Fabula
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day

Preempt the Hearing — Bartlet's Line in the Sand for Leo

In the Outer Oval, a light, policy‑laden meeting quickly hardens into an explicit presidential defense. Bartlet interrupts routine briefings to quietly order Josh and Sam to stop any House hearings into Leo's past — a preemptive, all‑options mandate that makes protection personal and political. He then confronts Leo about a meeting with Simon Blye, exposing distrust of fair‑weather friends and revealing a protective loyalty that raises the stakes: this is not just damage control, it's a moral choice that will shape the administration's tactics and liabilities going forward.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Bartlet pulls Josh and Sam aside for a clandestine directive: prevent House hearings on Leo's past at any cost, authorizing whatever political deal necessary to protect his Chief of Staff.

public meeting to private command ['Hallway outside Oval Office']

Bartlet confronts Leo about meeting with Simon Blye, delivering a stark warning about fair-weather friends and questioning why Leo seeks counsel outside their tight inner circle during crisis.

concerned inquiry to protective warning

Leo defensively justifies seeking outside help while Bartlet expresses loving concern about his trusting nature, creating tension between Leo's need for broad support and the President's protective loyalty.

defensive justification to vulnerable acceptance

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Controlled, quietly resolute — a calm exterior carrying personal loyalty and impatience with political gamesmanship.

President Bartlet interrupts a leaving briefing, pulls Josh and Sam into the hallway to give a blunt, pre‑emptive order protecting Leo from congressional hearings, then returns to the Oval and directly questions Leo about meeting with Simon Blye.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent any House hearing into Leo's past from proceeding or gaining leverage.
  • Reassert control over the administration's response and preserve staff morale and privacy.
  • Clarify Leo's motives for meeting with Simon Blye and express mistrust.
Active beliefs
  • Public hearings into a close aide's past will be damaging to individuals and the administration.
  • Leo deserves protection and counsel from the President rather than public exposure.
  • Some outside political operatives (e.g., Simon Blye) are opportunistic and cannot be trusted in crisis.
Character traits
decisive protective witty (uses humor as disarming tactic) authoritative
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Vulnerable and apologetic — feels exposed yet reluctant to cast off personal loyalties even when questioned by the President.

Leo stands with Bartlet through the briefing, listens as Bartlet orders protections on his behalf, and is then privately confronted in the Oval about meeting Simon Blye — he defends Blye as a friend and seeks counsel, appearing rueful and slightly defensive.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure counsel and support during a potentially embarrassing inquiry.
  • Preserve personal relationships (defend his friendship with Simon Blye).
  • Avoid escalating the public dimension of his private past.
Active beliefs
  • Friends like Simon have been helpful in good times and may provide needed counsel now.
  • The President values and protects him; he should be honest about his needs.
Character traits
loyal trusting of friends vulnerable deferential to the President
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Professional detachment — performing duties without intrusion into the content of the conversation.

The Secret Service agent posted at the Oval doorway politely steps aside when Bartlet asks to speak privately in the hallway, physically enforcing access and signaling the corridor's temporary privacy for an executive directive.

Goals in this moment
  • Maintain Presidential security and control access to the Oval.
  • Allow senior staff a private moment while preserving protocol.
Active beliefs
  • Access to the President is controlled and must be enforced.
  • Non‑interference with internal staff discussions is part of duty.
Character traits
disciplined procedural discreet
Follow Oval Office …'s journey

Alert, professionally focused — ready to convert the President's directive into tactical action while masking any personal concern.

Joshua Lyman receives Bartlet's order in the hallway, acknowledges the timing for going up to the Hill, and accepts the instruction to preserve options and check with the President before conceding anything to opponents.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect Leo and the administration from a damaging, public hearing.
  • Maintain maximum leverage when negotiating with House members ('don't take anything off the table').
Active beliefs
  • House actors will attempt to trade hearings for concessions.
  • Immediate, unified White House direction minimizes political damage.
Character traits
pragmatic responsive politically savvy respectful of command
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Abstinence-Plus Sex Education Report

The Sex Education report is verbally raised by C.J. and Leo as a consequential policy packet requiring presidential review; it functions as a narrative pressure point—something the President must choose to release or stage, and a deadline that competes with the emergent personnel crisis.

Before: Placed among briefing materials in the Oval Office, …
After: Still unread by Bartlet at scene's end; deferred …
Before: Placed among briefing materials in the Oval Office, unread by the President but in staff circulation.
After: Still unread by Bartlet at scene's end; deferred for end‑of‑day discussion and remains in the office's briefing stack.
President Bartlet's Compact Camera (S01E13)

Bartlet references his compact camera as the comedic device that 'proved' he saw Leo's meeting on the schedule—used rhetorically to disarm Leo and to assert knowingness. It functions narratively as a small, humanizing prop that punctures tension and enables an intimate reprimand.

Before: In the President's possession or readily available; implied …
After: Remains in the President's possession after the disclosure; …
Before: In the President's possession or readily available; implied to be accessible in his personal items.
After: Remains in the President's possession after the disclosure; used only as a verbal joke rather than producing physical evidence on screen.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Oval Office (West Wing, White House)

The Oval Office is the central battleground for the substantive briefing—where policy details (bananas, CPB appointments) meet personnel politics. It hosts the formal exchange where Bartlet puts institutional muscle behind a personal protection order.

Atmosphere Shifts from routine briefing formality to taut, purpose-driven focus when Bartlet issues directives.
Function Meeting place for senior decision-making and public-presidential authority.
Symbolism Embodies institutional power and the moral burden of presidential stewardship.
Access Restricted to senior staff, household aides, and cleared personnel; security present at threshold.
Presidential desk anchors the room Scattered briefing papers and the Sex Education report are on desks Staff rise and sit in formal deference on the President's entrance
West Wing Corridor (Exterior Hallway Outside Leo McGarry's Office)

The West Wing Hallway functions as the private corridor where Bartlet pulls Josh and Sam aside to give the explicit order to pre‑empt a hearing—a liminal space enabling confidential tactical directives away from the wider group.

Atmosphere Compressed, urgent, and conspiratorial—whispers and clipped commands carry down the hall.
Function Transition and private instruction zone for rapid tactical decisions.
Symbolism Represents the backstage machinery of power where public posture is translated into covert action.
Access Limited to senior staff and security; serves as a tactical funnel to the Hill.
Fluorescent lighting flattens color and heightens urgency Echoing footsteps and closed doors reinforce confidentiality The agent at the door is asked to leave to allow privacy
Outer Oval Office

The Outer Oval Office serves as the initial threshold where domestic staff (Mrs. Landingham, Nancy) and the President exchange banter, establishing informal tone. It frames entry into formal council and stages the shift from casual to urgent political business.

Atmosphere Light, domestic, slightly teasing before tension accrues.
Function Staging area and informal buffer between public Oval ceremony and private presidential counsel.
Symbolism Represents the White House's domestic continuity and the comforting rituals that momentarily humanize power.
Access Open to senior staff and household personnel; limited public access.
Lamplight and small desk objects create homely intimacy Footsteps and whispered banter echo in the narrow room Mrs. Landingham's presence asserts informal authority

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: "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. They know that, and they're gonna play 'Let's Make a Deal.' Don't take anything off the table until you've talked to me. You understand?""
"LEO: "He's a good friend.""
"BARTLET: "No, he's not.""
"BARTLET: "You put a lot of faith in people, Leo, and I love you for that. I just don't want to see you get disappointed.""