Babish Directly Questions Bartlet on Perjury for MS Nondisclosure
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Oliver Babish interrogates President Bartlet about his lack of life and health insurance, probing for potential perjury regarding his MS diagnosis.
Bartlet defends his financial and health arrangements, asserting his family's security without government salary.
Oliver cuts to the chase, directly asking Bartlet if he ever lied under penalty of perjury about his MS.
Bartlet denies any perjury, maintaining his composure under Oliver's intense questioning.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Focused determination veiling underlying frustration at incomplete evidence
Oliver Babish conducts a precise interrogation of President Bartlet, probing insurance gaps and perjury risks with direct questions, swiftly cutting through explanations, and responds to Leo post-interruption with candid uncertainty about conclusions.
- • Expose any perjury in Bartlet's disclosures to assess conspiracy scope
- • Gather factual baseline on financial and health revelations for legal defense
- • Bartlet's insurance voids signal deeper disclosure failures potentially criminal
- • Only exhaustive questioning pierces political facades to reveal truth
Urgent impatience layered with protective concern for the presidency's stability
Leo McGarry knocks insistently, enters to urgently direct President Bartlet to take a critical call, watches him exit, then immediately pivots to interrogate Babish on his assessment of the probe.
- • Extract preliminary judgment from Babish on perjury risks
- • Prioritize external crisis by pulling Bartlet from the interrogation
- • Babish's probe must yield actionable clarity to safeguard Bartlet
- • Duty demands balancing legal scrutiny with real-time White House demands
focused
interrogates President Bartlet about life insurance, health insurance, and whether he signed a perjury-punishable document concealing his MS diagnosis
- • determine if Bartlet committed perjury by not disclosing MS on official documents
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Office of the White House Counsel hosts Babish's high-stakes interrogation of the President, its closed doors enabling raw legal probing into perjury perils, interrupted by Leo's knock, transforming it into a nexus of interrupted reckoning where uncertainty lingers post-exit.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Oliver's interrogation about Bartlet's health documents leads directly to Bartlet's confession about Abbey's perjury on Zoey's form, escalating the legal jeopardy."
Key Dialogue
"OLIVER: "Yeah, let me cut to the end of the page, sir. Have you ever signed any document for health insurance or life insurance or any document, which falls under the pains, and penalty of perjury in which you are asked about your health and did not disclose you have MS?""
"BARTLET: "No.""
"LEO: "What do you think?""
"OLIVER: "I am nowhere close to being able to answer that question.""