Fabula
S1E2 · Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc

Mandy Returns — Drawing the Lines

In the communications war room, Leo cold‑calls a fixer: Mandy. Her appointment immediately fractures the team's calm — Josh reacts as if ambushed because Mandy is his ex. What should be a tactical hire to steady a brewing communications crisis becomes personal: Josh only accepts her if formal authority lines are drawn and she explicitly answers to him and Toby. The scene functions as a turning point — it solves a tactical need while seeding interpersonal rivalry that will slow and complicate the administration's crisis response.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

4

The team pressures Leo to approve a media consultant, pivoting from economic concerns to crisis management needs.

resistance to concession ["Leo's office"]

Leo ambushes Josh by proposing Mandy as the consultant, provoking Josh's panicked protests about personal history.

surprise to outrage

Josh ultimately concedes but insists on drawing power charts asserting authority over Mandy, revealing deep personal discomfort.

defeat to petulance

Josh dramatically reappears to reassert his Mandy ultimatum, revealing obsessive fixation on the issue.

determination to absurdity

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5
C.J. Cregg
primary

Amused and professionally detached — enjoying the interpersonal theater while staying ready to execute messaging implications.

C.J. is present and adds a wry aside about Mandy's unemployment and Josh's credit; she stands inside the doorway, observes the negotiation, and then moves to her office as the meeting ends.

Goals in this moment
  • Signal support for practical staffing choices
  • Maintain press operations unaffected by internal disputes
Active beliefs
  • Staffing decisions are often personal yet must be treated as functional
  • A degree of levity helps defuse internal tension without sacrificing effectiveness
Character traits
witty observant politically savvy measured
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Controlled and procedural — privately aware of the potential for mess but outwardly cooperative and solution‑oriented.

Toby supports the hire once it is framed as operationally necessary; he accepts Josh's chain‑of‑command demand and helps close the agreement, demonstrating message discipline over personal entanglement.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the communications function has a clear chain of responsibility
  • Avoid future public messaging clashes triggered by interpersonal rivalry
Active beliefs
  • Clear lines of authority prevent mixed signals from leaking to the press
  • Professionalism can be enforced through defined reporting structures
Character traits
disciplined pragmatic measured protective of message control
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Calmly impatient — focused on the operational solution and mildly amused by staff theatrics, but unwilling to be derailed.

Leo initiates the tactical hire, frames it as necessary and pragmatic, sidelines Josh's personal objection with blunt managerial authority, and pushes the team to accept the consultant to solve the communications problem.

Goals in this moment
  • Fill an urgent communications gap quickly
  • Keep the staff united behind a single, practical fix
  • Minimize drama while maximizing tactical outcomes
Active beliefs
  • Institutional needs trump personal discomfort
  • Hiring competent help is preferable to internal hand‑wringing
Character traits
decisive pragmatic blunt institutionally focused
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Irritated and exposed; surface team-player posture masking personal discomfort and a fear of losing control over workplace dynamics.

Josh is verbally ambushed by Leo's decision to rehire Mandy; he objects on personal grounds, insists on formal reporting lines, threatens to draw a chart to enforce authority, and departs still agitated.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent Mandy from operating without clear reporting lines
  • Avoid public or Oval Office confrontations with Mandy
  • Protect his professional authority and managerial jurisdiction
Active beliefs
  • Personal history with staffers affects workplace effectiveness and must be contained
  • Clear hierarchical lines reduce conflict and preserve the administration's focus
Character traits
territorial about chain-of-command defensive performatively moralistic protective of institutional order
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey
Madeline Hampton

Mandy is invoked as the consultant to be rehired; she does not speak or appear physically in the scene, but …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Hilton Head Draft

Sam's 'Hilton Head' draft is present as tangible proof of the team's ongoing work. Mentioned and complimented in Leo's office, it functions as a legitimizing artifact that reminds the group of substantive policy work even as they triage PR problems.

Before: In Sam's possession, recently completed and being carried …
After: Still with staff (delivered toward C.J.'s office) and …
Before: In Sam's possession, recently completed and being carried toward C.J.'s office; pages checked one last time.
After: Still with staff (delivered toward C.J.'s office) and acknowledged by colleagues; remains a background work product rather than central to the hiring decision.
Organizational / Reporting Chart (Communications Office, produced by Joshua Lyman)

An organizational chart is invoked by Josh as the immediate remedy for potential confusion: he promises to 'draw a chart' with lines and arrows to codify that Mandy answers to him and Toby. The chart is a narrative instrument — a future physicalization of authority to prevent Oval confrontations.

Before: Not yet drawn; only a conceptual tool referenced …
After: Planned and delegated to Josh to create; transforms …
Before: Not yet drawn; only a conceptual tool referenced by Josh as a solution to expected friction.
After: Planned and delegated to Josh to create; transforms from idea to an impending artifact meant to regulate behavior.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Oval Office (West Wing, White House)

Leo's office (the Outer Oval threshold) is the authoritative forum where the hire is proposed and ratified. Its proximity to the President and senior staff makes it the place to settle strategy and personnel decisions, and it is where personal history collides with institutional needs.

Atmosphere Ordered but tense: brisk, businesslike exchanges punctuated by flashes of personal heat as Josh objects; …
Function Meeting place for senior decision‑making and personnel arbitration; final arbiter of tactical moves.
Symbolism Embodies institutional power and the necessity of subordinating personal grievance to presidential priorities.
Access Restricted to senior staff and invited personnel; not a public space.
Polished wood and modest desk creating an authoritative threshold Brief, clipped time pressure ('You have three minutes') A small group of senior staff in close quarters, amplifying interpersonal dynamics
West Wing Corridor (Exterior Hallway Outside Leo McGarry's Office)

The Communications Office functions as the operational staging ground where Sam's phone call, his completed draft, and the initial confessions occur. It serves as the nervous, transitional space from which staff travel to Leo's office to escalate the problem.

Atmosphere Claustrophobic, busy, and slightly frazzled — phones ringing, staff moving between offices with an undercurrent …
Function Staging area and nerve center for rapid-response: where problems are triaged and staff assemble before …
Symbolism Represents the administration's front‑line vulnerability: public perception is manufactured here and small mistakes escalate quickly.
Access Open to communications staff and immediate aides; not public but frequented by multiple junior and …
Fluorescent lighting and the hum of electronics Ringing telephones and paper in hands (Sam's draft) Quick, clipped exchanges and movement toward senior offices

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Character Continuity

"Mandy's earlier lament about the White House celebrating her defeat foreshadows the tension when Leo proposes hiring her as a media consultant, which Josh reacts to with personal discomfort."

Mandy Confronts Russell — The Deal That Buried 443
S1E2 · Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc

Key Dialogue

"LEO: Can you think of a single reason not to use Mandy that isn't personal?"
"JOSH: She used to be my girlfriend!"
"JOSH: As long as she understands that she answers to me and she answers to Toby. I don't want to have to go 15 rounds with her in the Oval Office."