World Bank
Description
Affiliated Characters
Event Involvements
Events with structured involvement data
World Bank paired with IMF in Prague summit context, C.J. affirming restriction relaxations despite Didian's post-recess objections, highlighting multilateral economic maneuvers under White House optimism and press dissection.
Through summit plans in briefing discourse
Constrained by U.S. legislative hurdles
Exposes tensions in global economic governance
World Bank paired with IMF in C.J.'s Prague assurance, entangled in Didian's subcommittee threat; press query underscores its vulnerability to U.S. procedural blocks, amplifying stakes in global finance narrative.
Referenced in policy briefing and objections.
Subject to congressional veto power.
Highlights multilateral bodies' reliance on U.S. approval.
The World Bank is presented as a phone contact through which the administration begins discussions of rebuilding packages after Arkutu's stepdown, signaling financial coordination and multilateral buy-in for recovery.
Through leadership contacted by the President via phone.
A cooperative but powerful financial partner whose resources and lending standards shape reconstruction options.
Positions the administration within established global financial frameworks, lending legitimacy to U.S.-led rebuilding plans.
Not specified in scene; implied urgency to align with U.S. priorities.
The World Bank is named as a phone contact for rebuilding-package discussions; its invocation legitimizes the administration's economic approach to the Kuhndu aftermath and signals multilateral financial planning.
Mentioned as institutional leadership reached by phone; represented through C.J.'s summary of the President's calls.
Cooperative partner to the U.S. administration, providing technical and financial muscle; not subordinate but essential for reconstruction financing.
Signals that reconstruction will be multilateral and financed through established global institutions, shaping expectations and policy framing.
Not specified in the scene; implied technocratic alignment with U.S. positions.
The World Bank is invoked as one of the international institutions the President called regarding rebuilding packages after Arkutu's stepdown; its mention elevates the administration's focus on substantive global policy during the briefing and helps C.J. redirect coverage away from local campaign noise.
Through the President's phone calls to its leadership, as described by C.J.
A powerful multilateral financier cooperating with the U.S. administration, operating as a partner rather than a subordinate.
Its involvement underlines the administration's use of multilateral institutions to legitimize policy and shift media focus toward substantive international action.
Not detailed here; coordination with other international institutions is implied.
Related Events
Events mentioning this organization
In the Press Room, C.J. deftly fields queries on the IMF-World Bank Prague meeting, downplaying Pete Didian's objections amid congressional recess. She humorously deflects Mark's …
C.J. holds an off-the-cuff White House briefing that both humanizes and nationalizes the Kuhndu crisis — portraying President Bartlet as actively engaged (calls with the …