The Burden of Moral Leadership
Leadership here is defined less by managerial competence than by the willingness to set terms and shift the moral frame. Bartlet’s televised nominations and late‑night interventions reposition staff conversations into ethical argument; the episodes examine how a leader’s moral clarity both steadies a team and invites political retaliation.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
President Bartlet uses a homespun farmer anecdote and an impassioned speech to pivot the campaign onto renewable energy, framing Republicans as beholden to big oil and urging Americans to choose …
In Leo's office, a brisk scheduling exchange becomes a decisive triage moment: when Margaret tells him the President's first meeting is with the Treasurer (a ceremonial ‘color of money’ briefing), …
In a rapid-fire Situation Room quicksheet Leo corrals terse intelligence: the Dow is down 260 points, North Korea may probe the DMZ in reaction to the President's Seoul trip, General …
Amid a campaign-day cascade—logistical failures, a plunging market and an escalating international probe—President Bartlet steps up and delivers a low-key, anecdotal benediction that humanizes the office. Rather than policy or …
President Bartlet learns that Seth Weinberger's former assistant has gone to the press with an affair, and he reacts with personal outrage at the needless harm to Weinberger's family. The …
On live television President Bartlet names two outspoken campaign‑finance reformers — John Branford Bacon and Patricia Calhoun — to the F.E.C. In a smoke‑filled Senate suite, Onorato shatters the room's …
In a dim Senate conference room a jovial, dismissive mood — centered on an insulting debate about cognac versus brandy — is suddenly ruptured. Steve Onorato, watching Bartlet on TV, …
Late at night in the President's bedroom Bartlet soothes anxieties and forces forward motion: Leo confesses unease about revealing his rehab, C.J. sheepishly apologizes for a press gaffe and is …
In the President's bedroom after a bruising day, Bartlet quietly steadies his shaken senior staff. Leo voices unease about championing drug‑policy reform given his recovery; Bartlet reframes Leo's experience as …