S3E17
· Stirred

Leo Stonewalls Bartlet on Secret Roosevelt Room Meeting

Concluding the Idaho nuclear crisis briefing in the Oval Office, a weary President Bartlet sighs and probes the secretive meeting next door in the Roosevelt Room, intuiting the staff's clandestine debate over dumping VP Hoynes amid electoral peril. Leo, fiercely protective of the process and Bartlet's political innocence, delivers a curt 'Don't worry about it,' isolating the President from explosive deliberations. This terse exchange excavates deepening tensions in their trust dynamic, setups the loyalty crisis payoff, and amplifies Leo's gatekeeper role amid mounting crises.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Bartlet inquires about the meeting next door, and Leo dismissively tells him not to worry about it, hinting at the political tensions brewing.

curiosity to dismissal ['Oval Office']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

Weary and frustrated, laced with surprise turning to insistent curiosity

Sighs wearily post-briefing, tosses pager back to Leo earlier in exchange, expresses surprise at stolen truck revelation, then probes intently about the secretive Roosevelt Room meeting next door, asserting his right to know amid fatigue.

Goals in this moment
  • Gain insight into the adjacent Roosevelt Room deliberations
  • Reassert presidential awareness over unfolding White House intrigue
Active beliefs
  • All critical information must flow to the Oval Office
  • Leo's gatekeeping occasionally undermines necessary transparency
Character traits
Inquisitive Sarcastic Authoritative yet weary
Follow Abigail Bartlet's journey

Steadfast resolve masking protective tension

Concludes crisis briefing with precise updates on RAD team assessments, burning trucks, stolen rig from Glen's Ferry, and naming deceased driver Garry Vernon Clarke; deftly catches tossed pager; stonewalls Bartlet's probe on Roosevelt Room with curt dismissal, protecting the process.

Goals in this moment
  • Insulate Bartlet from politically damaging VP Hoynes debate
  • Maintain control over sensitive staff deliberations
Active beliefs
  • Bartlet's political innocence strengthens leadership
  • Some fires are best contained without presidential ignition
Character traits
Protective Defensive Decisive
Follow Leo McGarry's journey

Deceased, invoked as tragic figure

Explicitly named by Leo as Garry Vernon Clarke, the deceased driver of the stolen nuclear waste truck from Glen's Ferry, humanizing the crisis's toll during the briefing's close.

Character traits
elusive reckless tragic
Follow Garry Vernon …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Leo's Pager

Leo's pager serves as a humorous prop punctuating the briefing's tension relief; Bartlet yanks it from Leo's pocket earlier, mocks it as a 'telephonic device,' then tosses it back over his shoulder into Leo's grasp just before delving into hazard assessments, underscoring communication ironies amid AA sobriety jabs and crisis urgency.

Before: Tucked in Leo's back pocket, inactive
After: Caught and pocketed by Leo, functional sentinel
Before: Tucked in Leo's back pocket, inactive
After: Caught and pocketed by Leo, functional sentinel

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

4
Elk Horn

Elk Horn referenced by Leo as site of joint operations command setup, grounding the nuclear crisis updates in urgent evacuation chaos near the burning trucks, heightening stakes as Bartlet absorbs the peril twenty miles from 20,000 residents.

Atmosphere Chaotic with sirens and exodus frenzy
Function Crisis coordination hub
Symbolism Represents vulnerable heartland under radiological threat
Sirens shredding the night Traffic-choked evacuation roads
Boise State FEMA Office

Boise State FEMA Office invoked in Leo's coordination update with state FEMA, anchoring federal-state response to the inferno, pulsing as distant heartbeat of operational sync amid Oval deliberations.

Atmosphere Feverish with slamming phones and urgent huddles
Function State-level crisis nerve center
Access Restricted to emergency responders
Blazing phone lines Maps haunted by dead driver's shadow
Glen's Ferry Rest Stop

Glen's Ferry Rest Stop cited as origin of the stolen nuclear truck two weeks prior, deepening the briefing's intrigue with theft's premeditation and tying into driver Clarke's fatal accident, escalating from mishap to potential sabotage.

Atmosphere Remote and ominous, echoing isolation
Function Point of theft in crisis backstory
Symbolism Cradle of unfolding national security nightmare
Gravel crunch under phantom tires Chain-link rattling in desert winds
Roosevelt Room (Mural Room — West Wing meeting room)

Roosevelt Room looms as the enigmatic site of the clandestine staff meeting next door, probed by Bartlet and stonewalled by Leo; its secretive proceedings on VP Hoynes symbolize fracturing loyalties, amplifying Oval tension as political maelstrom brews adjacent to crisis command.

Atmosphere Shadowy and conspiratorial, pulsing with unspoken electoral peril
Function Site of off-limits staff debate
Symbolism Embodies hidden power struggles and loyalty tests
Access Isolated from presidential intrusion by Leo's directive
Audible proximity through Oval walls Nighttime intensity fueling secrecy

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

3
Office of the Governor of Idaho

Office of the Governor of Idaho referenced by Leo as key coordinator in joint response, bridging state executive with federal efforts against the nuclear blaze, underscoring layered command structure in the crisis wrap-up.

Representation Via Leo's briefing on coordination protocols
Power Dynamics Collaborating under federal oversight yet anchoring local surge
Impact Highlights federal-state interdependence in disasters
Synchronize state resources with national response Contain radiological threats preemptively Liaison with White House via operational updates Deployment of local fire crews
State FEMA

State FEMA positioned in Leo's update as Boise-based ally in overall crisis rhythm, quarterbacking lockdowns and joint ops amid stolen rig shadows, tempering Oval dread with unified grit.

Representation Through coordination mentioned in briefing
Power Dynamics Supporting federal command with state-level execution
Impact Exemplifies emergency bureaucracy's steel spine
Unify boots-on-ground with Oval directives Corral uncontrollable fire spread Resource channeling to hazard zones Real-time sync with RAD assessments
RAD Team

RAD Team's hazard assessment lauded by Leo—no cesium release, no radiation—providing critical data lifeline that reassures amid burning trucks, arming Bartlet with scientific precision before the VP pivot.

Representation Via Leo's relayed technical report
Power Dynamics Expert authority informing presidential command
Impact Bridges hazard science to policy decisions
Deliver uncontaminated site evaluations Scan for radiological breaches Scanners piercing fire chaos Data feeds to Oval briefings

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 2
Causal

"C.J.'s urgent news about the truck crash in Idaho directly causes Leo's update to Bartlet about the hazardous situation and the ongoing crisis management."

Bartlet Joyfully Files Charlie's Taxes, Shattered by Crisis Alert
S3E17 · Stirred
Causal

"C.J.'s urgent news about the truck crash in Idaho directly causes Leo's update to Bartlet about the hazardous situation and the ongoing crisis management."

C.J. Interrupts with Urgent Idaho Uranium Crash Alert
S3E17 · Stirred

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: ([sighs]) What's that meeting next door?"
"LEO: Don't worry about it."