Four Votes — Leo Goes It Alone to Richardson

The mood shifts from playful to urgent when Josh bursts in with the big news: they’ve pulled four of the five votes but need one more — and he wants the Vice President to seal it. Leo flatly refuses, rejecting Hoynes’ involvement and instead announces he will take the delicate, private task of confronting Congressman Mark Richardson himself. He immediately summons Margaret to fetch Richardson, asserting control and isolating the negotiation. The beat turns levity into strategy, setting up a moral confrontation and exposing Leo’s preference for personal persuasion — a risky, prideful choice that raises the stakes.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Josh interrupts with news of securing four votes and insists on involving Vice President Hoynes for Tillinghouse, but Leo refuses and plans to approach Richardson alone.

relaxed to urgent

Leo calls Margaret to arrange a meeting with Richardson, emphasizing the need for discretion and urgency.

determination to focus

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5
C.J. Cregg
primary

Measured and pragmatic — inclined toward the high-visibility solution but deferent to Leo's authority in the moment.

C.J. endorses Josh's solution with a quick affirmative, signaling agreement from communications and aligning publicly with a high-profile fix, but she yields to Leo's refusal — a brief institutional voice in the room.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect the administration's messaging by supporting an effective, rapid fix.
  • Avoid internal conflict that could derail communications strategy.
Active beliefs
  • High-profile intervention by the Vice President is an effective communications and persuasion tool.
  • Consensus among senior staff helps smooth the public narrative.
Character traits
concise aligning media-aware
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Controlled and resolute with a streak of personal stubbornness — calm on the surface while staking his authority and personal credibility.

Leo hears Josh's report, refuses the obvious institutional move to involve the Vice President, proposes a personal intervention with Richardson, and immediately orders Margaret to fetch him — taking ownership and isolating the negotiation.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent institutional escalation that could inflame the caucus or damage internal relationships.
  • Use a private, personal appeal to secure Richardson's cooperation and preserve the administration's standing.
Active beliefs
  • Direct, personal persuasion (from him) is more likely to succeed with Richardson than public or high-profile pressure.
  • Involving Hoynes risks political optics and could worsen caucus relations.
Character traits
authoritative private prideful procedural
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Apprehensive and mildly exasperated — worried about repeating a past mistake and the potential fallout.

Mandy questions the wisdom of Leo returning to Richardson, invoking past trouble and skepticism about repeating the approach — serving as the skeptical, optics-minded staffer cautioning against personnel decisions that might backfire.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent a political misstep that could anger the caucus further.
  • Ensure the administration uses the most effective, least risky method to secure the vote.
Active beliefs
  • Past confrontations with Richardson were costly and repeating them risks more damage.
  • Optics and caucus sentiment matter as much as the raw vote count.
Character traits
media-savvy cautious gossipy
Follow Madeline Hampton's journey

Professional neutrality; promptly responsive and focused on fulfilling Leo's request without commentary.

Margaret responds to Leo's summons, enters briefly to receive an instruction to fetch Mark Richardson out of the office, and departs to execute the order — functioning as the backstage logistics executor who translates Leo's decision into action.

Goals in this moment
  • Locate and bring Mark Richardson to Leo as requested.
  • Execute the order quickly and quietly to preserve discretion.
Active beliefs
  • Leo's directives require immediate and precise administrative action.
  • Maintaining discretion in political interventions is necessary for staff effectiveness.
Character traits
efficient discreet attentive reliable
Follow Margaret Hooper's journey

Frustrated urgency masking a tactical calm — clearly under pressure but determined to secure the pragmatic fix he believes necessary.

Josh enters abruptly, delivers the critical information about vote totals, advocates immediately for Vice Presidential involvement, presses timing urgency, and departs after insisting on a callback — acting as the urgent political messenger and pressure valve.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure Tillinghouse's vote by getting the Vice President involved.
  • Move the vote tally from precarious to secure as quickly as possible.
Active beliefs
  • Hoynes, as a Texan and high-profile figure, can persuade Tillinghouse more effectively than others.
  • Time is critical; delay increases the risk of losing the bill.
Character traits
urgent practical combative results-oriented
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Leo McGarry's Office (Chief of Staff's Office)

Leo's private office functions as the cradle of both intimacy and command: staff gather for light banter over a pearl choker, and the same space immediately compresses into a tactical command node where Leo issues orders, summons Margaret, and converts social energy into political action.

Atmosphere Shifts from warm, jocular intimacy to taut, purposeful urgency with underlying tension.
Function Meeting point for senior staff; immediate operational hub where private conversations become policy decisions.
Symbolism Embodies the collision of personal life and institutional duty — a domestic object (the choker) …
Access Informally restricted to senior staff and trusted aides during this scene; decisions are handled behind …
Wood-paneled private office with close chairs concentrating conversation The pearl choker physically present and being admired Sounds shift from laughter to clipped, urgent speech; a door opens/closes as Margaret leaves

Narrative Connections

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Key Dialogue

"JOSH: "Leo, I got four out of five. I'm absolutely convinced we need the Vice President to get Tillinghouse.""
"LEO: "No.""
"LEO: "I go to Richardson.""