C.J. Assigned the Lydells; Bartlet Postpones Sex‑Ed Decision

In the Outer Oval, Bartlet imposes a brisk political tempo and parcels out damage control: C.J. is told to sit with the grieving Lydells — with explicit worry that an unready, angry father could torpedo the administration's gay‑rights messaging — while Bartlet defers a combustible Sex Education report until he can read it, forcing C.J. to buy time and manage a leak. Simultaneously Bartlet orders Josh and Sam to pre-empt any hearings into Leo, exposing the team's willingness to trade moral clarity for institutional protection. The scene functions as both setup (C.J.'s fraught outreach to the Lydells; the delayed sex‑ed choice) and a tonal turning point that foregrounds the moral compromises the staff will be asked to make.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

C.J. enters to lighthearted teasing about Toby's cooking show habits, instantly puncturing the formal atmosphere before the conversation pivots to the serious Lydell family situation.

formal briefing to casual humor to serious concern ['Oval Office doorway']

Bartlet reveals his core political concern: Jonathan Lydell's potential embarrassment about his son's homosexuality could sabotage the hate-crimes bill signing, forcing C.J. to manage the grieving father carefully.

professional inquiry to moral tension

C.J. pushes the President on the urgent sex-education report, seeking immediate action on its dramatic findings about abstinence-only education failures, but Bartlet delays until end of day.

urgency to procedural delay

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

9
C.J. Cregg
primary

Tightly controlled empathy — personally affected by the family's loss yet aware of the political minefields, trying to balance humane outreach with message discipline.

C.J. confirms she'll meet the Lydells, presses the President about the Sex Education report's presentation, and accepts Bartlet's instruction to buy time and manage messaging and potential leaks.

Goals in this moment
  • Provide a sympathetic, steady presence for the Lydells to prevent a public backlash
  • Shape the framing and timing of the Sex Education report to avoid a damaging narrative
  • Buy time for the President to read before making a public decision
Active beliefs
  • How the administration handles grieving families will shape public perception
  • Releasing incendiary material without presidential approval will be politically dangerous
  • A personal, careful outreach by a senior communicator can blunt outrage or missteps
Character traits
compassionate professionally anxious media‑minded deferential but insistent
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Controlled and brisk — outwardly genial but insistently purposeful; protective of Leo and the institution while impatient with distractions.

President Bartlet takes command of the room's tempo, issues targeted orders: asks C.J. to sit with the Lydells, defers the Sex Education report for personal review, and instructs Josh and Sam to block any hearing into Leo.

Goals in this moment
  • Contain political damage to the administration and Leo's family
  • Delay public release or framing of the Sex Education report until he can review it
  • Prevent a congressional hearing that would publicize internal vulnerabilities
Active beliefs
  • Institutional stability and protecting staff reputation are paramount
  • Uncontrolled public spectacle (e.g., a withdrawn father forced into the limelight or a premature sex‑ed release) will harm policy goals
  • He should personally make final judgments on combustible documents
Character traits
decisive theatrical protective of staff strategic about optics
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Composed but attentive — aware of stakes and ready to support messaging or counsel the President if called.

Toby is present and briefly engaged in the CPB/bananas thread; in this event he listens and remains a guard for message discipline though he does not drive the Lydell or hearing directives.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect the administration's messaging around policy appointments
  • Maintain rhetorical discipline on contentious topics
  • Support colleagues in navigating political pitfalls
Active beliefs
  • Language and framing determine public reaction
  • Institutional appointments (like CPB) deserve careful defense
  • He should be the steward of precise messages
Character traits
disciplined linguistically exact guarded morally attentive
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Uneasy and solicitous — protective of relationships but aware of political peril, quietly worried about reputational risk to his family and himself.

Leo reports the facts about the Lydells and Simon Blye, asks for counsel, and implicitly asks Bartlet to intervene; he also relays Mandy's assessment of the grieving father's withdrawal.

Goals in this moment
  • Obtain advice and protection for himself and his family
  • Ensure the President understands the sensitivity of the Lydells' situation
  • Secure a trustworthy interlocutor for his personal concerns (hence the meeting with Simon)
Active beliefs
  • Personal friendships can provide the counsel he needs when political channels feel insufficient
  • He is vulnerable to political attack and needs protection
  • Bartlet's judgment and intervention carry decisive weight
Character traits
loyal vulnerable procedural seeking counsel
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Quietly dutiful — performing her role in the background, knowing small details matter and are noticed by senior staff.

Margaret is the backstage administrative source who fed Bartlet the scheduling gossip (Simon meeting); her small logistical work ripples into trust and suspicion about Leo's private counsel.

Goals in this moment
  • Support Leo by transmitting practical information
  • Keep the Chief of Staff's schedule organized and confidential
  • Ensure senior staff have the details they need
Active beliefs
  • Small administrative details can have political consequence
  • Discretion is part of her role
  • Her fidelity to Leo matters
Character traits
efficient discreet attentive loyal to Leo
Follow Margaret Hooper's journey

Alert and ready — braced for a political fight on the Hill, absorbing instructions with the promise of action and some suppressed irritation.

Josh is present at the Oval; Bartlet pulls him (and Sam) into the hallway and tasks them with pre‑empting any congressional hearing into Leo, warning them not to make deals without consulting the President.

Goals in this moment
  • Block or blunt any hearing that would expose Leo or the administration
  • Negotiate with Congressional actors to remove or limit leverage against the White House
  • Keep options open and not accept concessions without presidential sign‑off
Active beliefs
  • Hearings are a political weapon that must be neutralized
  • Political actors ('Let's Make a Deal') will try to extract concessions
  • Protecting senior aides preserves the President's ability to govern
Character traits
tactical defensive impatiently professional politically combative
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey
Jonathon Lydell

Jonathon Lydell is referenced as the public face of the family who will be met by C.J.; his likely reticence …

Simon Blye (private political operator, Leo McGarry acquaintance)

Simon Blye is discussed (not physically present) as Leo's outside confidant; Bartlet expresses distrust and frames Simon's presence as a …

Unnamed Grieving Father

The grieving father is not present in the room but is the object of the President's and C.J.'s concern — …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
Abstinence-Plus Sex Education Report

The Sex Education report is spoken of as a combustible policy packet that could be politically dramatic; Bartlet postpones reading it, making the report a narrative pressure point and forcing subordinates to buy time and manage leaks or optics.

Before: In the Outer/Oval Office stack of materials, physically …
After: Deferred: left unread by Bartlet for the day, …
Before: In the Outer/Oval Office stack of materials, physically present but unread by the President; in staff awareness as an agenda item.
After: Deferred: left unread by Bartlet for the day, flagged as 'to be reviewed' and requiring later message-shaping conversations.
President Bartlet's Compact Camera (S01E13)

Bartlet humorously claims to have broken into Leo's schedule compartment and taken infrared photos with his compact camera; the camera functions as a prop to puncture tension and to reveal Bartlet's playful intrusion into staff private spaces.

Before: Presumed in Bartlet's possession or readily available; an …
After: Remains a conversational prop, the joke landed and …
Before: Presumed in Bartlet's possession or readily available; an informal personal item used to make a joke.
After: Remains a conversational prop, the joke landed and the object returns to being a minor, playful presence in the room.
Brideshead Revisited (Cultural Reference)

Mentioned by Toby as part of a comic assurance of cultural competence ('I was raised on Brideshead Revisited'), the cultural reference functions as rhetorical padding to reassure Bartlet about handling CPB appointees and to humanize Toby's competence.

Before: Referenced culturally; not physically present or handled.
After: Remains a verbal signpost of Toby's confidence; no …
Before: Referenced culturally; not physically present or handled.
After: Remains a verbal signpost of Toby's confidence; no material change.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Oval Office (West Wing, White House)

The Portico is the entry point through which Bartlet and Leo arrive, giving the scene a spatial rhythm of arrival and immediate transition into business; its brief mention frames movement and the ritual of presidential approach.

Atmosphere Brief and charged—a momentary pause before entering decision space.
Function Arrival staging area that precedes Oval Office business.
Symbolism Marks the liminal threshold between outdoors/external world and the Presidency's interior authority.
Access Passive; controlled entry appropriate to presidential comings and goings.
Footsteps on stone A slight draft and movement of coats A tactical pause before entering formal spaces
West Wing Corridor (Exterior Hallway Outside Leo McGarry's Office)

The West Wing Hallway is used briefly when Bartlet pulls Josh and Sam aside for a private directive; it functions as a corridor where privacy is partial and urgency is compressed into quick tactical orders.

Atmosphere Fluorescent, urgent, and clipped; privacy is brittle and words matter.
Function Transitional corridor for private instructions and tactical coordination.
Symbolism Represents the thin veil between public decision and behind-the-scenes maneuvering.
Access Restricted circulation for staff; not public.
Fluorescent lighting flattens faces Metallic echo of shoes sharpens every word An agent steps away to give the President privacy
Outer Oval Office

The Outer Oval Office serves as the initial staging area where Bartlet and Leo enter, exchange banter with Mrs. Landingham and Nancy, and from which the staff transition into the Oval. It frames social ritual and backstage maneuvering, a threshold between intimacy and formal authority.

Atmosphere Domestic-tinged, taut with low humor that undercuts underlying political tension.
Function Staging and transitional space where staff receive quick directives and personal logistics are managed.
Symbolism Represents the liminal area between private care and public power, where domestic normalcy masks political …
Access Informal but traditionally limited to staff and household; accessible to senior aides and domestic staff.
Lamplight pools, close walls amplify low laughter A small desk with papers and a mug signals everydayness Quick footsteps and clipped banter create a pressured intimacy

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 2
Character Continuity

"Bartlet's protective loyalty to Leo remains consistent across both moments."

Banana Banter and the Drawer: Bartlet Shelves the Sex‑Ed Report
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Character Continuity

"Bartlet's protective loyalty to Leo remains consistent across both moments."

Shelving the Sex‑Ed Report to Save Leo
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: "This is no time to out a guy in front and center who's embarrassed that his son was gay.""
"C.J.: "Mr. President, I was wondering if you had an opportunity to look at the Sex Education report?""
"BARTLET: "I want to pre-empt a hearing. I don't want it. I don't want it for Leo. I don't want it for his family. I don't want it for us.""