06x04 - Liftoff

Episode transcripts for the TV show "The West Wing". Aired September 1999- May 2006.*
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An American political drama revolving around the White House Staff.
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06x04 - Liftoff

Post by bunniefuu »

Previously on The West Wing:

Prime Minister Zahavy, Chairman Farad,
and President Bartlet will hold. . .

. . .a joint press conference
to describe a tentative accord. . .

. . .that's been reached
between the parties.

Barracks security found Leo
in the woods at Camp David.

-They think it's a heart att*ck.
-You've got to keep him out of that job.

He'll k*ll himself for you if you don't.

There's something I need you
to do for me.

-What's that?
-Jump off a cliff.

Morning. Staff Sergeant Keltie.
This is Sergeant Wolitzer.

-Everything all right?
-Sure. May we?

-It's 5:30.
-5:26 on mine. I'm gonna use this chair.

-We couldn't do this at my office?
-According to our logs. . .

. . .you usually exit the building here.

-Right.
-It's easier to head out. . .

. . .the West Gate. It's closer for your
parking. You have to time that.

But in the event of a situation,
we'll need you to exit here.

-Ms. Cregg?
-I'm listening.

-What situation?
-A nuclear att*ck.

-Are we expecting one?
-Any att*ck. But nuclear tops the list.

You'll exit here, directly to Marine One.

You'll sit at S-5, behind the president,
to the left of the NSA.

-And they'll evacuate you.
-Okay.

If there is a situation in your home,
make your way with all due haste. . .

. . .to this field, off Denville Road.

-It's a mile to the south.
-A field.

-A pasture.
-I'll be standing with cows.

Horses. They'll scoot as soon
as the copter shows up.

Won't be more than three minutes
from code call to liftoff.

Excuse me.

-Morning.
-No.

Sorry. Agents DeCastro and Shay.

-I don't need Secret Service.
-They'll give you a wide berth.

-Could we please discuss this?
-Not really.

Have you got a spare room
or a basement or something?

They're gonna need a place to sleep.

-You're not waiting, right?
-I just knocked.

-You okay?
-In an emergency. . .

. . .I stand in a field with a cow
and wait to be airlifted.

-Hey. There she is.
-Morning, sir.

-Good morning.
-Excited?

Hit the ground running.

I won't be in the security briefing.
I've got paperwork with the CIA. . .

. . .but NSC will get me up to speed.

Sky's falling,
damage estimate to follow.

-Yes, sir.
-You'll be great.

-Thank you, Mr. President.
-She's gonna be great.

-Is she nervous?
-No, she looks fine.

Oh, that's good. I'd be apoplectic.

Let's keep it light today.
Anything you can, hold till next week.

-On it.
-Check the hospital.

See if Leo's up to a phone call.

This is Ellroy. He brings briefing books.
You're gonna be friends.

-These are this week's?
-These are today's.

-Ready?
-I told Josh to be there. . .

-. . .in case you need backup.
-I don't need backup.

Try to keep a tight rein.
I'm not the story, Leo's not.

I know. Camp David's
the story. Stop worrying.

Let me have that.

-Good morning.
-Morning.

This will be my last briefing
as White House press secretary.

Toby Ziegler will be filling in until
the president names a replacement.

I'll ask you to please be kind to him. . .

. . .and if you can't be kind,
at least speak slowly.

These past six years working for
this exceptional group of journalists--

I'm sorry. Thank you.

Ladies and gentlemen,
the president of the United States.

Thank you.

After bypass surgery at Bethesda
Naval Hospital 36 hours ago. . .

. . .I'm relieved to announce that
Leo McGarry is in stable condition. . .

. . .and headed for a full recovery.

Though he will always be a very
valuable part of this administration. . .

. . .he will not be returning to his post.
I'm pleased and terribly proud. . .

. . .to announce that,
effective immediately. . .

. . .the position of White House
chief of staff. . .

. . .will be filled by Claudia Jean Cregg.

Congratulations.

-Marburg Fever.
-And it's a virus?

-Six cases so far. AP heard it in Ecuador.
-You're telling her this. . .

-. . .as press secretary or chief of staff?
-Both.

-We'll have something. Ask AP to wait.
-That was press secretary.

-CDC.
-Call CDC, Immigration, DOH.

Give them what you have.
Set up a conference call for me.

C.J., do you want me in?
I'm not sure where to sit.

Oh, God, right.

Toby's gonna need you.

-That's fine.
-Just for the next couple of days.

People shouldn't be
sending me flowers.

They're for Leo.

-I'm sorry about the stuff.
-Don't worry about it.

-You need coffee or anything?
-I'm fine. Let's do it.

CIA briefer's on his way.

Security will be by for
a palm print and an eye scan.

President's got Treasury in
10 minutes. You're on the call.

EPA's waiting for feedback
on the Clean Air markup.

Armed Forces is coming about a
budget boost for the peacekeeping tour.

They forgot to factor in
food for the troops.

-And this gets us to. . . .
-8:45.

I'm not commenting.

NATO's expressing reluctance
to contribute troops. . .

. . .to the peacekeeping effort.

The Secretary General of NATO,
the president is speaking with him. . .

. . .the Secretary General of NATO,
this afternoon.

There's verbal support
and there's boots on the ground.

I'm not commenting on
a negotiation before it happens.

-Can we do this without them?
-Not commenting.

If NATO's out, would the president
reconsider the U.N.?

I do not have an answer.

Can you point us towards a
subject you're commenting on?

Can you find out where counsel
put the DOD analysis?

Will Cregg's role be the
same as Leo McGarry's?

Title, parking spot, gym membership.

She's not coming in with
any national-security experience.

The president has a flock of
national-security professionals. . .

. . .to address his questions
and the chief of staff's.

We're about to stage
a m*llitary action--

A m*llitary incursion into the most
entrenched conflict on the planet.

Cregg's not the only one
without a net.

Oh, no, no.

-We're confident--
-You said nobody has experience. . .

-... with this kind of incursion.
-The Pentagon has...

...as do the Joint Chiefs of Staff
and the NSC.

But in the event they lose their way,
the president can send...

... C.J. Cregg to Ramallah to swat
at su1c1de bombers with her purse.

Nobody has a portfolio?

Oh, good Lord.

My purse?! Page Carol!
Get him the hell out of there!

-Who has the quote?
-I got, "The president can send...

... C.J. Cregg to Ramallah to swat
at su1c1de bombers with her purse. "

Toby!

You don't have to brief.
You're better with written material.

-We can flood them with press releases.
-How'd it go?

-Fine.
-Missed it.

Well, there'll be others.

I'm thinking about
the substance-abuse initiative.

What do you say
we send C.J. to Compton?

Have her swat
drug lords with her purse?

It was an ambush.
They love an opportunity like this.

If they could dance around me
with a pig's head, they would.

-How's it going?
-Well. Well.

Pat Quigley wants to know if
you're interested in a conversation.

-The Policy Institute?
-A job offer.

-I've gotten five of these today.
-Job offers.

-It's that kind of day.
-She's ready.

-C.J. doing okay?
-She's fine. She's a pro.

Like a ninja with a Prada clutch.

-Men of valor.
-It was an ambush.

-I say we move past it.
-I've never seen you sling anything. . .

. . .but a briefcase
loaded with 30 pounds. . .

. . .of legislative detritus,
not your lipstick or your hankie.

-Jump right over it.
-I'm just--

-Shut up.
-Okay.

-Hey, how's he doing?
-Leo? Awake and cranky.

-Sounds about right.
-You started senior staff?

I guess we did. Why don't we. . .

-. . .go ahead and sit.
-The intel estimates. Did you--?

I'm sure I didn't.

Leo likes to glance at the
top sheets before senior staff. . .

. . .circle anything
he has questions about.

That way, NSC can pull material
for the afternoon briefing.

We can wait. Go ahead.

-Okay. We'll set aside some extra time.
-Thank you.

We also try and cover
the lunch order before senior staff.

-Leo likes a roast turkey sandwich.
-That's fine.

-Mayo?
-Tell me we can talk about this later.

-Hi. Press secretaries.
-Can I apologize again?

No, but let's move finding my
replacement from priority three to one.

Short list, four or five good choices.

D Triple C's coming to talk
about the election.

-Vulnerable seats?
-Josh, sit down with Will.

-It's gonna be Merridy.
-Josh can do it.

-Merridy hates him.
-Josh is gonna meet with D Triple C. . .

. . .and sit with Will.
There's fundraising trips for the VP.

Get to me sooner rather than later.

Our campaign office
has him double-booked.

-Toby, Marburg virus.
-Not that I know of.

Outbreak in Ecuador. CDC's
setting up a border-screening plan.

Make sure we don't seem panicked.

Let me say what would've
been best articulated an hour ago.

The peacekeeping plan is still vulnerable.
This place needs to reek of competence.

Avoid further implications that
the president's in over his head.

-"Working without a net. "
-I think that's it.

We're all working
without a net today. Thanks.

C.J. Wow, this is hard.

I couldn't be happier
that you got this gig.

But I think it's just time for me to go.

Six years is a. . . .
I just think it's time for me to move on.

This is my letter of resignation
to the president.

I don't wanna pile on, but working
for one of my closest friends. . .

-. . .is not gonna bring out my best.
-Josh.

You can't. . . .

-Sorry to barge in.
-Mr. President, can I have a minute?

I'll make this quick.
I don't know if I'm comfortable. . .

. . .working this closely with a woman.
Maybe it's time for me to call it a day. . .

. . .give the VP a chance
to steer the ship.

You're weak. You have a weak will.

You should've seen if she pulled
the Continuity of Government plan.

He cracked up
at the suggestion of the VP.

I had a whole thing on spending time
with my kids, and I went up!

-You are bad, bad men.
-In the service of a vengeful god.

On behalf of
the vice president and myself. . .

. . .and every man who's ever had
a Wonder Woman fantasy. . .

-. . .it's a bright day.
-Get out.

-Margaret, we behind yet?
-Very.

-Toby.
-We need press-secretary candidates.

-Pull some r?sum?s.
-This is the list.

-These are the r?sum?s.
-You always do that?

C.J. keeps an
"in case I get hit by a bus" file.

You've got appointments
with the top choices.

Spokesmen from State, Interior. . . .

-This is a nightmare.
-I'll help. Let me see.

Haffley's in your office. Time, time.

Here.

Donna will help.

Nice briefing.

-C.J.
-Thank you.

That was something,
everyone pretending to resign.

Bless their cotton socks.

But you know
I'm actually leaving, right?

Leo's gonna be doing something,
and it's a long time I've worked for him.

-I just can't imagine--
-Margaret.

Sure. Sorry.

Mr. Roman Mindeli from the Republic
of Georgia in the Roosevelt Room.

-Good morning.
-Thank you.

Good morning to you.

-You okay there?
-Would be better on left hand.

-Important documents.
-Of course.

I wanted to speak with Mr. McGarry.

This is gift I bring for him. Saperavi.

-From my own vines.
-You're a winemaker?

Former Economic Advisor
to Georgia President Rustaveli.

-You want taste?
-Oh, no, it's a little early. l--

-Did Josh Lyman put you up to this?
-President Rustaveli sent me. . .

. . .with important offer, but I wish
to speak it with Mr. McGarry.

Mr. McGarry's been ill, so I'm afraid
you're gonna have to speak it with me.

Most top-secret?

President Rustaveli wants to offer. . .

. . .United States gift of uranium.

Highly enriched.

-To your government.
-Uranium?

-Like, to make bombs.
-We do not wish to make bombs.

We give to you.
You make what you want.

-Can you excuse me just one moment?
-Yes.

-I open this, show you maps.
-That's great.

Is this like
the two-weeks'-notice g*ng?

-Hey.
-Is Inspector Clouseau your idea?

-What?
-You and Toby didn't send a guy to--

-Did he proposition you?
-No.

He tried to give me his collection
of highly enriched--

What?

Oh, my God.

-This is happening.
-What?

Margaret, get the National Security
Advisor right away.

Is there a problem?

I've got an emissary
from the Republic of Georgia. . .

. . .offering me a load
of weapons-grade uranium.

I'm gonna go with yes.

-I'll wait.
-They've got 300 kilograms. . .

. . .of weapons-grade uranium
the Soviets left when they pulled out.

-That's what?
-Enough for 10, maybe 15 bombs.

Margaret, I need a meeting with the
Secretary of State, Energy, Defense. . .

. . .the J.C.S. and CIA tomorrow.
You'll brief everybody?

We tried to take this stuff in '92.

-Didn't wanna part with it.
-Because?

If things got rough,
they could build a nuke.

They're not. It's just sitting there. . .

. . .behind what he's
describing as a padlock.

-A miracle it wasn't boosted.
-The Russians don't guard it?

They gave them the padlock.
Yeah? Thank you.

Mindeli's been at the Iranian embassy
twice in the last three days.

We are not the only ones
who got this offer.

Margaret, that meeting's
gotta be today.

Hi. Come on in.

I'm Donna Moss. This is Toby Ziegler.

You're Dan, right? From State?

-Yes, Dan Edmunds.
-Thanks for coming in.

Good to meet you.
You want me up here?

That'd be great.

Toby's gonna ask you a few questions.
Just pretend he's 150 reporters.

The U.N. seems to have ruled out sending
troops to help us with peacekeeping.

What's the administration gonna do?

The North Atlantic Council has made,
and will continue to make. . .

. . .determinations in regard
to burden-sharing. . .

. . .and a great many factors
weigh upon those determinations.

It's premature to prejudge what the
council, in its deliberative fashion. . .

. . .of fully appropriate to its role
as a deliberative body. . .

. . .may or may not have
predetermined out of any zeal. . .

. . .to ascertain the precise
nature of those deliberations.

This is gonna be a long day.

-Need to schedule.
-I'm seeing the president.

-You have a door in your office.
-Let me see.

Looks good.

The chief of staff clears
the president's schedule.

The chief of staff
knows every meeting. . .

. . .and gets the information
the president will get before he does.

In that case, get me briefed
on this one and this.

Push the 1:45 to next week.

-And this shouldn't even exist. Cancel it.
-Fiderer.

-Better.
-Secretary of Defense for the president.

Unscheduled.

The chief of staff clears phone calls.
Know what the call's about?

-Ask what it is.
-May I ask what it's in reference to?

The president's unavailable,
but he should call me. . .

. . .and let me know what it's about.

-Thanks.
-Just today.

-Tomorrow you're on your own.
-He's on a call. Can I direct you. . .

-. . .to the chief of staff?
-Mr. President?

That's what they tell me.

We've been approached
by the Republic of Georgia. . .

. . .Iooking to unload
enriched uranium.

We may need to stage
an emergency extraction.

There's some concern
it'll wind up in Iran.

-Worth avoiding.
-We're briefing agencies.

I hope to have options
by the end of the day.

Mr. President, they're waiting for you.

Thank you.
You putting together a tiger team?

-I'm not sure what that is.
-Four or five agencies on one project. . .

. . .something this complicated,
they'll pass it around like a hot potato.

14 months from now, we'll wake up
having accomplished absolutely nothing.

You're gonna have to
spearhead the project.

Sure, I'll tiger team:

-What was that?
-Nothing.

He could work with Chuck Horowitz.
He could replace him.

The D Triple C's
a great place to work, Josh.

-I'm not looking.
-You got something?

-I'm staying at the White House.
-Gosh, working for C.J.

-Okay, let's talk about the--
-Really, anything else.

-Coffee?
-No.

Thanks for the help at the midterms
last year. It was fantastic.

-Our pleasure.
-Looking at next year.

Seven members of Congress
retiring, and we've got 12. . .

-Maybe 13.
-. . .vulnerable incumbents.

-Presidential's got the spotlight.
-And the money.

-We're not neglecting these seats.
-The Republicans won't be.

-Why is Matthew Santos dropping?
-He's done.

He's not done. He's 42. We just
got him on Ways and Means.

-He says that he's had enough.
-No, he hasn't. I'll talk to him.

-Who else?
-Wexler in Connecticut's retiring.

Hey, you're from there.
You could run for his seat.

I have a job.

-Can I get in?
-You have your own door.

-I'll be quick.
-He's talking with Secretary of Defense.

-Hutchinson?
-He walked him back. . .

. . .from the meeting.
Weren't you there?

I got pulled out. Hutchinson
doesn't have a meeting.

They walked in. I thought
about taking him down.

Margaret, did the Secretary
of Defense call for me?

It's C.J.

He didn't? Get him out of there.

-Really?
-Pull the president.

-He's late for his 1: 15.
-He doesn't have a 1: 15.

Make one up.

Excuse me, Mr. President?

-Secretary Hutchinson.
-Congratulations.

-Woman of the hour.
-Thank you.

I wanted to catch you.
You're gonna do a fantastic job.

Thank you. I know
the president had to run.

-Anything I can help you with?
-No.

This Georgian project could be tricky, but
we'll cover it in the meeting. See you.

How come Matt Santos
doesn't wanna run again?

Well, what makes a man
seek public office, Josh?

What makes a man abjure
the comforts of a private life?

-Here we go.
-The decadence of simple breadwinning. . .

. . .for the Athenian wrestling mat
that is the forum politic.

-Hey.
-Why doesn't Matt Santos. . .

-. . .wanna run again?
-Because he's a tool.

-We got him on Ways and Means.
-They love him in Houston.

-Maybe he'll run for governor.
-You think?

Term or two,
he can run for the big chair.

-You high?
-People like him. Ex-Marine--

-He's not running-- No.
-I'm talking to him.

D Triple C wants help on 19 races.
Yours are the ones with stars.

The VP's gonna be
fundraising for himself.

I'm not sure we can
double dip in these places.

It falls under the category. . .

-. . .of people scratching people's backs.
-Indeed.

-First priority.
-For the day?

-For 1:45.
-300 pages on snowmobiles.

The president's got lunch
with Interior tomorrow.

-Yellowstone's gonna come up.
-No one can position us?

-Toby and Policy shop are split.
-Get the rest.

We've talked through it.
You have to leave.

-Where am I going?
-The Georgian thing.

Where's the nonproliferation one?
And the uranium-repatriation study?

You really have to start walking now.

-It's downstairs?
-At DOD's request.

WHO faxed preliminary plans
for the Marburg virus.

They're asking for 18 million
worth of emergency aid.

It doesn't say how they
came up with that.

Does HHS know they're calling it
a global health alert?

I'll call them.

Ma'am.

This way, ma'am.

Ten-hut.

Anybody run this by the Russians?

Georgians don't want the Russians.

They left the uranium
in the first place.

-The Russians can't secure it.
-It's gotta come here.

-Who's gonna pay?
-Excellent question.

Department of Energy's
tapped out.

-We're all tapped out.
-It's probably not just enriched uranium.

I bet there's a load of spent fuel
with it. Nuclear waste.

And leaking, likely as not.

We may be looking at
a biohazard cleanup.

-Which costs?
-Extraction, maybe 5 million.

Cleanup's easily 20.

Besides which, we take nuclear material
and dump it in Oakridge, Tennessee. . .

-. . .every environmental group--
-This can't go public.

It'll get out. You'll have
a PR nightmare on your hands.

Isn't the larger PR crisis one
wherein al Qaeda steals the stuff. . .

. . .and we admit it wasn't under
our control because we were cheap?

You got a Congressional appropriation
I don't know about?

-Who pays?
-He called it a gift, didn't he?

-Your friend.
-Are we considering leaving a stash. . .

. . .of uranium unprotected because
we can't scrape up 25 million?

I'm considering this the tip
of a very large iceberg.

We can look into helping
the Russians secure it.

The president isn't interested
in the Russians.

-He's not?
-Figure out something else.

I didn't get the site analysis.

Have we run an independent test?

-I'm not--
-This just walked in the door.

Before we deploy a fleet
of C-5's with an extraction team. . .

. . .be nice to know
we're not buying clay.

-We'll test it.
-Get the president a report on storage.

-I'm not sure we're ready--
-He asked me for it.

Are we done?

Mr. President?

What do we have on
domestic nuclear-storage facilities?

I'll get Energy's quarterly.

Sir, we may be able
to get the Russians to help.

Hutchinson wants the Russians out of it.
We don't know if it's actually uranium.

You get documentation they're
not selling us the Brooklyn Bridge?

-We're looking into that.
-I asked for the breakdown. . .

-. . .on domestic facilities.
-I've got it. I just wanted to look it over.

I didn't get a copy.
You sure Margaret and Charlie. . .

-. . .are keeping your papers flowing?
-Yes, sir.

Your conversation
with the Secretary of Defense--

We didn't talk much. Charlie hightailed
me into a meeting with an empty chair.

I know it's gonna be bumpy
till you settle in.

But make sure things
aren't being lost in the shuffle.

-Of course.
-Thank you.

Sources say NATO's
reluctant to contribute troops. . .

. . .to peacekeeping missions
in the Middle East.

How will the president address that?

The president was aware when
he drafted the peacekeeping agreement. . .

. . .that the international community
wasn't going to jump in like lemmings.

You're saying it's a su1c1de mission?

Not necessarily.

The lemmings die
at the end of the story.

Sources say NATO's
reluctant to contribute troops. . .

. . .to peacekeeping
in the Middle East.

How's the president
going to address that?

Joanne, marry me. Make me
the happiest man in the world.

NATO has shown reluctance
to commit troops.

Individual member nations--

Sorry.

We can't hear you back here.

NATO has agreed to provide
support as well as m*llitary--

-Thanks.
-Thank you.

Thank you.

NATO doesn't seem to wanna pitch in
troops to the peacekeeping mission.

The president asked for
NATO troops as a courtesy.

What we need from our
allies is financial support. . .

. . .Iogistical support, tactical aid.
All of which they've pledged.

We don't need their troops?

The president doesn't want
the impression we're strong-arming. . .

. . .the region with European forces
marching into Jerusalem. . .

. . .under an American flag.

This process will be ex*cuted by the
Palestinian and Israeli governments.

-We're there to help.
-What if it turns out to be bigger?

The president knows
what he's getting into.

He's crafted a mission he knew
could succeed, and it will.

Governor of Tennessee called.
Georgian package, absolutely not.

How did he. . .? Who the hell leaked it?

I cannot have a leak. Get the governor
on the phone, quickly. Margaret?

Nancy McNally needs
to call the governor. . .

. . .and reiterate that he needs
to keep a lid on this.

Have Charlie put it on
the president's schedule for tomorrow.

-We got a guy.
-What kind?

A press secretary.
He's smart, he's articulate. . .

. . .and you can hear him.

-He was the Great Wall of China.
-I thought we were looking at a short list.

Governor of Tennessee on one.

Mr. Governor.

Thank you, sir.
I understand you heard--

-The Secretary of Energy.
-We're done.

We're not done. I'd like a list.
Three to five names.

Unfortunately, sir, his decision to
share that information was premature.

The president would appreciate it
if you did not go public with this.

No, I'm gonna have to insist.


Josh Lyman for the congressman.

We're not in
the dream-making business.

Why not a cap? Punitive damages
stop at 5 million.

-In egregious cases--
-You invest that money, it's a good life.

-For a kid paralyzed when he was 2?
-It gives insurers immunity. . .

. . .nobody gets. Not automakers,
chemical companies. . .

-. . .me if I mow you down in my car.
-A distinct possibility.

-It's a societal disincentive.
-Running it to the ground is a disaster.

Josh? Are we gonna run
the HMO system into the ground?

HMOs pulled down 8.8 billion
in profit last year.

We're not running them
into anything.

So Republicans are greedy bastards.

Profits are a red herring. What if
the Republicans aren't worried. . .

. . .about profits? What if they know
the companies do that on their own. . .

. . .by boosting premiums
and letting costs soar. . .

. . .in an industry that was created
to curtail the price of health care?

-I'll have lunch with Joel Haig.
-Watch him put ketchup. . .

. . .on his mashed potatoes?
Bipartisan or bust!

Come on in, Josh.

-Patients' Bill of Rights?
-Final shudder and gasp. . .

-. . .of a dying piece of legislation.
-Then bring it back next term.

I'm not gonna get
five minutes of small talk?

-Not asking about my kids?
-How're your kids?

-Don't recognize me. Who's that guy?
-One more term.

We'll do fundraising.
We got chairmanships opening up--

-It's not gonna happen.
-You're a strong presence on the floor. . .

. . .your staff's on fire.
How can you walk away from this?

Who champions
Patients' Bill of Rights?

-You.
-I'm happy to help.

But you gotta put
your name on the bill.

When I was the mayor of Houston. . .

. . .we opened up eight health clinics.

Each one sees 200 patients a day.

I'm gonna go home
and open up 20 more.

That's not a health-care agenda, Josh.
That's health care.

That's appealing. As, I'm sure,
is the governor's mansion.

You think I'm gonna run
for another office?

-I'm getting out.
-What about your 20 clinics?

Privately funded.
That's all we got left.

There's no Patients' Bill of Rights.
Congress won't do it.

Or else they'll spend five years
wrangling over minutiae. . .

-. . .and come up with a toothless plan.
-A toothless plan is not inconsiderable.

And a little wrangling?
That's the fun part.

No, that's how you have fun.

That's why you're here,
and I'm going home to Texas.

I hear C.J. Cregg got chief of staff.

-That's gotta be a blow.
-It's fine, really.

Everybody likes the look
of the next rung up the ladder.

But you know what?

You couldn't do the kind of politicking
you do behind Leo McGarry's desk.

You'd be making sure
the trains run on time.

They need you.

You love that fight. . .

. . .and you're good at it.

I don't love it.

Go on. Get out of my office.
Do what you were born to do.

You're screwing the party. It's not like
we got a lot of bench strength in Texas.

I know.

And I'm sorry about that.

Ronna, give Mr. Lyman a copy
of the talking points.

-On?
-Patients' Bill of Rights.

-Gail!
-I fed her this morning.

We're not in Kansas anymore, Gail.

Greg Brock's writing an "Is the
administration in over its head?" story.

-Peacekeeping mission?
-He's trying to get General Alexander.

-Where'd he--?
-Rumors, speculation.

-Toby's briefing.
-First day's tough.

-Is Toby in his office?
-I think so. I'll check.

Traditionally, we call people,
and they come to you.

-That's the wrong file.
-You want a magazine?

-That's the not-enough-experience file.
-Yes, indeed.

-We have people with more--
-We've got a guy who is bulletproof. . .

. . .who will throw himself
in front of the press corps. . .

. . .like the Ione man facing down
the tanks in Tiananmen Square.

One, two. . . .
Bring in these four tomorrow.

-You don't think that's a waste of time?
-Yeah, it is a colossal waste of time.

These four.

Talk to Greg Brock.
Get him to hold the story.

-He has nothing.
-He'll run nothing next week.

I misspoke. No one thinks
you can't handle foreign policy.

We all do. If you thought
differently, it would've been:

"She's been involved in foreign policy
for five years" . . .

. . .not, "She'll bounce
questions to NSC. "

It never crossed your mind to reject it.

-So I'm a lousy public speaker.
-Talk to Brock.

This runs tomorrow,
it's two graphs on page 10.

Wait a week, it's top left, page one.

It wasn't a suggestion.

It was what? An order?

It's almost 8.
You should get out of here.

-I'll be back.
-Where are you going?

I. . . .

I don't think this is gonna work out.

Lord, I never wanted a double vodka
at 9 a.m. until this week.

They say the first step
is admitting you have a problem.

Margaret, sit.

I have a problem.

-I'm not sure I'm--
-Hutchinson's a son of a bitch.

-Is that just me, or--?
-No.

-How did Leo deal with him?
-Leo always talked to Tim Crawford first.

-Chief of staff at DOD.
-How about Secretary of Energy?

Leo's first calls
were always subcabinet.

Secretaries have agendas,
policy wonks have information.

Right.

How many policy wonks work for me?

A bunch.

Secretary of State.
Secretary of Defense.

Secretary of Energy.
All fans of nonproliferation.

All doing everything they can
to keep their hands off this.

They're the "no" team.
You're the "yes" team.

-Where's Toby?
-He had a. . . . I don't know.

I need a plan for funding an emergency
uranium extraction from sunny Tbilisi.

Keep in mind we need to secure it,
contain it, transport it. . .

. . .and bury it in a manner that will
shelter it for upwards of 30,000 years.

Resist the temptation to rely on
the Emergency Nonproliferation Fund.

Apparently, we've already spent it.

You knew these four were underqualified
when you called them in.

He mispronounced "New York. "

-God help me.
-Come on in.

-Is this. . .?
-Yep. Right place.

-You're Annabeth Scott?
-Schott.

-What?
-Schott.

-There's an H. I didn't see it.
-She didn't see it.

Go ahead and stand
behind the podium there.

-Up there?
-Yeah.

I'm not going up there.

-Why would I do that?
-Much of the job is briefing the press.

-For a deputy?
-Deputy what?

-You the gal I talked to on the phone?
-Thank you.

We're gonna move on to somebody
who understands the position.

-You're hiring a press secretary.
-Do something.

-To be press secretary.
-C.J. Cregg, former press secretary. . .

. . .has been promoted. Big day.
All over the news.

-You should go watch.
-I've seen the news.

"President's fixing to send Cregg to
Ramallah to swat bombers with a purse. "

That's gotta be some purse.

-I never said "fixing. "
-Why on earth would you hire. . .

. . .a new press secretary with Cregg
10 minutes out of the job?

Does someone not talk to these people?
Nobody tell you why you're coming?

Deputy press secretary
for Media Relations.

I sent in my r?sum? six months ago.

They were looking
to replace Tim Waters.

-He used to prep for the morning shows.
-He was irritating.

-He saved your tail more than once.
-Okay.

Did you ever replace him?
Because I'd be a fine choice.

If you're nice, I'll get
a dress Marine to walk you out.

You don't want
a new press secretary. Not yet.

Anyone who tries to stand in
C.J. Cregg's shoes will be eaten alive.

And who exactly do you think
is gonna brief the press?

You. You need someone from
the administration to get through. . .

. . .this transition period.
Don't make a face.

-You were good.
-I saw it. He really wasn't.

You need grooming.
I can take care of that.

I'll help you find
a new press secretary.

A real search, not some 24-hour
emergency-rescue mission.

Who's this administration's
most effective critic?

-Taylor Reid.
-When I found him. . .

. . .he was a bartender
with half a novel.

He had what you have.

-What's that?
-A watchable quality.

-Short list.
-Two.

-Shorter than discussed.
-Alan Zwick, you brought me before.

-He was good.
-He has no soul.

Of course he sounded good. He'd front
for the Gotti family if you asked.

And Annabeth Schott. The little pixie
from The Taylor Reid Show?

We shouldn't hire them.

-I think I should do it.
-Do what?

Brief the press.

I have a quality.

Look, not forever. For a few weeks,
until we find somebody.

But we do a real search and hopefully
not with me sitting listening to them.

-This is thought out.
-She came up with it. Marybeth.

-Annabeth.
-She said we were rushing. She's right.

We put a fresh face
up there this week. . .

-. . .they'll be ground beef.
-She's your follow-up act?

No, she wanted some Media Relations--
She's irrelevant--

-She wants Tim Waters' job?
-And she wants to search. . .

-. . .for your replacement.
-Not a bad idea.

-It is, but can we focus on--?
-On you as spokesman?

-Dream come true.
-The deputies can handle most.

-I'll do high-profile stuff.
-Like this morning.

-Yeah, no. Slightly better.
-Did you talk to Greg Brock?

He's not holding the story.

-Don't give me the face.
-This is. . . .

I don't know how
this is gonna work, Toby.

You're not his story.

"We're unprepared" is the story.
It's not coming from here.

-It's coming from DOD.
-What?

Graham Bradley told him
they low-balled the troop estimates.

We can't do it with 18,000 men.

DOD's burying the number because they
can't get that money from Congress.

DOD's in over their heads.

I love you, desperately.

-I know.
-They low-balled the estimates.

Hutchinson's railroading the
Georgia project. He can't afford it!

-I could be good at briefing.
-That's debatable.

Bring her in to do the search.
Put her in Media Relations.

-I don't think that part's a good idea.
-She'll be helpful to you, and you. . . .

If you wanna brief, you should.
You know why? I trust you.

-And you most certainly have a quality.
-I'm watchable.

The Secretaries of State, Energy. . .

. . .Defense, Nancy, JCS,
and CIA in the Sit Room.

Not the Sit Room.
My office. This office. Here.

I need to speak with him.

Come here.

-Right.
-Come in.

-Afternoon, Mr. President.
-How you doing?

Fan-dab-tastic.
You got the Energy quarterly?

-I got it right here. Thank you.
-I'd like it back.

Get your own copy.

We're not ready to assess
nuclear storage facilities.

The team hasn't evaluated all the options.
You don't have complete information.

-You don't think this is a good start?
-I think it's you doing my job for me.

You're looking at this
based on DOD's call.

It's valid, but it's one perspective.
Until we've gathered others. . .

. . .if you need something to read, the new
Benjamin Franklin bio is a page-turner.

Thank you, Mr. President.

What was that?

I just got spanked.

Sorry I missed it.

-She still nervous?
-I don't think so, no.

-They're in there.
-Great.

You're an odd woman.
I've never understood you.

But you're extremely capable.
You run this office like a watch.

You're tall, which is reassuring.

Leo may need you,
and if he does, that's okay.

But if he's willing to part
with you, I hope you'll stay.

Thanks for coming in. These are
tentative figures for the extraction.

We need to rejigger
numbers on flight support.

It shouldn't change the bottom line.

-I'd like to sit with the president--
-It will flow through this office.

I will keep the president up to speed.

-Let's look at the breakdown.
-I'm sure this is well-thought-out.

-The only viable option now. . .
-Mr. Secretary.

-. . .is to secure the material. . .
-Mr. Secretary.

-. . .because we don't have the resources.
-Miles.

We will find the money.
You will not.

Though DOD will likely be saddled with
most of the operational responsibility. . .

. . .you will not be saddled with the cost.
You're sending 18,000 troops. . .

. . .into the Middle East, and we
can assume that's the beginning.

You're overextended.
We'll find money elsewhere.

Let's look at the breakdown
on page three.

C.J. wants us upstairs.

-I had a great meeting with Matt Santos.
-Good.

What do you think about
the Patients' Bill of Rights?

Lead balloon.

Maybe. I don't know.

-I'm gonna take a look at it again.
-So he's keeping his seat?

No, he's screwing us.

That's your idea of a good meeting?

Yeah.

Look what the elves have done.

-Hey.
-Hey.

C.J. wanted to be here,
but she got pulled in.

Staff's on their way.

She wanted me to give this to you.

-"J and T, nothing without you. "
-Hey.

Thanks.

-Who did this?
-The boss.

-Good evening, Mr. President.
-Hey.

How'd it go with the tiger team?

We took a vote and elected
not to call it tiger team.

Beyond that, I think
we've isolated the funding.

There's some concern
about political fallout. . .

. . .if we bring foreign nuclear material
onto American soil.

-EPA?
-Environmental-impact study. . .

. . .would take over a year.
We don't have that time.

Thinking about the British,
see if they'll help.

We talked about nonproliferation
at the G8 last year.

-They said they're willing to get involved.
-Great.

I'll schedule a call
for the prime minister.

C.J., you're chief of staff.
You can make the call.

Right.

Thank you, sir.

Margaret.

Will you set up a call tomorrow. . .

. . .with the prime minister
of the United Kingdom?

Sure. Who's going to be on the call?

Me.
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