience, and
    qualifications.” Mitchell, 
    895 F.3d at 371
    . These factors need not be identical
    for both the plaintiff and her proffered comparator, however, as such a
    requirement would be “essentially insurmountable”—“it would only be in
    the rarest of circumstances that the situations of two employees would be
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    totally identical.” Lee v. Kan. City S. Ry. Co., 
    574 F.3d 253
    , 260 (5th Cir.
    2009). This inquiry is often reserved for the factfinder, but only when a
    plaintiff has produced evidence sufficient for a reasonable factfinder to
    conclude that the plaintiff and her proffered comparator are similarly
    situated. Morris v. Town of Indep., 
    827 F.3d 396
    , 402 (5th Cir. 2016).
    Otherwise, summary judgment is appropriate.
    The district court held that Muslow and Cunningham failed to
    identify proper comparators, i.e., male employees who were paid more for
    sufficiently similar work. Plaintiffs contend that this was in error, pointing to
    several individuals who were employed at LSUHSC at the same time as they
    were, who they believe are comparators. In support of their comparisons,
    Plaintiffs principally rely on the Study to demonstrate that they and their
    purported comparators were similarly situated, as well as limited references
    to the relative job experience or qualifications of specific male employees.
    Muslow and Cunningham argue that, for purposes of Title VII,
    LSUHSC’s Study is “important, if not dispositive.” While the Study is
    instructive, it does not resolve whether Plaintiffs and their proffered
    comparators occupy nearly identical positions. We have previously held as
    much in Brennan v. Victoria Bank and Trust Co., a case concerning an alleged
    pay disparity between male and female bank tellers brought under the equal
    pay provision of the Fair Labor Standards Act. 
    493 F.2d 896
     (5th Cir. 1974).
    There, the record included the bank’s internal assessment and classification
    of various bank teller positions; nonetheless, we could not determine whether
    pay discrimination was occurring based solely on the bank’s own records.
    Instead, “the controlling factor in equal pay allocations has to be job content,
    not the job description prepared by the employer.” 
    Id. at 899
     (emphasis
    added). We reiterated this point more recently in Badgerow v. REJ Properties,
    Inc., where we recognized that it is not enough for a plaintiff to allege that she
    has the same job title as her purported comparator; rather, she must provide
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    “evidence of how her job duties compared to” those of a male employee in
    nearly identical circumstances. 
    974 F.3d 610
    , 617 (5th Cir. 2020). Of course,
    a court should not ignore the employer’s rating of jobs, see Victoria Bank, 
    493 F.2d at 899
    , but such classifications are not enough, on their own, to
    demonstrate that another employee is a comparator under Title VII.
    We must also look to the “job responsibilities, experience, and
    qualifications” of Muslow and Cunningham and their proffered
    comparators. 1 Mitchell, 
    895 F.3d at 371
    . Muslow puts forward eight
    individuals for consideration, four of whom the Study placed in higher pay
    grades than Muslow. With respect to Edwin Murray, Jimmy Cairo, and
    Demetrius Porche, the employees in lower pay grades than Muslow, she
    provides only a cursory analysis regarding their job responsibilities,
    experience, and qualifications insufficient to create a genuine dispute of
    material fact as to whether their positions are nearly identical to hers.
    Muslow argues that Edwin Murray, LSUHSC’s Vice Chancellor of
    Community and Multicultural Affairs, had two years of experience in his
    position while she had more than fifteen years as General Counsel. But
    Murray’s position required significantly more starting experience than
    Muslow’s—he was required to have 8–10 years of experience in an academic
    or governmental affairs setting and 3–5 years of experience in a senior level
    administrator position, whereas Muslow only needed three years of
    experience as a practicing attorney. She also contends that her position
    _____________________
    1
    Muslow and Cunningham contend that at least some of the position descriptions
    provided by Defendants are “inaccurate, outdated, or otherwise suspect” but fail to
    describe which descriptions are erroneous and in what, if any, ways. By contrast,
    LSUHSC’s compensation manager authenticated the provided descriptions and certified
    that each was in effect at the relevant time. Absent any specific objections by Plaintiffs, we
    find that the position descriptions proffered by Defendants are accurate and rely on them
    for our analysis throughout this section.
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    required a Juris Doctor degree, while his did not. However, this only
    underscores how different their roles were. His position required more years
    of work experience and a master’s degree, and he was responsible for
    developing multicultural affairs programs and initiatives, serving as
    LSUHSC’s Risk Management and Security Officer, and overseeing the
    management of the LSU Health Police staff. Muslow directs us to no
    evidence other than the Study to overcome the obvious differences between
    these positions and establish that Murray qualifies as a comparator.
    Regarding the other employees—Jimmy Cairo, then-Dean of the School of
    Allied Health, and Demetrius Porche, Dean of the School of Nursing—
    Muslow similarly points only to the Study, which by itself is insufficient.
    Accordingly, Muslow has failed to establish that these employees are
    appropriate comparators.
    Muslow’s analysis regarding the four male employees occupying
    higher pay grades is similarly perfunctory. By Plaintiffs’ own logic, the
    Study’s pay grade assignments indicate that the positions occupied by these
    male employees require greater knowledge, skills, and abilities. Importantly,
    the evidence also bears this out. Two of the individuals, Henry Gremillion
    and Dean Smith, served as Deans of LSUHSC’s schools and were required
    to have doctoral degrees and at least ten years of experience, with some of
    that time in a managerial position in an academic setting. Muslow’s only
    argument is that Smith was hired more recently than her; however, that is
    insufficient to make them proper comparators considering the significant
    differences between their positions. She also identified Keith Schroth, who
    served as LSUHSC’s Associate Vice Chancellor for Business Development
    and Associate Dean of Fiscal Affairs, as a comparator despite his higher pay
    grade. She contends that his position, unlike hers, required no advanced
    degree, but his position required significantly more experience—eight years,
    at least two of which were in a management capacity—and carried different
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    responsibilities, including overseeing budgeting and contractual relations for
    each of LSUHSC’s six professional schools and creating and negotiating
    business opportunities for LSUHSC. Her argument concerning her last
    purported comparator, John Harman, who was LSUHSC’s Vice Chancellor
    of Administration and Finance, also falls short. Though he was hired more
    recently than her, his position, like many of the others, required significantly
    more experience and came with a host of distinct responsibilities, including
    directing the administrative and financial operations of LSUHSC. The
    district court did not err in finding that these employees’ positions are not
    nearly identical to the position held by Muslow.
    Muslow’s final proffered comparator is her successor, Louis Colletta.
    She contends that he asked for and received a higher salary than she despite
    his lack of experience in an academic or healthcare setting. However,
    Colletta was hired as Chief Counsel of LSUHSC at a salary of $182,500,
    which is substantially less than Muslow’s salary when she left LSUHSC and
    less than she was offered to transition to OGC. While he later became the
    Chief of Staff at LSUHSC, for which he was paid $249,000, that position
    required a different set of qualifications—10 years of administrative
    experience in senior leadership positions—and involved a different set of
    responsibilities—institutional planning and policy development; serving as
    the Chancellor’s primary liaison with LSUHSC, government, and
    community leadership; and overseeing the Chancellor’s organizational units.
    Muslow provides no analysis as to how the Chief of Staff position compares
    to her role as Chief Counsel, and there is no evidence suggesting that it is a
    proper comparator.
    Cunningham offers two purported comparators: Richard Buhler, a
    Senior Contracts Administrative Officer, and Frank Wasser, LSUHSC’s
    Compliance Officer. She argues that her staff attorney position required
    more credentials and more responsibility than Buhler’s, over whom she
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    contends she had oversight, despite being paid less than him. But his position
    required either a Juris Doctor degree and 5 years’ related experience or a
    master’s degree with 8 years’ related experience—similar credentials to
    Cunningham’s with greater prior experience. His position’s responsibilities
    were also significantly different from those of a staff attorney, as he assisted
    in managing the entire contracting process. While one part of his position
    required him to “seek advice from LSUHSC legal counsel as appropriate and
    necessary so there will be no violation of state, or LSUHSC policy or
    procedure,” this does not indicate that Cunningham had oversight of Buhler.
    Rather, it demonstrates the differences between the two positions and their
    varied responsibilities: legal counsel was tasked with staying apprised of state
    law and LSUHSC policy and procedure, while a contracts officer developed,
    managed, and processed contracts on behalf of LSUHSC. Moreover,
    Cunningham’s and Buhler’s positions existed in distinct reporting
    structures: a staff attorney reported to the General Counsel, while a contracts
    officer reported to the Associate Vice Chancellor of Business Development.
    He is not a proper comparator.
    Neither was Wassel’s position nearly identical to that of a LSUHSC
    staff attorney. Though both positions required a Juris Doctor degree,
    Wasser’s position additionally required 8 years of professional-level
    experience at a top law firm, in-house legal department, or university. And
    his responsibilities were significantly different: the Compliance Officer is
    tasked with developing and implementing a compliance plan, serving as the
    employee resource on compliance matters, and liaising with LSU Internal
    Audit, Legislative Auditor, and other oversight entities, among other duties.
    Cunningham held none of these responsibilities.
    Because Muslow and Cunningham have failed to identify any male
    employees who were paid more than them for work requiring substantially
    the same responsibility, they have not established a prima facie case of
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    gender-based wage discrimination. Accordingly, the district court did not err
    in granting summary judgment in favor of LSU, Harman, and Hollier on
    Plaintiffs’ Title VII and section 1983 gender discrimination claims.
    Plaintiffs’ Equal Pay Act gender discrimination claim falls short for
    the same reasons. The Equal Pay Act proscribes pay inequities between
    employees of opposite sexes “for equal work on jobs the performance of
    which requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are performed
    under similar working conditions,” except under certain enumerated
    exceptions. 
    29 U.S.C. § 206
    (d)(1). To establish a prima facie case of
    discrimination under the Equal Pay Act, a plaintiff must show that “(1) her
    employer is subject to the Act; (2) she performed work in a position requiring
    equal skill, effort, and responsibility under similar working conditions; and
    (3) she was paid less than the employee of the opposite sex providing the basis
    of comparison.” Badgerow, 974 F.3d at 617 (quoting Chance v. Rice Univ., 
    984 F.2d 151
    , 153 (5th Cir. 1993)). Once a plaintiff has established a prima facie
    case, “the burden of proof ‘shifts to the employer to show that the
    differential is justified under one of the Act’s four exceptions.’” Plemer v.
    Parsons-Gilbane, 
    713 F.2d 1127
    , 1136 (5th Cir. 1983) (quoting Corning Glass
    Works v. Brennan, 
    417 U.S. 188
    , 196 (1974)).
    For the same reasons that Plaintiffs’ Title VII and section 1983
    discrimination claims fail, so too does their discrimination claim under the
    Equal Pay Act. Here, Muslow and Cunningham rely entirely on the Study to
    establish which employees occupy positions requiring equal skill, effort, and
    responsibility and to argue that they were paid less money than male
    employees with jobs requiring less skill, effort, and responsibility. But the
    Study, without more, is insufficient to establish comparators.
    Moreover, the Equal Pay Act has a “higher threshold” for potential
    comparators than Title VII—“it demands that equal wages reward equal
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    work.” Siler-Khodr v. Univ. of Tex. Health Sci. Ctr. San Antonio, 
    261 F.3d 542
    ,
    546 (5th Cir. 2001). In other words, an employee who fails to qualify as a
    comparator under Title VII in a case of gender-based wage discrimination
    also fails to qualify as a comparator under the Equal Pay Act. Accordingly,
    the district court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of LSU,
    Harman, Hollier, and Jones on Plaintiffs’ Equal Pay Act discrimination
    claim.
    IV.
    We next consider Plaintiffs’ retaliation claims under Title VII against
    LSU and under the Equal Pay Act against LSU, Hollier, Skinner, and Jones,
    which allege that Muslow and Cunningham suffered from retaliation in
    response to their salary-review requests and filing of EEOC charges.
    We analyze retaliation claims brought under either Title VII or the
    Equal Pay Act using the familiar McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting
    framework. Lindsley v. TRT Holdings, Inc., 
    984 F.3d 460
    , 469 (5th Cir. 2021).
    “To establish a prima facie case of retaliation, a plaintiff must ‘demonstrate
    that: (1) she engaged in protected activity; (2) an adverse employment action
    occurred; and (3) a causal link exists between the protected activity and the
    adverse employment action.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Gorman v. Verizon Wireless Tex.,
    L.L.C., 
    753 F.3d 165
    , 170 (5th Cir. 2014)). The defendant must then provide
    a “legitimate, non-retaliatory reason” for the employment action. Id. at 470.
    If the defendant does so, the burden then falls to the employee to show that
    the employer’s stated reason is a pretext for unlawful retaliation. Gorman,
    
    753 F.3d at 171
    . “Under this framework, the employee’s ultimate burden is
    to prove that the adverse employment action would not have occurred but
    for the protected conduct.” Wantou v. Wal-Mart Stores Tex., L.L.C., 
    23 F.4th 422
    , 437 (5th Cir. 2022).
    15
    Case: 22-30585         Document: 00516871664                 Page: 16        Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    1. Prima Facie Case
    Muslow and Cunningham present two allegations of retaliation: first,
    that they received letters notifying them of their positions’ terminations only
    a few days after filing EEOC charges; and second, that their employment
    contracts with OGC were rescinded, and they were eventually terminated,
    after they raised gender-pay equity concerns to Skinner via email. 2
    Plaintiffs’ first allegation—that they were first notified of their
    termination shortly after filing EEOC charges on March 26, 2019—is not
    supported by the evidence. On March 1, 2019, Hollier emailed Skinner,
    copying Muslow and Cunningham, and stated: “In accordance with revised
    PM-72, [LSUHSC] will retire our existing legal positions by June 30, 2019.”
    The record reflects that Plaintiffs had actual notice of this message, as
    Muslow responded to it five days later on behalf of herself and Muslow.
    Thus, Muslow and Cunningham were notified that their LSUHSC positions
    would be terminated long before they filed EEOC charges; as such, there is
    no causal link between their alleged protected activity and the adverse
    employment action, and Plaintiffs have not presented a prima facie case of
    retaliation with respect to this allegation.
    Plaintiffs’ allegation relating to the salary-review request finds more
    support in the record. At this stage, Defendants’ sole argument is that
    Muslow’s request was not a protected activity because it was unreasonable
    _____________________
    2
    Muslow and Cunningham briefly discuss a third allegation; namely, that they
    never received their requested pay increase. However, they provide no explanation
    regarding this alleged prima facie case of retaliation, nor do they appear to have raised it
    before the district court. Accordingly, we consider the argument forfeited and do not
    address it here. Rollins v. Home Depot USA, 
    8 F.4th 393
    , 397 (5th Cir. 2021) (“A party
    forfeits an argument by failing to raise it in the first instance in the district court . . . or by
    failing to adequately brief the argument on appeal.”).
    16
    Case: 22-30585       Document: 00516871664         Page: 17    Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    for Plaintiffs to believe that they were experiencing gender-based wage
    discrimination.
    To qualify as a protected activity, “the employee’s conduct must have
    ‘opposed’ the employer’s practice and that opposed practice must have been
    unlawful.” Scott v. U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n, 
    16 F.4th 1204
    , 1209 (5th Cir.
    2021). “Importantly, a plaintiff need not demonstrate that the practice was
    actually unlawful for his opposition to be a protected activity; rather, it is
    enough that the plaintiff reasonably believed the practice was unlawful.” 
    Id. at 1210
    . We hold that Plaintiffs’ belief that LSUHSC unlawfully discriminated
    against them because of their gender was reasonable. In Muslow’s February
    15, 2019 email to Skinner, she laid out the reasons she believed LSUHSC,
    and LSU by extension, was unlawfully discriminating against them:
    The adjustments sought are not only equitable on their face
    given the 2017 study, but are also overdue and necessary to
    ameliorate an environment at the [LSU]HSC that has not
    seemed historically to view equity as potentially a gendered
    issue. By way of example: With my move to the OGC, there
    will be but one woman who directly reports to the chancellor
    and, like me, her salary has lagged far behind her male peers.
    Also like me, her salary was adjusted only to the bare salary
    minimum indicated in the 2017 equity study and she's not
    received an adjustment since.
    That we conclude that Defendants did not discriminate against Plaintiffs
    does not negate their reasonable belief, based on these facts, that they
    received discriminatory wages on account of their gender. Moreover,
    although the district court was unable to locate it, the record reflects that
    Skinner understood Muslow’s email to raise gender-pay equity concerns.
    Regarding Muslow’s email, he stated at his deposition: “Did I read the letter
    as indicating that she had a problem with gender disparity in pay at Health
    Science Center New Orleans? Yes, that’s what I took from that letter,” and
    17
    Case: 22-30585     Document: 00516871664            Page: 18    Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    that he “took it to mean . . . that there was a—potentially a pay disparity
    between males and females at [LSU]HSC.” As the district court recognized,
    such testimony “seem[s] to corroborate that Plaintiffs’ belief was objectively
    reasonable.” Taken together, this evidence satisfies Plaintiffs’ burden at the
    summary judgment stage to show that their salary-review request was a
    protected activity.
    Defendants do not contest that the other elements of a prima facie
    case have been satisfied for Plaintiffs’ salary-review-request allegation. We
    hold that Muslow and Cunningham have identified two adverse employment
    actions related to this allegation—the rescission of their employment
    contracts, and their eventual termination—and provided evidence linking
    such actions to their salary-review request. Accordingly, we find that
    Plaintiffs have established a prima facie case of retaliation with respect to this
    allegation.
    2. Legitimate Non-Retaliatory Reason
    Defendants offer several non-retaliatory reasons for the employment
    actions taken against Muslow and Cunningham sufficient to satisfy their
    summary judgment burden: LSUHSC positions were retired in favor of OGC
    positions; Plaintiffs did not execute their OGC employment contracts;
    Plaintiffs did not apply for the new OGC postings despite multiple
    invitations; and Muslow advised Jones that he did not have permission to
    treat her or Cunningham as OGC applicants. We agree with the district court
    that these are legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons for rescinding Plaintiffs’
    employment contracts and terminating their positions, which Muslow and
    Cunningham do not dispute. Thus, we must consider whether Plaintiffs have
    offered sufficient evidence of pretext.
    18
    Case: 22-30585     Document: 00516871664            Page: 19   Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    3. Pretext
    At this stage, Plaintiffs must establish that Defendants’ asserted
    reasons for rescinding their employment contracts and terminating their
    positions are pretext for the real, retaliatory purpose. Septimus v. Univ. of
    Hous., 
    399 F.3d 601
    , 608 (5th Cir. 2005). Ultimately, a plaintiff must provide
    substantial evidence that, but for her protected activity, she would not have
    been subject to the adverse employment action. Id.; Brown v. Wal-Mart Stores
    E., L.P., 
    969 F.3d 571
    , 581 (5th Cir. 2020). “Even if a plaintiff’s protected
    conduct is a substantial element in a defendant’s adverse employment action,
    no liability for unlawful retaliation arises if the employee would have faced
    that discipline even without the protected conduct.” Wantou, 23 F.4th at
    437.
    Muslow and Cunningham have not met this burden with respect to
    their termination from LSUHSC. The evidence establishes that Plaintiffs
    were aware of the plan to consolidate all legal services within OGC by
    December 2018. While they were told at that time that the transition would
    be administrative, Muslow and Cunningham do not dispute that they were
    required to go through the entire recruiting process, which included the
    submission of a “completed employment contract” before OGC could
    effectuate their hiring. As the district court recognized, Plaintiffs’ “failure
    to execute the tendered employment contracts with OGC or to apply for the
    new OGC positions – despite being prompted and invited to do so multiple
    times – cemented their termination.” Thus, it was inevitable that their
    positions would be terminated, and the salary-review request was not the but-
    for cause of their termination.
    However, Muslow and Cunningham have provided substantial
    evidence regarding that their employment contracts at OGC would not have
    been rescinded but for the request for their salaries to be reviewed because of
    19
    Case: 22-30585        Document: 00516871664              Page: 20       Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    gender-pay equity concerns. Upon review, it appears that the district court—
    and Defendants on appeal—treated the rescission of Plaintiffs’ employment
    contracts and their later termination as a single adverse employment action
    and thus did not separately consider whether the salary-review request was
    the but-for cause of the contract recission. But these are their own adverse
    employment actions and must be considered separately.
    Defendants offer only one non-retaliatory reason that Plaintiffs’
    employment contracts were rescinded: they were not executed by February
    1, the effective appointment dates listed on the contracts. 3 Muslow and
    Cunningham offer substantial evidence that there was no deadline for
    executing the contracts. Notably, OGC continued to request that Plaintiffs
    execute the allegedly expired contracts after February 1, which calls into
    question Defendants’ reason for rescinding the contracts. Moreover, Skinner
    explained at his deposition that the employment contracts were rescinded
    because he was “taken aback” by Plaintiffs’ salary-review request. Given his
    admission that their request raising gender-pay equity concerns regarding the
    OGC salaries was the reason the contracts were rescinded, we hold that
    Muslow and Cunningham have presented evidence sufficient to overcome
    summary judgment on this allegation of retaliation.
    4. Individual-Defendant Liability
    Lastly, Hollier, Skinner, and Jones contend that they are not
    “employers” for purposes of the Equal Pay Act and thus cannot be held liable
    for Plaintiffs’ retaliation claim. 4 Under the Equal Pay Act, an employee or
    _____________________
    3
    Their other proffered reasons relate only to Plaintiffs’ eventual termination, not
    the recission of Plaintiffs’ contracts.
    4
    LSU does not dispute that it was Plaintiffs’ employer for purposes of the Equal
    Pay Act and Title VII claims brought against it.
    20
    Case: 22-30585      Document: 00516871664            Page: 21   Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    former employee may seek legal or equitable relief for retaliation only against
    an employer. 
    29 U.S.C. § 216
    (b). We rely on the “economic reality test”
    when determining a party’s status as an employer, under which we evaluate
    “whether the alleged employer: (1) possessed the power to hire and fire the
    employees, (2) supervised and controlled employee work schedules or
    conditions of employment, (3) determined the rate and method of payment,
    and (4) maintained employment records.” Orozco v. Plackis, 
    757 F.3d 445
    ,
    448 (5th Cir. 2014) (quoting Gray v. Powers, 
    673 F.3d 352
    , 355 (5th Cir.
    2012)). A plaintiff need not establish each element for us to find that a party
    was her employer, but she must, at the very least, establish that at least one
    of the factors is present. Gray, 
    673 F.3d at 357
    .
    As an initial matter, Muslow and Cunningham do not allege that
    Hollier was involved in the recission of their employment contracts, which is
    the only alleged retaliatory action that we hold survives summary judgment.
    Accordingly, it was proper for the district court to grant summary judgment
    in favor of Hollier on Plaintiffs’ retaliation claim.
    That leaves Skinner and Jones, both of whom worked at OGC—and
    not LSUHSC—when Plaintiffs’ employment contracts were rescinded.
    Muslow and Cunningham argue that Skinner had the power to “hire, fire,
    and control their work, particularly in early 2019 as they transitioned to the
    OGC.” However, the transition to OGC, which would have given Skinner
    many of the powers considered by our test, never took place. Plaintiffs were
    still employed by LSUHSC when they were eventually terminated, and it was
    LSUHSC that ultimately fired them. Moreover, Muslow and Cunningham
    stated in their EEOC charge that, by the end of March, “no steps to
    centralize [LSU’s legal] operations ha[d] been taken (e.g., no meetings, plans
    for workflow, consolidation of documents, remote support to [LSUHSC’s]
    campus, etc.).” In short, by Plaintiffs’ own admission, Skinner lacked the
    power to control their work. Accordingly, we hold that Skinner was not
    21
    Case: 22-30585      Document: 00516871664           Page: 22   Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    Plaintiffs’ employer for purposes of the Equal Pay Act and the district court
    properly granted summary judgment in his favor on Plaintiffs’ retaliation
    claim.
    Only Jones remains. Muslow and Cunningham argue only that “[h]e
    participated in decisions about their OGC transition and the later drafting of
    their termination letters, which were sent after they filed EEOC charges,”
    and thus had control over them. These facts are insufficient to transform
    Jones into Plaintiffs’ employer. Muslow and Cunningham do not allege that
    he had any decision-making power relating to their OGC transition, and his
    being one of several voices contributing to a decision—ultimately made by
    another individual—to terminate Plaintiffs does not transform him into an
    employer. Moreover, Jones’ participation in the drafting of Plaintiffs’
    termination letters (and it is not clear that he participated, as Plaintiffs rely
    solely on Hollier’s testimony that Jones may have provided input) does not
    establish that he had control over Muslow and Cunningham. Reviewing
    employment and termination letters is a regular part of legal counsel’s
    responsibilities, and this does not transform legal counsel into the employer
    of every person whose termination letter he or she reviews. Like Skinner, we
    hold that Jones was not Plaintiffs’ employer and summary judgment in his
    favor was proper.
    Accordingly, the district court erred only by granting summary
    judgment in favor of LSU on Plaintiffs’ Title VII and Equal Pay Act
    retaliation claims relating to Plaintiffs’ salary-review request and the
    subsequent revocation of their employment contracts.
    V.
    Muslow and Cunningham request that, on remand, we reassign the
    case because the district court improperly discredited their evidence and
    “expressed disdain” for their claims. Our power of reassignment “‘is an
    22
    Case: 22-30585     Document: 00516871664              Page: 23   Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    extraordinary one’ and ‘is rarely invoked.’” Miller v. Sam Hous. State Univ.,
    
    986 F.3d 880
    , 892 (5th Cir. 2021) (quoting Johnson v. Sawyer, 
    120 F.3d 1307
    ,
    1333 (5th Cir. 1997)). Plaintiffs have provided no persuasive reason why we
    should invoke this extraordinary power, and we decline to do so.
    *        *         *
    For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the district
    court in favor of LSU on Plaintiffs’ Title VII and Equal Pay Act claims
    alleging that LSU retaliated against Muslow and Cunningham by revoking
    their employment contracts following their salary-review request, and
    otherwise AFFIRM the judgment of the district court. We REMAND the
    case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    23
    Case: 22-30585     Document: 00516871664            Page: 24     Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    Jerry E. Smith, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
    I respectfully dissent, but only in regard to retaliation. As to that issue,
    plaintiffs have transmuted baseless speculation about LSU’s motive in re-
    scinding their employment contracts into a “genuine” and “material” fac-
    tual dispute. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Instead, we should affirm the
    summary judgment in full. I otherwise concur in the thorough and impres-
    sive opinion.
    The majority systemically—and correctly—recognizes plaintiffs’ fail-
    ure to carry their evidentiary burden on almost every claim. But its culling
    wrongly spares one stalk: plaintiffs’ retaliation claim. The theory is that LSU
    rescinded plaintiffs’ employment contracts effecting their transfer to the
    Office of the General Counsel (“OGC”) because they had sent an e-mail
    requesting a salary increase and raising the issue of gendered pay disparity.
    The LSU employee primarily responsible for the rescission was Thomas
    Skinner, Vice President of Legal Affairs and General Counsel.
    To survive summary judgment on retaliation, plaintiffs must establish
    a prima facie case. Lindsley v. TRT Holdings, Inc., 
    984 F.3d 460
    , 469 (5th Cir.
    2021). If they succeed, LSU must offer a “legitimate, non-retaliatory rea-
    son” for the action. 
    Id.
     at 470 (citing Gorman v. Verizon Wireless Tex., L.L.C.,
    
    753 F.3d 165
    , 171 (5th Cir. 2014)). The burden then shifts back to plaintiffs
    to show that the reason was pretextual. Gorman, 
    753 F.3d at 171
    .
    I do not dispute that plaintiffs have made out their prima facie case.
    But the majority’s well-intentioned treatment of LSU’s proffered non-
    retaliatory reasons is unduly constrained and overlooks swathes of the record.
    It identifies “several” reasons proffered by LSU for the contract rescissions,
    including that plaintiffs’ “positions were retired in favor of OGC positions;
    [p]laintiffs did not execute their OGC employment contracts; [p]laintiffs did
    not apply for the new OGC postings despite multiple invitations; and Mus-
    24
    Case: 22-30585        Document: 00516871664                Page: 25        Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    low advised [the Deputy General Counsel] that he did not have permission
    to treat her or Cunningham as OGC applicants.”
    The majority proceeds to note that the district court’s analysis on the
    retaliation claim was imprecise because it treated both the rescission of plain-
    tiffs’ contracts and their eventual termination as a single adverse employ-
    ment action. The district court therefore jumbled the (potentially different)
    non-retaliatory reasons for each of the two employment actions. LSU makes
    the same mistake on appeal.
    Fair enough. But that confusion was understandable, given that plain-
    tiffs lumped their theories of adverse employment action together. The
    majority correctly disentangles the arguments about each of the employment
    actions but construes LSU’s arguments too narrowly in light of the failure of
    all the parties to keep their analysis perfectly neat. After all, the university
    also contended that the salary demands themselves—rather than any allega-
    tion of pay disparity—provoked the contract rescission, pointing to Skinner’s
    testimony about the salary-request e-mail. 1
    The record unequivocally corroborates that explanation. Skinner’s
    deposition testimony—all sworn, none controverted—decisively answers
    the question of why plaintiffs’ contracts were rescinded: The requested
    salary increases were unreasonable and logistically impossible (or nearly so).
    Describing the request in his deposition, Skinner said,
    But what became clear in that e-mail is that [Muslow’s] salary
    expectations, or at least what she felt she should be entitled to,
    were significantly higher than what we had offered. And what
    _____________________
    1
    Even if we were inclined to impose the strictest requirements on LSU to present
    all of its arguments perfectly clearly in its appellate briefing, affirmance would still be war-
    ranted: “We are free to uphold the district court’s judgment on any basis that is supported
    by the record.” Zuspann v. Brown, 
    60 F.3d 1156
    , 1160 (5th Cir. 1995) (collecting cases).
    25
    Case: 22-30585    Document: 00516871664            Page: 26    Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    we had offered was significantly higher than the range that our
    HR department in Baton Rouge had said would be appropriate
    for the position.
    ....
    . . . I was willing to [increase her salary] in order to ease
    the transition . . . . When Ms. Muslow came back and said
    [$]370[,000] or whatever the number was, I—literally, it
    stopped me in my tracks because this was not a minor differ-
    ence in compensation. . . . This was a—this was over 50
    percent higher than the salary that we had offered.
    ....
    . . . Paying the chief counsel in New Orleans $370,000,
    when that individual is a Baton Rouge employee, would have
    made that individual maybe the second-highest-paid employee
    on the Baton Rouge campus next to President Alexander.
    . . . This was, “Hey, I need to see what’s out there and
    understand, if we can get somebody who is at least equally
    competent in the range that our folks are saying is supposed to
    be the range, then I’m not going to pay somebody $370,000 or
    $350,000.”
    Those statements are in exact accordance with Skinner’s e-mail to the Chan-
    cellor of the Health Sciences Center explaining the situation: “On Feb-
    ruary 15, 2019, Ms. Muslow e[-]mailed me demanding significant salary
    increases for the new [attorney] positions, far in excess of the amounts
    authorized for the positions by LSU HR[].”
    The explanation offered by Skinner is patently non-retaliatory. Mus-
    low requested a salary increase from $227,500 to $375,000—a 64.8% in-
    crease. Likewise, Cunningham requested an increase from $127,500 to
    $204,748 (both annualized)—a 60.5% increase—in addition to a bump from
    0.60 full-time equivalent to 0.80 full-time equivalent. The salary requests
    26
    Case: 22-30585       Document: 00516871664              Page: 27       Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    were not just substantively significant: They far exceeded the authorized
    compensation for the positions and would have “completely skew[ed] and
    destroy[ed] [LSU’s] compensation structure in Baton Rouge.” As for Mus-
    low’s request, Skinner thought the gap was “insurmountable without some
    empirical evidence or proof of what it would take to hire a chief counsel in
    New Orleans or, for that matter, a chief counsel in Shreveport,” only under-
    scoring the point. 2
    The discussion should end there. Skinner did not believe that a chief
    counsel—man or woman—was entitled to the salary Muslow requested.
    Indeed, her male successor, Louis Colletta, earned $182,500 when he
    started—over $40,000 less than what Muslow was making at the end of her
    tenure. Identical reasoning applies to Cunningham, given Skinner’s testi-
    mony and e-mail to the Chancellor (although her position is currently
    vacant).
    The majority stresses that Skinner understood plaintiffs’ e-mail to
    include an allegation of gender disparity in pay. That’s not in dispute, but
    it’s also irrelevant: The e-mail also contained a request for significant salary
    increases. Moreover, the part of the e-mail requesting salary bumps iden-
    tified both male and female comparators, and only the final few paragraphs
    of the e-mail mentioned anything about gender at all. The majority appears
    to find it inconceivable that Skinner could have been aware of both facets of
    the e-mail but have been motivated by only one of them. His deposition tes-
    timony eliminates any such doubts.
    Taken at face value, the majority’s reasoning unintentionally allows
    _____________________
    2
    Skinner did not even take Muslow and Cunningham out of the running for the
    new positions. They could still apply; he just was not going to agree to the huge increases
    without first determining whether the local labor market justified them.
    27
    Case: 22-30585     Document: 00516871664            Page: 28   Date Filed: 08/24/2023
    No. 22-30585
    any plaintiff to make absurd demands of her employer, gesture toward Title
    VII or the Equal Pay Act at the end of the request, and then survive summary
    judgment if the employer (reasonably) rejects the demands. The problems
    with that approach are clear even in this case. Skinner was pellucid on the
    basis for the rescissions: The requested salary increases were unreasonable
    and logistically nonviable. There is not a whiff of any retaliatory motive in
    the record. Nor do plaintiffs offer even a scintilla of evidence contradicting
    Skinner’s claims or demonstrating that they were pretextual. In fact, they
    don’t even mention them at all.
    “[N]o liability for unlawful retaliation arises if the employee would
    have faced that [action] even without the protected conduct.” Wantou v.
    Wal-Mart Stores Tex., L.L.C., 
    23 F.4th 422
    , 437 (5th Cir. 2022) (citing Long
    v. Eastfield Coll., 
    88 F.3d 300
    , 305 n.4 (5th Cir. 2002)). The question is
    whether LSU would have rescinded the contracts if plaintiffs had merely
    ended their e-mail before mentioning gender pay disparities at the end. The
    answer is clear from the record: Yes.
    Plaintiffs therefore failed to establish a genuine dispute as to any mate-
    rial fact on their retaliation claims. Because defendants are entitled to judg-
    ment as a matter of law under our circuit’s burden-shifting framework, the
    summary judgment should be affirmed across the board.
    28