Original airdate: April 6, 2005
Written by: John Wells (7)
Directed by: Alex Graves (27)
Synopsis
- Chaos reigns at the Democratic National Convention, which begins with no clear presidential nominee and gets even more convoluted when an unexpected candidate throws his hat into the ring. An enraged President Bartlet orders Toby and Kate to find out who leaked the secret of the military shuttle.
Now this is a rip-roaring finish to Season 6, a roller-coaster ride of an episode set up almost like a thriller, whipsawing us from unexpected twist to unforeseen turn. It's one of my favorites from the later seasons of The West Wing, and I could write endless paragraphs about it, so buckle in, boys and girls!
- The convention begins with Russell and Santos fighting to get enough delegates for the nomination
- Russell's expected naming of Baker as his VP choice would likely sew up the nomination for Russell
- Josh goes to Hoynes to ask for him to support Santos, as that would put Matt over the top
- Baker ends up double-crossing Russell by trying to get himself nominated from the floor
- Chaos breaks out as delegates switch sides
- Word leaks about Baker's wife and her hospitalizations for depression, something that Baker had kept a secret
- As Baker's support (and his appetite for staying in the contest) fades, Leo insists it's time for Matt to step aside for Russell
- Matt turns his final speech into a surprise rallying cry for the delegates to take the power given them and make the nomination choice based on who they personally prefer
- The President is swayed to Matt's side, he leans on the teachers' union leader, the delegates flock to Santos
- Josh asks Leo to be Matt's running mate
Yeah, so even my "short wrapup" is pretty involved. And I haven't even mentioned the continuing saga of the International Space Station astronauts and the secret military space shuttle that's their only hope.
Okay. We start at the convention arena, with negotiations over candidate speaking order and other quibbles. As things are being set up, Matt, Helen, and some of the Santos staff take a look around, while Helen worries about speaking in front of 25,000 people ("more like 25 million," Ned says helpfully. "Gotta figure in the television audience").
It's a pretty big space.
Josh: "Your political life is over. It was over the day you resigned the Vice Presidency. I don't care what they're saying to Larry King - your delegates are going to rush to the nearest lifeboat after the first ballot."
Hoynes: "Hey, don't sugarcoat it for me, Josh, I can take it."
Josh: "And there's not gonna be a Cabinet post or an ambassadorship coming your way, either. Your indiscretions saw to that."
Josh tells Hoynes he could serve as an advisor, a "party elder" in a Santos administration, something he'd never get from Russell, then drops the hammer with this final bit.
Will: "What happened?"
Russell: "He wants to sleep on it."
Will: "Sleep on it? We'll be on the third or fourth ballot by --"
Russell: "Yeah, I think he's aiming to be on it - the son of a bitch doesn't want to be VP, he's gonna try to get nominated from the floor."
Matt: "I am not doing it!"
Josh: "I went to see Ernie Gambelli. Rather flip-flop on teacher tenure? Because we are one nail in the coffin away from dead."
Of course Josh just needed to bank on Russell doing it, as Will is all over using this information about Baker to try to sink his chances. Donna fights to be the voice of compassion:
Will: "It's Bartlet's MS all over again."
Donna: "We can't leak this, it's clinging to 18th century stereotypes of mental illness. Why not attack her for having consumption?"
Will: "It's not the depression, it's his failure to disclose it."
Donna: "Will, this isn't a quick hit on some 15-year-old piece of telecom legislation - it's a brutal character assault on a man's wife for an eight-hour story that'll be over by tomorrow night."
Will: "We're not trying to be judge and jury, we get it out there, let the delegates decide how important it is."
Donna: "Don't do this. The Vice President'll do it if you tell him to. Please."
Will: "Eight hours keeps us alive through another ballot."
Understandable, I guess, given how Will and Russell feel like they were double-crossed by Baker. So they leak the information, the news is all over Mrs. Baker's depression treatment and the Governor's hiding of it. The shot of the Bakers watching the coverage, with Dotty's out-of-focus turmoil and tortured embarrassment and Eric's stoic unspoken acknowledgement that he screwed up, is pretty emotional.
So we're back to two. With the President ready to arrive on Day Three of the convention, Leo insists it's time for Josh and Matt to step aside, to let Vice President Russell take the nomination and lead the way in November, to stop the bickering wrangling on the floor of the convention. Josh knows he's right.
Leo: "You done good, kid."
Josh: "The President?"
Leo: "Yeah. He's gotta put a stop to this."
Josh: "One more primary - we would've had it. Peaked a little late, I guess. (pause) He's not gonna do it just because I say so, Leo. He's his own man."
Leo: "And here I thought I found the last one."
Leo and Matt have a meeting, in the seats of the arena. It's never spoken out loud, never exactly defined, but the outcome is clear ... Santos must give in. He has one last request.
Matt: "Will I have the chance to address the convention again?"
"Of course," Leo replies. It's the least they can offer for this unifying gesture. But, it turns out, Matt has a different idea in mind. We the viewers don't know it yet, but as he prepares to take the stage, with millions of Americans (including the President) watching on TV, he and Helen share a knowing look - a telling look, considering no one has seen this speech except these two, including Josh.
And Matt takes the spotlight, with the surprising statement, "I have been asked by people that I respect to take this opportunity to support one of the other fine candidates who have made this race with me, to help decide who our nominee will be.
"But I can't do that."
He goes on with a stem-winder of a speech, exhorting the delegates that they have the power to decide, not the party decision-makers, and then turns to the news of Baker's wife and her medical background being made public:
Matt: "Because we're all broken. Every single one of us. And yet we pretend that we're not. We all live lives of imperfection, and yet we cling to this fantasy that there's a perfect life, and that our leaders should embody it. But if we expect our leaders to live on some higher moral plane than the rest of us, well, we're just asking to be deceived."
Helen's smiling look at Josh after this turn of events is just ... golden.
The delegates are energized, the momentum is shifting, and President Bartlet reaches out to Josh. It's time to make a choice, to bring the power of the Oval Office down on the scales. The teachers' union chief is brought in to see the President himself, he sways his union members to back Santos, and the nomination is made.
But who will be Vice President? Leo, shuffling papers and finalizing the business of the convention before it wraps up, has a conversation with Josh.
Leo: "Hey, what are you doing here? You ought to be down on the floor, celebrating with your guys."
Josh: "We still gotta line up a VP."
Leo: "You ask Baker?"
Josh: "Yeah, he begged off. Doesn't want to put his wife through it."
Leo: "I guess Russell isn't on the short list."
Josh: "That was a nonstarter with the Congressman."
Leo: "Want me to help work up a list?"
Josh: "No, we got it narrowed down to the guy we want. I'm just not sure he's going to accept."
Leo: "You want the President to push your guy along?"
Josh: "I called the President. Said he'd kick the guy's ass all over the schoolyard if it came to that."
Leo: "So, who is it?"
Josh: "You."
Josh stands up and leaves. The stunned look on Leo's face is really something. Remember, back in Memorial Day we had flashbacks to President-elect Bartlet getting ready to take office, with Jed being so appreciative of Leo's guidance and support, telling him "It should be you, Leo. You, not me," recognizing Leo's political acumen while acknowledging that his past struggles with addiction probably made elective office impossible. Now, here he is, the Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States.
And as President Bartlet gets ready to speak, to introduce the Democratic ticket of Santos-McGarry, we see this unspoken moment between these two old friends.
Just terrific. I think it was Martin Sheen who said he described The West Wing as a love story between Jed Bartlet and Leo McGarry, and he has a point!
Then, to remind us that this triumph by Matt, Josh, and Leo is only the beginning of what's to come in Season 7, the episode closes with the Republican candidate, Arnie Vinick, watching TV coverage of the convention announcement and then standing to face his staff.
"Okay. Let's go win this thing." |
Whew! What an episode!
Hold on - I haven't even begun to discuss the other story thread, the other plot line that's going to carry through Season 7 as well ... who leaked the existence of a Pentagon military space shuttle to Greg Brock?
With the astronauts in the ISS three days away from suffocating due to lack of oxygen, the President finally decides to launch the military shuttle to make the repairs to save the crew. While they'll try to do it in a manner that doesn't expose the existence of that shuttle to the public, one of the ISS crew members is a Russian cosmonaut, which almost certainly means he'll confirm that the spacecraft indeed exists.
Bartlet is furious over the national security leak that basically forced his hand in this decision, and demands the leaker be found.
President: "I want this leaker found by us. What about somebody at NASA? Kelwick, maybe!"
Kate: "No, sir, I can't imagine --"
President: "You don't have to imagine, 'cause you're gonna find out, you and Toby. I want to know who it is in this administration who thinks their opinion of how I should handle this situation matters more than mine. I want a name on this desk by Friday."
Kate and Toby are put on the case, and they join forces with the FBI to start combing through the list of prospective leakers. If you recall in Things Fall Apart, what we were shown definitely seemed to make us viewers lean toward CJ as giving the information to the press: she was the strongest voice for just sending up the shuttle to rescue the ISS crew; she was seen several times watching news coverage of the crisis rather pensively, as if she was considering something; and she's had a working relationship with Brock ever since Full Disclosure, when he definitely did her a favor by giving her an early look at his interview with John Hoynes.
That gets reinforced a bit here in the Oval Office scene when CJ defends Brock, saying he'll never give up his source even if the government puts the power of the Department of Justice on him. But ... we don't know CJ is the leaker, not yet, it's not definite. In fact, in the DVD commentary, writer and producer John Wells says that at this point, as they wrapped up Season 6, they hadn't yet decided who the leaker was. They were still keeping their options open. That does make us wonder just exactly what the writers were thinking, though, with this late scene in Toby's office (and since Wells was the writer of this episode, gee ... do you have someone you're pointing fingers at or not?):
Kate (closing the door as she enters Toby's office): "It wasn't Kelwick."
Toby: "Hm?"
Kate: "From NASA. He wasn't the leak. Nobody over there was. Too many of the technical details were wrong."
Toby: "You didn't have to close the door to tell me that."
It's yet another season-ending cliffhanger, of sorts, to join the previous five years:
- Season 1: the shooting at Rosslyn in What Kind Of Day Has It Been, with the final line we hear "Who's been shot? Who's been shot?"
- Season 2: President Bartlet facing the press, about to answer the question of whether he's going to run again in Two Cathedrals (although strictly speaking, we know what his answer is going to be, so not exactly a cliffhanger). We are still awaiting the outcome of the coup in Haiti, however.
- Season 3: again, not quite a cliffhanger, as Bartlet approves the operation to kill Qumari defense minister Shareef in Posse Comitatus ... but we are waiting to see how and when the operation will become public and what the fallout from that will be.
- Season 4: Zoey's kidnapping and Bartlet's 25th Amendment relinquishing of his office in Twenty Five.
- Season 5: in Memorial Day, what's going to happen with the Israeli-Palestinian summit? Who's coming, how will the stakes shake out? Will Jed and Leo work out the conflicts being laid bare between them? And has Donna suffered life-altering complications from her emergency surgery?
For Season 7, we have not just the general election campaign to look forward to, and the decision of whether Santos or Vinick will be the next President, but also who in the West Wing committed a felonious breach of national security by leaking information about a top-secret military space shuttle to the press?
Just one more season to go of this terrific television drama.
Tales Of Interest!
The morning backlight, the powerful silhouettes ... nice. |
The composition of this shot is just beautiful. |
And this one ... |
And this is near perfection. |
Balloons for Santos' speech? I don't think so |
Now that you're bringing on the nominees, now it's time for balloons |
In order to capture the nomination for the Democratic Party candidate for President, the nominee must have 2162 delegates for him or her. This convention episode is all about who will be the one to earn those 2162 votes.
Quotes
-----
Ned: "If Russell announces Baker as his VP how do we prevent a stampede to Russell on the second ballot?"
Josh: "By getting Hoynes to throw his support behind us."
Ned: "Why would he do that?"
Josh: "Only thing Hoynes would hate more than Matt Santos getting the nomination is Bob Russell getting the nomination."
Bram: "Santos - you hate him less."
Leo: "One night of this is entertaining, two nights we look like idiots."
-----
Matt: "Did you tell Ned to offer New Jersey delegates federal jobs?"
Josh: "Did you hear the rumors about Baker's wife?"
Matt: "Do we know if these people are even remotely qualified - do they even have high school diplomas?"
Josh: "It's not violating any laws."
Matt: "Avoiding prosecution isn't the standard that I was shooting for."
Story threads, callbacks, and familiar faces (Hey, it's that guy!)
- Another appearance by Dylan Clark, Hoynes' representative at the convention. He's played by Tim Kelleher (Thirteen Days, Independence Day, NCIS).
- The news anchor played by Ivan Allen (Sicario, Apollo 13) is back again; he's been an ongoing TV presence on the show ever since A Proportional Response. He's been seen on CNN, MSNBC, the series' onetime made-up news channel CND, and a local DC news station; more recently, as we see here, he's on the show's generic news channel.
- Bram (Matthew Del Negro) is back; we haven't seen him since he first appeared in La Palabra.
- New York delegate and head of the teachers' union Ernie Gambelli is played by Vincent Guastraferro (NYPD Blue, Spartan, State and Main, Wiseguy).
- Nancy pops up again, played by Martin Sheen's daughter Renée Estevez.
- Hey, look, it's Zoey! We did see her briefly in Things Fall Apart, with Charlie sneaking out of her room. Obviously she's staying with the First Family in the White House for the time being, and she's made the trip to San Diego for Jed's speech to the convention.
- Josh brings up the fact that Matt Santos won his home state of Texas in the primary; in Things Fall Apart I had the distinct impression that Russell took Texas. I think I misread that, though ... when Will, Josh, and the Hoynes representative are arguing over floor positioning of delegations in that episode Dylan Clark asks if they have something against Hoynes' home state (Texas) and Will says "The Vice President carried his home state" ... I misunderstood that to mean Russell won Texas, but he meant Russell won his home state of Colorado. I also completely missed Josh's reference to the Texas delegation being spirited and boisterous and Will's response, "And loud enough to be heard from the back of the room."
- Josh's remark about "stray Atkins delegates" reminds us of an Atkins who was another Democratic candidate first mentioned in King Corn, and was no doubt one of the "seven dwarfs" in Freedonia.
- The "indiscretions" Josh talks to Hoynes about brings to mind what caused Hoynes to resign the Vice Presidency in the first place in Life On Mars; his affair with a socialite where he tried to impress her with classified government information. We also know he's a serial adulterer, from the revelation he spent a night with CJ (Full Disclosure) to the news stories about dalliances with Senate staffers that led him to temporarily suspend his campaign in La Palabra.
- Donna brings coffee to Will; famously in her first appearance in Pilot we were told she had never before brought coffee to Josh until that day, when he was in trouble for what he said on Capitol Beat.
- CJ asks Toby to prepare two statements on the space station for the President; he asks, "You said a couple of statements?" to which she replies, "One if the President decides to save them, one if he doesn't." This should not be a surprise to Toby - the whole idea of having two speeches for differing outcomes of certain events has been discussed before, most movingly in 7A WF 83429 and The Dogs Of War - in that case, Toby himself explained to Will that they'd need two speeches ready, one in case Zoey was found alive and one if she wasn't.
- As CJ is heading to her interview with the FBI, Toby asks her if she should take a lawyer, to which she answers "I don't need a lawyer." This is almost word-for-word the conversation Sam had with Josh when Josh headed off to give his deposition to Les Claypool over Leo's rumored drug use in Lord John Marbury.
- A "Governor Baker" was first mentioned as a potential leading Democratic presidential candidate in The Hubbert Peak. Baker appeared in A Change Is Gonna Come when President Bartlet donated his 25th Amendment letter to the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia; in the Oval Office he told Bartlet he was doing some early polling on his chances. Then, in In The Room, Baker made the surprise announcement he wouldn't be pursuing the nomination, for "family reasons." Baker was dipping his toe back in the race in Things Fall Apart, though, sounding quite receptive to Russell's overtures about a possible Vice President spot. Now, with the turmoil in the convention and no clear-cut nominee emerging, Baker decides to jump back into the race for the Presidential nomination - which blows up when word of his wife's hospital stays for depression become public. Was that the "family reasons" Baker used to get out of the race in the first place? Pretty ironic, I guess, that he didn't stick with his first decision, for his wife's sake ...
- Both Josh and Will are quick to tie Baker's hiding of his wife's depression treatment with President Bartlet's coverup of his multiple sclerosis. The MS was first disclosed to us in He Shall, From Time To Time ..., with the public announcement of his condition and the coverup playing out over the end of Season 2. The disease has not actually affected the President much (with the exception of Election Night) until he suffered an attack in A Change Is Gonna Come that extended through his China trip, and causes him to use a cane even now.
- As Leo commiserates with Matt pondering the end of his run, he asks, "You ever think you'd get this far?" Matt replies, "Honestly, no, I didn't." This reminds me of Opposition Research when he admits to Josh he only agreed to run to get his education issues out on the table for discussion in the early primaries and then he expected he'd go back to Houston.
- CJ reminds the President how the Speaker forced him to nominate Russell as the Vice President to replace Hoynes because the Republicans knew Russell couldn't win the general election. We saw that play out in Jefferson Lives.
- To me, Matt's speech to the convention closely echoes what we heard Vinick say in In God We Trust.
Matt, in this episode: "But if we expect our leaders to live on some higher moral plane than the rest of us, well, we're just asking to be deceived."
Vinick, to the press in In God We Trust: "If you demand expressions of religious faith from politicians you are just begging to be lied to."
- Kate asks Toby, "You think Santos stands a chance against Vinick in the fall?" and Toby answers, "He's gonna get killed." Toby has been dismissive of Santos' chances ever since Josh first mentioned him as a potential candidate in Faith Based Initiative, when Toby asked if a military junta was part of Josh's nine-point plan.
- Leo's reaction to the Vice Presidential offer - and particularly the moment with him and President Bartlet before Jed takes the stage - reminds us of Memorial Day and the flashback to President-elect Bartlet telling Leo, "It should be you, Leo. You, not me."
DC location shots
- None. See above for where the convention scenes were filmed.
They Do Exist! It's The Real Person, or Thing
- A cavalcade of network logos is seen inside the convention center: CNN, CBS News, ABC News, MSNBC, and NBC News.
- Early on we see a Diet Coke can and bottles of Aquafina water on the table in front of Leo and the candidates' teams.
- Annabeth says the networks will cut away from the convention to show Seinfeld repeats if they keep struggling to select a candidate.
- The front page of The Washington Post with a lead story about the ISS astronauts is clearly visible.
- There's a Nestlé ice cream vendor in the hallway outside the convention arena. It kinda reminds me of Will gazing longingly at his ice cream sandwich in the vending machine in King Corn.
The King Corn ice cream sandwich |
- When Josh and Ronna are stopping by the concession stand in the hallway you can see a Samuel Adams beer tap. The set/props crew struggled mightily to turn those taps sideways and hide the logos, but they weren't completely successful.
- John Hoynes tells Josh that Larry King's booker keeps calling his delegates.
- Vice President Russell compares Baker's waffling on the VP offer to William Shakespeare's Hamlet.
- Leo is trying to keep the networks airing the convention on the first night when they're wanting to dump the boring stuff and go to local news; after Annabeth spills the word that a contentious and potentially damaging floor fight is coming with Baker's draft push, he says, "If you want to cut to Law & Order now, Susan, be my guest."
- The President, watching TV with Abbey, says, "It's a free-for-all. I think Aaron Burr's got 20 votes."
- Josh tells the head of the wavering New Jersey delegation, "You're not going to be left at the altar. You're gonna be wearing satin at the Elvis chapel."
- When Donna asks about his voice, Will says, "I feel like I just re-recorded Rod Stewart's back catalog."
- Donna brings Starbucks coffee to Will; there's a Panda Express box nearby.
- When Josh implies the New Jersey delegates could get government jobs under a Santos administration, he says most of the Interior Department will be humming Thunder Road - a song by New Jersey icon Bruce Springsteen.
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