Fabula

The West Wing

Description

The West Wing identifies the television series shown in end credits and copyright notices. It presents White House staff—President Bartlet, Leo McGarry, Claire Huddle, Vice President Hoynes—handling Hoynes's resignation in the Oval Office. Bartlet reads the letter, acknowledges it, then tasks Leo with selecting a replacement, shifting the focus to succession amid political machinery.

Event Involvements

Events with structured involvement data

2 events
S4E20 · Evidence of Things Not Seen
Late-Night Poker & The Lifted Lockdown

The West Wing functions as the broader institutional frame for the action: it is the building and culture that allow late-night camaraderie, immediate presidential access, and rapid movement from leisure to crisis management.

Active Representation

By the collective behavior and constraints of staff operating within its offices; also present as end-credit attribution.

Power Dynamics

Embodies institutional authority; staff defer to the chain of command located within this institution.

Institutional Impact

Reinforces the theme that personal rituals and institutional obligations coexist uneasily; the building's routines both shelter and constrain responses.

Internal Dynamics

Informal social rituals (poker, snacks) exist under the formal hierarchy that can be invoked at any moment.

Organizational Goals
Maintain continuity of government operations Protect the President and manage national security incidents
Influence Mechanisms
Established protocols and culture of duty Staff hierarchy and physical proximity enabling rapid response
S4E21 · Life on Mars
Quiet Acceptance: Bartlet Takes the Call on a Vice President

The West Wing as the institutional backdrop functions through its staff and procedures: this moment illustrates how the 'West Wing' (the presidency and its apparatus) translates private scandal into formal administrative steps and succession planning.

Active Representation

Through the collective action of senior staff and adherence to executive protocol — the President and chief of staff enact institutional response.

Power Dynamics

Institutional authority (the Presidency) asserts control over personal consequences, subordinating individual circumstance to continuity of governance.

Institutional Impact

The event foregrounds institutional resilience and the mechanics of succession — individual fallout is quickly reframed as an administrative problem requiring staff mobilization.

Internal Dynamics

Tension between protecting people (Claire, staff morale) and protecting the institution's agenda; chain-of-command moves from emotional response to practical assignment.

Organizational Goals
Preserve continuity and stability of the executive branch Manage political fallout to protect administration priorities Rapidly staff a replacement to avoid leadership vacuum
Influence Mechanisms
Chain-of-command decisions (President directing Chief of Staff) Control of information flow and timing (private acceptance, then planning) Reputational management through swift administrative moves

Related Events

Events mentioning this organization

30 events
S1E1
Leo Reclaims Control: Organizing the Chaos

Leo McGarry moves through the West Wing like a tuning fork, turning diffuse panic into a plan. He issues curt, precise orders, corrals staff, shields …

S1E1
Gatekeeper: Leo Shields the President

Leo moves through the West Wing like a surgical hand, converting staff anxiety into action while quietly containing scandal and personal chaos. He deflects Donna's …

S1E1
Pressroom Speculation — Is Josh on the Chopping Block?

In a charged pressroom moment, Billy seeds a rumor that President Bartlet will be forced to sacrifice Josh Lyman to placate Al Caldwell and the …

S1E2
Mandy Confronts Russell — The Deal That Buried 443

Mandy abandons her BMW and lunges across a Washington street to confront Senator Lloyd Russell after learning he quietly stalled Bill 443. Russell admits the …

S1E2
Hoynes' Public Dismissal of C.J.

At a crowded, camera-lit reception Hoynes brusquely rebuffs C.J.'s attempt to contain a damaging quote. C.J. approaches apologetically and tries to thread a political fix, …

S1E2
Roosevelt Room: Midnight Tension

At 3:35 A.M. the usual midnight hush of the West Wing is gone — staffers move with a charged purpose through the halls. Toby threads …

S1E3
Toby Reports Bartlet's Volatility — Private Scandal Meets National Crisis

As Josh and C.J. argue about Sam's indiscretion, Toby arrives with a far graver report: the President spent the previous night erupting at advisers, frightening …

S1E3
Quiet Summons — C.J. Pulls Sam into Private Territory

In the compressed urgency of the West Wing hallway—staff moving between crisis appointments—C.J. halts the operational tally with a quiet, pointed request: she asks Sam …

S1E3
Pause at the Oval Threshold

As Josh leads Charlie down the West Wing toward the Oval, the walk-through becomes a charged, quiet beat: Charlie suddenly stops outside the President's door, …

S1E4
Josh Declares Hardball

When the President's gun-control bill is found five votes short, Josh pivots immediately into a ruthless posture: he argues, invoking L.B.J., that they must win …

S1E4
Hoynes Delivers the Vote — and a Quiet Lifeline

Leo arrives at Vice President Hoynes' office emotionally unmoored after the gun‑control bill falls five votes short. Hoynes immediately neutralizes the political crisis—promising to see …

S1E4
Leo's Breakdown, Hoynes' Quiet Salvage

In the Vice President's office at night Leo arrives raw and disoriented—five votes are lost and, worse, his marriage has just collapsed. Hoynes immediately both …

S1E6
Poker Night Interrupted by Security Alert

A late-night, convivial poker game in Leo's office abruptly fractures when Secret Service agents storm in to announce a security breach. The room's easy intimacy …

S1E8
Small Favor, Large Signal

In a tense hallway exchange, Charlie tells Sam that Leo personally asked him to write a birthday message for the Assistant Transportation Secretary. Sam’s surprised, …

S1E9
Triumph — and the Ceiling Falls

Josh and C.J. erupt in euphoric victory when the White House secures Peyton Cabot Harrison III as the nominee. Their celebratory charge — chest bumps, …

S1E9
Mendoza's Walk-By: A Nomination Becomes Visible

Judge Roberto Mendoza and his aides pass the Communications Office, transforming an abstract political option into a tangible presence in the West Wing. Ed's casual …

S1E9
Dismissal, Recognition, and the Small Insult

Harrison brusquely orders Charlie out of the closed mural room, dismissing the President’s aide while expecting privacy. Charlie calmly asserts that he was asked to …

S1E11
From Small Talk to Situation Room: Subpoena and Mobilization

Josh and Donna's light, flirtatious banter about caddying and golf is violently interrupted when a process server hands Josh a subpoena — a sharp reminder …

S1E11
Josh Returns — From Friction to Emergency Briefing

Josh storms back into the West Wing tense and clipped. Donna greets him, takes his coat and asks if things went okay; his curt response …

S1E12
C.J. Summons Danny — Controlling the Personal/Professional Boundary

As the West Wing holds its breath before the State of the Union, private tensions bleed into the workplace. Josh teases C.J. about Danny flirting …

S1E15
White House Gets Through — Toby With Mendoza

A terse radio update collapses the distance between the West Wing and a Connecticut holding cell: Sam tells Josh they have gained access. Josh's immediate …

S1E16
Midnight Ultimatum: Leo Warns Hoynes of Political Exile

Outside a Washington building late at night, Leo escorts Vice President Hoynes to his car and delivers a blunt, paternal warning: if Hoynes breaks a …

S1E18
Policy Wedge, Personal Deflection

Mallory O'Brien confronts Sam Seaborn after receiving his leaked position paper — a provocation traced back to her father, Leo. Their policy spat over school …

S1E19
A Rare Opening — Donna Pushes, Josh Ducks Out

Walking briskly through the West Wing, Donna teases out a technicality about the F.E.C. — two simultaneous commissioner resignations create an almost once-in-a-generation opening to …

S1E19
Charm, Then Betrayal: C.J. Confronts the Memo

C.J. opens with a light, crowd-pleasing briefing — a practiced charm offensive that temporarily diffuses the West Wing's anxiety. The levity abruptly fractures when she …

S1E19
Donna's Madison Memo — A Check on Defeatism

Donna catches Josh in the corridor and presses a six‑page memo arguing for English as the national language into his hands. When Josh brusquely dismisses …

S1E19
It's Not What We Do" — Confronting Staff Defeatism

Josh returns to his office to find Mandy waiting with a warning: the President's plan to nominate reformers to the F.E.C. will provoke a retaliatory …

S1E20
Conscience vs. Command: Sam Challenges Mandatory Minimums

Walking across a D.C. street, Sam erupts with moral urgency — "Mandatory Minimums are racist" — pressing for the administration to tackle sentencing policy alongside …

S1E20
Locked Out: Mandy Told to Stay Away

Mandy arrives raw and defensive after Al Kiefer’s public attacks, expecting to be part of the Oval’s damage control. Instead C.J. delivers a cold, bureaucratic …

S1E21
Staged Welcome — Leo Parks Barry in the Fold

Leo deliberately choreographs Barry Haskel’s visit to convert private sympathy into a public commitment. He times Margaret’s entry, summons a dress Marine to rattle Barry, …