Shelving the Sex‑Ed Report to Save Leo

President Bartlet orders the White House to suppress a contentious sex‑education report — shelving it until after the midterm elections — in order to protect Chief of Staff Leo McGarry from damaging hearings. C.J. Cregg fights a moral argument: the report’s findings show that withholding information increases unsafe sex and that providing safe‑sex information reduces harm. Bartlet answers with brutal political realism — congressional funding only favors abstinence, and a deal made by Josh and Sam obliges them to buy time. The exchange crystallizes the season’s theme: truth and public duty sacrificed for political survival, leaving C.J. to leave with a quiet, cutting rebuke about their shared responsibilities.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

6

Bartlet enters the Oval Office and shifts focus to C.J., immediately addressing the contentious sex-ed report.

casual to serious ['Oval Office']

Bartlet informs C.J. they will shelve the sex-ed report until after midterm elections, prioritizing political survival over public health truth.

directive to defensive

C.J. passionately argues against suppressing the report, citing moral obligation to share expert findings with the public.

frustration to pleading

Bartlet reveals the shelving is part of a deal to protect Leo from congressional hearings, forcing C.J. to confront political reality.

defensive to resigned

Bartlet instructs C.J. to literally 'throw it out with the trash,' crystallizing the moral compromise.

directive to grim acceptance

C.J. exits but delivers a parting shot about being 'better teachers,' leaving Bartlet pensive about the ethical cost.

resignation to lingering doubt

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

6
C.J. Cregg
primary

Righteous and constrained frustration; her professional composure masks genuine dismay at being asked to conceal information she believes will prevent harm.

C.J. makes the ethical and procedural case for publishing the report: she quotes the findings, insists on the White House's obligation, and presses the President on transparency. She pauses, accepts the decision with visible disappointment, then offers a final, cutting rebuke about teaching responsibilities as she leaves.

Goals in this moment
  • Compel the President to honor the commission's findings and disclose them.
  • Protect public health by ensuring the administration uses its pulpit responsibly.
  • Maintain the integrity of the press office's relationship to truth.
Active beliefs
  • The White House has a moral obligation to present empirical findings, especially on public health.
  • Withholding the report will result in preventable harm to teenagers.
  • Institutional reputation should not trump factual disclosure when lives are at stake.
Character traits
morally principled tenacious committed to public duty emotionally controlled but hurt
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Resolute and mildly weary; outwardly calm with a steeliness that masks the ethical weight of choosing political expediency over immediate transparency.

President Bartlet receives C.J.'s moral argument, listens while working at his desk, makes a considered political decision to delay release, and frames the choice as tactical necessity to protect Leo. He physically sits, removes his glasses at the end, and speaks with a mix of paternalism and bluntness.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect Chief of Staff Leo McGarry from politically damaging hearings.
  • Minimize institutional and electoral damage before the midterms.
  • Control the public narrative so the administration retains flexibility.
Active beliefs
  • The administration must prioritize political survival to preserve its broader program.
  • Congressional funding incentives and realities limit what can be done publicly now.
  • Timing and staging of disclosures matter more than immediate moral purity in governance.
Character traits
pragmatic protective of staff politically savvy slightly patronizing
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Unstated in scene; implicitly endangered and relieved by the President's action, though the decision will place moral burden on staff.

Leo is not present but is the explicit reason for the President's decision; Bartlet frames the delay as necessary to 'get Leo off the hook,' making Leo the person whose career and immediate safety are being actively protected by the choice.

Goals in this moment
  • Avoid immediate congressional scrutiny and damaging hearings (as inferred).
  • Preserve the efficacy of his role and the administration's operational capacity.
Active beliefs
  • Political exposures can derail staffers and administration priorities.
  • Sometimes containment and timing are the only viable tools to protect personnel.
Character traits
vulnerable (by implication) institutional linchpin political target
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Not emotional within the scene; their influence is evidentiary and moral rather than affective.

The commissioned medical consultants are invoked indirectly through C.J.'s recitation of their findings; they function as authoritative, apolitical sources whose empirical conclusions create the ethical tension between disclosure and delay.

Goals in this moment
  • Provide an evidence-based assessment of sex education effectiveness (as intended).
  • Inform policy with clinical findings, expecting responsible use by policymakers.
Active beliefs
  • Empirical evidence should guide public-health policy.
  • Disclosure of findings enables better public health outcomes.
Character traits
scientific authoritative detached
Follow Commissioned Medical …'s journey

Matter-of-fact and slightly reproving; she is focused on protocol rather than the moral argument unfolding inside the Oval.

Mrs. Landingham appears briefly in the anteroom, enforcing presidential routine by denying Bartlet a banana and signaling C.J. is waiting; her presence punctuates the domestic normality around the Oval before the policy exchange begins.

Goals in this moment
  • Maintain the President's schedule and dignity.
  • Ensure appropriate staff access and timing for meetings.
Active beliefs
  • The presidency functions through small rituals and discipline.
  • Orderly administration of the President's day is essential to effective governance.
Character traits
practical maternal direct
Follow Mrs. Landingham's journey
Joshua Lyman

Joshua Lyman is referenced as a negotiating actor (the dealmaker along with Sam) whose bargain influences the President's choice; his …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
President Josiah 'Jed' Bartlet's Metal-Rim Reading Glasses

President Bartlet's metal‑rim reading glasses serve as a small physical punctuation: he wears them during business, uses a gesture (removal) to mark a shift in mood, and removes them at the end while looking pensive — a tactile signifier of private reflection after a morally costly decision.

Before: Worn by Bartlet as he reads and addresses …
After: Removed by Bartlet at the scene's end and …
Before: Worn by Bartlet as he reads and addresses C.J., part of his usual presidential manner.
After: Removed by Bartlet at the scene's end and held or set aside as he contemplates the consequences of his choice.
Sex‑Ed Report (Printed Disclosure Packet — Leo's Office)

The printed Sex‑Ed Report is the contested object of the scene: its findings are read aloud by C.J., it is described as "incendiary," and Bartlet decides it will be set aside in a drawer until after the midterms. The report functions as both evidentiary truth and political liability, the physical stand‑in for the moral choice.

Before: Completed and back in the administration's possession; known …
After: Designated to be shelved — figuratively and literally …
Before: Completed and back in the administration's possession; known to some reporters and sitting on or near presidential staff desks.
After: Designated to be shelved — figuratively and literally placed in a drawer and withheld from public release until after the midterm elections.
Metaphorical 'Trash' (rhetorical device for discarding news items)

The 'Metaphorical Trash' is invoked rhetorically when Bartlet instructs staff how to speak to the press — "Throw it out with the trash" — turning a moral suppression into a communication tactic and verbal ritual of disposal, normalizing the act of burying the report.

Before: An available rhetorical device used by senior staff …
After: Activated as the chosen frame for public messaging: …
Before: An available rhetorical device used by senior staff to describe discarding stories; conceptually present.
After: Activated as the chosen frame for public messaging: the administration will downplay the report and rhetorically consign it to the trash in media interactions.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Oval Office (West Wing, White House)

The Oval Office is the decision chamber where Bartlet and C.J. negotiate truth versus political survival. It concentrates ceremony and authority, making the private choice to shelter the report into an act with national consequence. The room's domestic objects and desk frame the moral weight of the exchange.

Atmosphere Tense, sober, and intimate — authoritative space where joking and banter fall away and consequential …
Function Battleground for moral argument and executive decision; the site where the President asserts control over …
Symbolism Embodies institutional power and the loneliness of executive choice — where personal loyalty and public …
Access Restricted to senior staff and close advisors; private meeting space closed by Bartlet when he …
Lamplight over the desk and the presidential seal anchoring the room. The sound of a closing door and the tactile act of removing reading glasses punctuating mood shifts.
Outer Oval Office

The Outer Oval Office stages the opening domestic exchange: Mrs. Landingham intercepts the President, refuses a banana, and announces C.J. is waiting. It acts as a domestic buffer between everyday White House rhythms and the formal decision‑making inside the Oval, subtly enforcing decorum before the political confrontation.

Atmosphere Domestic and taut — familiar routines and blunt, maternal authority temper the build toward policy …
Function Antechamber and gatekeeper that filters access and sets the tone before the Oval meeting.
Symbolism Represents the private, domestic order that mediates the public presidency — a maternal counterweight to …
Access Effectively restricted to senior staff and household attendants; functions as a staff filter to the …
Close quarters with a small desk and ritual objects. Low, practical lighting and the sound of footsteps and brief, sharp exchanges.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 10
Causal

"The sex-ed report's controversial findings lead directly to the decision to shelve it for political expediency."

Scripted Optics Break Under Grief and Policy Bombshell
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Causal

"The sex-ed report's controversial findings lead directly to the decision to shelve it for political expediency."

Report on 'Abstinence‑Plus' Drops on C.J.'s Desk
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Causal

"Bruno's political threat directly results in the report being shelved to protect Leo."

Bruno's Ultimatum — 'So, what happened?'
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Character Continuity

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

C.J. Assigned the Lydells; Bartlet Postpones Sex‑Ed Decision
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Character Continuity

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

Setting the Pace: Bartlet Cuts In, Protects Leo, and Sets the Day
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Character Continuity

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

Preempt the Hearing — Bartlet's Line in the Sand for Leo
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Symbolic Parallel medium

"The 'Take Out The Trash' strategy becomes literally enacted with the sex-ed report."

Burnt Hamburger Ritual & the Friday Dump
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Symbolic Parallel medium

"The 'Take Out The Trash' strategy becomes literally enacted with the sex-ed report."

Take-Out-the-Trash: Friday Damage Control
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Thematic Parallel

"Both moments force C.J. to choose between morality and political necessity."

Hallway Clash: Principle vs. Press
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Thematic Parallel

"Both moments force C.J. to choose between morality and political necessity."

The Lydell Confrontation — Public Fury vs. Press Control
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: We're gonna leave it alone for a while."
"C.J.: The report is very direct, sir, it says withholding knowledge about having sex doesn't prevent teenagers from having sex, it prevents teenagers from having sex safely. And it says offering information about safe sex doesn't increase the rate of sex, it increases the rate of protected sex."
"C.J.: Mr. President? We could all be better teachers."