Demanding a Doctrine

President Bartlet rejects the State Department's cautious inaugural phrasing and pushes for a clear, morally freighted foreign‑policy doctrine while morning levity (a poetic Chief Justice, a missing Washington Bible) punctuates the Oval Office. The Khundu crisis—mass killings and endangered American missionaries—arrives as an ethical imperative that sharpens the rhetoric. Will volunteers to mine Bartlet's record and build a distinct voice; Toby dispatches him to coordinate awkwardly with State, exposing interagency friction, leak risk, and the speech's real-world consequences.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

4

Bartlet critiques the State Department's conservative foreign policy language in his inaugural speech draft, expressing his desire for more substantive rhetoric.

frustration to resolve

Will seeks clarity from Bartlet on his foreign policy vision and alludes to the deep collaboration needed between a President and his speechwriter.

tentative to determined ['THE OVAL OFFICE']

Will requests Charlie's help in accessing extensive archival materials of Bartlet's past speeches to inform the inaugural address, showing his dedication to capturing the President's voice.

urgency to relief ['OUTER OVAL OFFICE']

Toby instructs Will to meet with the State Department Communications Director, acknowledging the potential awkwardness of the inexperienced Will representing the White House.

pragmatism to tension

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

9

Playful and alert — using levity to calm the room while monitoring how language and ritual will play to the press.

Participates in banter, raises the possibility that the Chief Justice's meter is a code, and stands by as staff rehearse oath details while managing the intersection of optics and protocol.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the President's ceremony and message will read well to reporters.
  • Probe whether unusual details (the dissent in meter) mean anything operational.
  • Support the President tactically as communications choices are made.
Active beliefs
  • Press and ceremonial optics shape public reception of policy.
  • Strange facts (poetic dissent) can become distracting if not managed.
Character traits
witty curious media‑aware
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Apologetic but efficient — anxious to solve practical problems without slowing the President.

Interrupts to report that Hollowman requires lead time to fetch the George Washington Bible, offers to help Will obtain Governor Bartlet's records, and exits after the President chooses the family Bible.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure the requested ceremonial Bible or acceptable substitute.
  • Support staff research requests quickly (New Hampshire archives, Library of Congress).
  • Keep the inauguration logistics from derailing policy work.
Active beliefs
  • Custodians (Hollowman/Freemasons) control historical artifacts and require notice.
  • Staffers should handle archival and logistical tasks quietly and competently.
Character traits
helpful deferential logistical
Follow Charlie Young's journey
Hollowman
primary

Not shown; functional presence via protocol.

Referenced by Charlie as the Freemasons' contact who controls access to the George Washington Bible; not on stage but his rules shape the President's ritual choice.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect custody and condition of the George Washington Bible.
  • Enforce source protocols for artifact retrieval.
Active beliefs
  • Historical artifacts require controlled handling and lead time.
  • Organizations safeguarding relics set strict access rules.
Character traits
custodial (implied) procedural
Follow Hollowman's journey

Frustrated with institutional euphemism but resolute — masking anxiety about real-world consequences with rhetorical precision and wryness.

Leads the room: demands foreign policy copy on the prompter, repudiates safe State Department phrasing, absorbs the Khundu security update, and chooses a personal family Bible for the oath — steering both rhetoric and ritual under pressure.

Goals in this moment
  • Force the inaugural rhetoric to mean something substantive rather than safe diplomatese.
  • Maintain ceremonial authenticity (choose a Bible with personal resonance).
  • Understand and respond to the Khundu crisis.
  • Prevent White House language from being co‑opted by cautious bureaucracy.
Active beliefs
  • Words in a presidential address should carry moral weight and real consequence.
  • Institutional language (State boilerplate) often softens moral responsibility.
  • Symbolic acts (the Bible) matter to the public and the President's integrity.
Character traits
moralistic impatient with euphemism ceremonially literate directive
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Concerned but controlled — juggling crisis facts with organizational reassurance.

Delivers the Khundu security update tersely (death tolls, endangered missionaries), calms Bartlet by promising the language will be fixed, then withdraws to manage operations from his office.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the President is informed of the Khundu situation.
  • Contain panic and provide staff with a clear operational path.
  • Coordinate follow-up action (evacuation/intel) offstage.
Active beliefs
  • Accurate intelligence briefings are necessary before policy decisions.
  • Staff will operationalize presidential directives if properly marshaled.
Character traits
steady pragmatic protective
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Neutral and task‑oriented — focused on executing cues accurately.

Receives a clear instruction to load item 144 on the prompter and prepares to display the foreign‑policy copy for the President and staff to review.

Goals in this moment
  • Load the requested copy promptly and accurately.
  • Support the President's review process through reliable operation.
Active beliefs
  • Teleprompter must reflect the exact text requested by senior staff.
  • Operational smoothness aids rhetorical clarity.
Character traits
discreet technically competent responsive
Follow Prompter Operator's journey

Not shown; implied protective of diplomatic language.

Mentioned by Toby as the State Department Communications Director who will meet Will; functions offstage as the institutional counterweight that prefers cautious, diplomatic phrasing.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure State's preferred wording and diplomatic considerations are reflected.
  • Guard against rhetorical developments that could complicate foreign engagements.
Active beliefs
  • Conservative, tested phrasing reduces diplomatic risk.
  • State should have input on presidential foreign‑policy language.
Character traits
cautious (implied) protocol‑oriented
Follow State Department …'s journey

Pragmatic and slightly amused; protective of rhetorical precision and aware of leaks and turf issues.

Runs the prompter cue, discovers and reads aloud the Chief Justice's trochaic dissent, flags State Department wording as overly cautious, and instructs that Will meet with State's Communications Director — initiating a delicate interagency handoff.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the president's text is rhetorically precise and defensible.
  • Manage interagency input on foreign‑policy phrasing.
  • Limit the risk of leaks and bureaucratic dilution of the White House voice.
Active beliefs
  • State Department expects and should have voice on phrasing, but White House must own the President's message.
  • Precise language matters both rhetorically and operationally.
Character traits
meticulous wry procedural protective of message discipline
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Not directly observable; inferred as whimsical or old‑fashioned from the dissent's tone.

Not physically present but actively shaping mood: his eccentric dissent (written in meter) is the comic/curious hook that briefly distracts and humanizes the staff amid policy tension.

Goals in this moment
  • (Implied) Influence jurisprudential debate through memorable prose.
  • (Implied) Leave a distinctive intellectual imprint on legal opinions.
Active beliefs
  • Legal writing can be rhetorical and personal.
  • The Court's voice may carry idiosyncratic expression.
Character traits
eccentric (as inferred from text) literary
Follow Unnamed White …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
George Washington Bible

The George Washington Bible functions narratively as the unavailable ceremonial ideal: Charlie reports Hollowman's need for notice and the Freemasons' custody, which forces the President to select a personal family Bible instead — a small but telling defeat of pageantry in favor of personal authenticity.

Before: In custody of the New York Freemasons (off‑site …
After: Remains in Freemasons' custody and unavailable; the President …
Before: In custody of the New York Freemasons (off‑site in New York), unavailable without days' notice.
After: Remains in Freemasons' custody and unavailable; the President elects to use the Bartlet family Bible instead.
Bartlet's Khundu Security Cable

Bartlet's Khundu security cable is the factual trigger: its contents (short cable about unrest, massacres, and trapped missionaries) shift the room from rhetorical debate to ethical imperative, grounding the abstract discussion of 'vital interests' in human lives.

Before: Delivered to the President as a short security …
After: Referenced and absorbed into the day's operational agenda; …
Before: Delivered to the President as a short security cable earlier that morning (held in staff awareness).
After: Referenced and absorbed into the day's operational agenda; follow‑up actions implied.
Chief Justice's Dissent in Verse

Toby reads and laughs over his faxed copy of the Chief Justice's dissent and hands it to Bartlet; the paper breaks the tension, supplies comic relief, and temporarily redirects staff energy before the Khundu briefing resumes serious focus.

Before: Faxed to Will and sitting in Toby's hands …
After: Passed to the President for inspection and then …
Before: Faxed to Will and sitting in Toby's hands as he reads it aloud.
After: Passed to the President for inspection and then set aside as the meeting pivots back to policy.
Oval Office Inaugural Teleprompter

The Oval Office teleprompter is ordered to load item 144 — the foreign‑policy passage — and serves as the focal display for the President and staff to review and argue over phrasing, enabling immediate textual adjustments and rehearsal.

Before: Idle/standing by, containing previous or blank copy; awaiting …
After: Loaded with the foreign policy copy for the …
Before: Idle/standing by, containing previous or blank copy; awaiting cue to load item 144.
After: Loaded with the foreign policy copy for the President and staff to read and revise.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
West Wing Corridor (Exterior Hallway Outside Leo McGarry's Office)

The West Wing hallway functions as connective tissue: Bartlet and Leo step out to exchange private remarks about the Chief Justice and the Khundu cable, emphasizing how quickly public ritual and private policy collide in the day’s flow.

Atmosphere Businesslike with sardonic asides; brisk footsteps, quiet conspiratorial tone between senior staff.
Function Transit area for quick, urgent exchanges and a buffer between formal Oval discussions and offices.
Symbolism Represents the continuous motion of governance — decisions move from rooms to action across corridors.
Access Limited to staff movement; not public.
Stopping in front of Leo's office to confer. Quick exchanges, ambient West Wing noise and overhead fluorescent lighting.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

3
United States Department of State

The State Department functions as the institutional interlocutor whose cautious, tested phrasing is invoked as the opposing posture to the President's moral clarity; Toby warns that State will want input, and Will is ordered to coordinate — highlighting turf, timing, and diplomatic risk.

Representation Mentioned via its Communications Director and the notion of standard diplomatic language.
Power Dynamics Institutional counterweight to the White House voice — influential over wording but subordinate to presidential …
Impact Exposes the routine friction between executive rhetoric and bureaucratic caution; reminds that language choices have …
Internal Dynamics Implied conservatism versus the White House’s desire for moral clarity; potential for tension between communications …
Protect diplomatic relationships by advocating cautious, non‑inflamatory language. Ensure phrasing does not unintentionally escalate foreign crises or constrain diplomats' options. Policy norms and established phrasing (boilerplate). Institutional authority and expertise in foreign affairs. Direct engagement through its Communications Director with White House staff.
New York Freemasons

The New York Freemasons appear as custodians of the George Washington Bible; their control of the artifact and procedural demands (lead time via Hollowman) shape the President's ceremonial choices and force an emotional pivot to a personal family Bible.

Representation Manifested through Charlie's report about Hollowman's conditions for retrieving the Bible.
Power Dynamics Ceremonial gatekeepers with obscure but real leverage over presidential ritual; their authority is narrow but …
Impact Forces the President to choose personal authenticity over national pageantry, underscoring how private institutions can …
Internal Dynamics Not explored in scene; implied rigid custodial procedure possibly prioritized over accommodating high‑profile requests.
Safeguard and control access to a historically significant artifact. Maintain custodial protocols and prevent mishandling or opportunistic use. Custodial rights and physical control of the artifact. Imposition of procedural requirements (advance notice).
Library of Congress

The Library of Congress is invoked as the resource to supply Bartlet's historical floor speeches and statements to Will; its archival authority enables the speechwriter to craft an authentic presidential voice grounded in past utterances.

Representation Mentioned as a repository to which Charlie can dispatch researchers to pull Bartlet's records.
Power Dynamics Serves as a neutral institutional resource — not a decision maker but critical for supplying …
Impact Enables continuity between a politician's past rhetoric and present presidential voice; ties personal history to …
Internal Dynamics Standard archival processes and possible delays inherent in searching historical records (implied).
Provide accurate archival material to staff researchers. Preserve historical records that inform contemporary speechwriting. Custody of historical documents. Access protocols and research services.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 5
Causal

"Leo's briefing on the escalating violence in Khundu prompts Bartlet to order a forced depletion report."

Ordering the Forced-Depletion Estimate for Khundu
S4E14 · Inauguration Part I
Character Continuity medium

"Charlie's initial logistical issues with the Bible lead to Bartlet's later decision to change his mind about which Bible to use."

Forced-Depletion Report — Khundu's Human Cost Meets Rhetoric
S4E14 · Inauguration Part I
Character Continuity medium

"Charlie's initial logistical issues with the Bible lead to Bartlet's later decision to change his mind about which Bible to use."

Edwards' Bible — Small Symbol, Large Consequence
S4E14 · Inauguration Part I
Thematic Parallel medium

"Bartlet's dissatisfaction with State Department's conservative language parallels Will's proposal of a bold new doctrine based on American values."

Recovered Doctrine — Values, Force, and Khundu
S4E14 · Inauguration Part I
Thematic Parallel medium

"Bartlet's dissatisfaction with State Department's conservative language parallels Will's proposal of a bold new doctrine based on American values."

Who Owns the Doctrine?
S4E14 · Inauguration Part I

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: "America cannot be the world's policeman. America cannot enforce its own values, its own standards across the world. Yet when it's in our clear an vital interests... We're being candid at least.""
"TOBY: "Will, you're going to meet with my counterpart, the State Department Communications Director. He likes to have input into foreign policy language." WILL: "Isn't he going to be insulted that he's meeting with someone he's never heard of, who isn't a White House staffer?""
"WILL: "There's a... partnership, sir, that can develop between someone and his speechwriter. It happens over time. You get to know just where he likes his commas and why he says self-government instead of governement... Like jazz musicians..." BARTLET: "I can't remember your name, but are you asking me out on a date?" WILL: "No, sir. It happens over time.""