Fabula
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet

Bartlet Dangles for FEC Reform

Riding a wave of irritation from a humiliating public outing, Bartlet seizes a rare institutional opening when Josh reports two simultaneous F.E.C. resignations. Leo counsels defeatism — the Senate will fill the seats and the White House won't win — but Bartlet, craving principle over poll-driven caution, insists they at least "dangle our feet" and put forward reform-minded nominees. The beat crystallizes a tonal turning point: Bartlet choosing moral leadership (and political risk) over sanitized restraint, setting the causal chain that will force Josh to announce FEC nominees and provoke institutional pushback.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Josh reveals FEC vacancies, triggering Bartlet's impulse for reform despite Leo's immediate warnings about political impracticality.

opportunism to conflict

Bartlet overrules Leo and Josh's objections, insisting on 'dangling feet' in campaign finance reform by demanding reform-minded FEC nominees.

defiance to determination

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

7
C.J. Cregg
primary

Alert and multitasking—ready to translate any internal decision into press posture but not the driving voice in the exchange.

C.J. is present among the staff and participates in the surrounding chatter; she listens and later pivots to another staff problem, remaining professionally alert to the new political opening but not directly intervening in the FEC argument.

Goals in this moment
  • to anticipate press consequences of any FEC move
  • to protect the President from avoidable embarrassment
Active beliefs
  • Media will seize on any appearance of internal discord.
  • Better to shape the narrative proactively than react defensively.
Character traits
practical media-savvy observant
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Calmly professional—focused on ensuring the President has what he needs and the schedule proceeds.

Charlie escorts the President and staff through the halls, answers logistical questions about who has the President's remarks, and stands close during the FEC exchange, functioning as a composed aide facilitating movement.

Goals in this moment
  • to keep the President on schedule and supplied with materials
  • to minimize disruptions so the President can perform in public
Active beliefs
  • Orderly logistics reduce political embarrassment.
  • An aide's role is to make the President's choices operationally possible.
Character traits
efficient dutiful unflappable
Follow Charlie Young's journey

Quietly alert—calm on the surface while cataloging implications for communications and speech.

Toby is nearby and exchanges brief courtesies earlier; during the FEC exchange he listens, absorbing the practical political disagreement with professional focus, prepared to translate any decision into disciplined language.

Goals in this moment
  • to understand how the President's impulse will affect messaging
  • to be ready to craft tight communications depending on the decision
Active beliefs
  • Language and framing determine whether a political risk becomes a liability or a principled stand.
  • The staff must contain chaos and translate presidential instincts into actionable messaging.
Character traits
methodical linguistically precise emotionally contained
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Neutral and procedural—task-focused and unconcerned with the argument's politics.

Nancy, the ceremonial usher, waits at the auditorium entrance and punctuates the movement toward the stage; her presence marks the transition from private hallway debate to public performance as the policy impulse solidifies.

Goals in this moment
  • to escort the President and staff smoothly into the auditorium
  • to maintain ceremony and timing for the event
Active beliefs
  • Protocol preserves dignity regardless of internal debates.
  • The show must go on.
Character traits
ceremonial attentive polished
Follow Nancy O'Malley …'s journey

Cautiously alarmed and defensive—wary of political exposure but professionally resigned and obedient under presidential directive.

Joshua arrives from behind, delivers a rapid situational update including C.V.O. revisions and two F.E.C. resignations, then hears the President's impulse for a symbolic political move and objects on pragmatic grounds before ultimately conceding with a hesitant 'Yes, sir.'

Goals in this moment
  • to inform the President of immediate political developments
  • to prevent the administration from taking futile or losing political fights
  • to preserve leverage with Senate leadership and avoid needless confrontation
Active beliefs
  • The Senate leadership will ultimately fill FEC seats; the White House cannot easily force confirmations.
  • Political capital is scarce and should be spent strategically rather than symbolically.
  • Leo's caution reflects institutional reality and should guide approach.
Character traits
politically pragmatic protective of institutional interests cautious expository and fact-driven
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey

Somewhat distracted—professionally engaged but peripheral to the FEC argument; carrying a low-level anxiety about logistics and messaging.

Sam physically handed the President his remarks earlier and stands nearby as the F.E.C. news breaks; he listens and watches the political exchange unfold without intervening, present as a policy-minded observer.

Goals in this moment
  • to ensure the President has his prepared remarks and public messaging intact
  • to follow the chain of command and support staff decisions
  • to remain useful and avoid adding friction
Active beliefs
  • Public appearances and messaging are easily derailed by internal political fights.
  • Keeping the President supplied with remarks is essential to maintaining credibility.
Character traits
attentive deferential policy-oriented
Follow Sam Seaborn's journey
Supporting 1

Soberly amused—providing a stabilizing, non-political counterpoint to the staff's urgency.

Mrs. Landingham rides the escalator with the President and remains a quietly present domestic anchor; she listens to the conversation peripherally and offers domestic rebukes earlier, embodying steadiness rather than political analysis.

Goals in this moment
  • to maintain the President's routine and composure
  • to provide practical, grounded counsel when needed
Active beliefs
  • Small, human routines matter even amid political crisis.
  • The President needs steady, practical touchstones.
Character traits
maternal down-to-earth practical
Follow Mrs. Landingham's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
President Bartlet's Imagined Comic Prop Cabbage

Bartlet's comic invocation of beating Mrs. Landingham senseless 'with a head of cabbage' conjures a mental prop that lightens and humanizes the hallway exchange while also revealing his irritability; the cabbage is purely rhetorical but shifts tone and underscores his restless mood.

Before: Imagined by Bartlet as part of banter; not …
After: Remains a comic rhetorical image that punctuates the …
Before: Imagined by Bartlet as part of banter; not physically present.
After: Remains a comic rhetorical image that punctuates the conversation and offers a small, tense release.
C.J.'s Pocket Briefing Notebook (recurring personal notebook)

A pocket notebook (represented in the scene by Sam slamming his notebook) functions as the tactile evidence of preparation — slammed in frustration when Sam realizes he forgot something, underlining backstage disorder even as the President goes onstage.

Before: In active use by a staffer as a …
After: Closed or slammed shut in frustration, its abrupt …
Before: In active use by a staffer as a working reference for the President's remarks and talking points.
After: Closed or slammed shut in frustration, its abrupt handling signaling a missed procedural step and internal tension.
Outyear Projections Report (internal White House fiscal brief)

Referenced by Josh as the C.V.O.'s impending 'outyear projections' revision — the report functions as a concurrent informational pressure point that compounds the political significance of the F.E.C. vacancies and helps make the morning feel like a cascade of institutional developments.

Before: Existing bureaucratic report, not yet publicly released but …
After: Acknowledged by staff as part of the day's …
Before: Existing bureaucratic report, not yet publicly released but known to staff as an upcoming revision.
After: Acknowledged by staff as part of the day's political context and folded into their immediate triage of priorities.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Second-Floor Auditorium — Old Executive Office Building (O.E.O.B.)

The Second Floor Auditorium is the immediate destination and public stage — Bartlet moves inside to deliver remarks while the staff, just outside, process the political opening; it frames the divide between the theatrical presidency and the backstage policy scrimmage.

Atmosphere Functional, slightly chaotic backstage with a formal, performative public space just beyond the door.
Function Stage for the President's public remarks and the battleground for messaging decisions spawned moments earlier …
Symbolism Represents the public-facing theater of the presidency where private choices reverberate publicly; the doorway separates …
Access Open to invited audience (the Trout Fishermen) but monitored and controlled; staff remain outside doorway …
Fluorescent lighting on tiered seating Announcement over the auditorium sound system ('Ladies and Gentlemen, the President of the United States!') Wet coats and hurried staff hovering at the door

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 8
Causal

"Bartlet's decision to 'dangle feet' in campaign finance reform directly leads to Josh announcing the President's nominees for the FEC."

Josh Picks a Fight Over the FEC
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
Causal

"Bartlet's decision to 'dangle feet' in campaign finance reform directly leads to Josh announcing the President's nominees for the FEC."

The Room Empties — Josh's Quiet Resolve
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
Character Continuity medium

"Bartlet's early frustration with his staff carries through to Leo's later confrontation about his self-sabotaging caution."

Let Bartlet Be Bartlet — Leo's Confrontation and Rally
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
Character Continuity medium

"Bartlet's early frustration with his staff carries through to Leo's later confrontation about his self-sabotaging caution."

Muffins, Polls and a Reckoning: Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
Character Continuity medium

"Bartlet's early frustration with his staff carries through to Leo's later confrontation about his self-sabotaging caution."

Polling Meltdown — Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
Symbolic Parallel medium

"Bartlet's humiliating 'magnificent vista' line symbolizes his disconnect from reality, later resolved by his declaration to speak freely."

Muffins, Polls and a Reckoning: Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
Symbolic Parallel medium

"Bartlet's humiliating 'magnificent vista' line symbolizes his disconnect from reality, later resolved by his declaration to speak freely."

Polling Meltdown — Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
Symbolic Parallel medium

"Bartlet's humiliating 'magnificent vista' line symbolizes his disconnect from reality, later resolved by his declaration to speak freely."

Let Bartlet Be Bartlet — Leo's Confrontation and Rally
S1E19 · Let Bartlet Be Bartlet

Key Dialogue

"JOSH: "The C.V.O.'s gonna revise its outyear projections, two commissioners resigned from the F.E.C. this morning, and the N.G.A. endorsed trigger locks.""
"BARTLET: "Two F.E.C. commissioners resigned?""
"LEO: "Mr. President, you're thinking about changing the nature of democracy.""
"BARTLET: "I'm not saying jump off the boat, Josh. I'm saying dangle our feet.""