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  • Episode 2.11 -- "The Leadership Breakfast"
    The West Wing Scripts/Season 2 2008. 11. 6. 17:10
    THE WEST WING
    "THE LEADERSHIP BREAKFAST"
    WRITTEN BY: PAUL REDFORD
    DIRECTED BY: SCOTT WINANT
    
    
    TEASER
    
    DONNA [VO]
    We don’t need some kind of permission for this?
    
    JOSH [VO]
    No.
    
    DONNA [VO]
    What about supervision, shouldn’t there be some official supervision?
    
    FADE IN: INT. THE MURAL ROOM - NIGHT
    Sam and Josh are bending over a fireplace. All three are bundled up in heavy coats, and 
    Donna is wearing a winter hat.
    
    JOSH
    We’re making a fire in a fireplace, what kind of supervision do you want?
    
    DONNA
    FEMA? The American Red Cross?
    
    SAM
    What kind of wood is this?
    
    JOSH
    [sighs] I don’t know.
    
    DONNA
    Josh...
    
    JOSH
    It’s freezing in here.
    
    DONNA
    I acknowledge that it’s cold.
    
    JOSH
    It’s like Ice Station Zebra.
    
    DONNA
    It also might bother someone.
    
    JOSH
    It’s half past midnight!
    
    SAM
    See, here’s the thing. This looks like spruce to me.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah?
    
    SAM
    And spruce is a softwood, softwood burns out quickly. You know what we need for a slow 
    burning fire?
    
    JOSH
    A hardwood?
    
    SAM
    That’s right.
    
    JOSH
    That’s interesting.
    
    DONNA
    Where did you get the wood?
    
    JOSH
    It was sitting in... the thing. [points across the room]
    
    DONNA
    I think that is mean to be decorative...
    
    JOSH
    It’s wood, we’re not burning Benjamin Harrison’s log cabin.
    
    SAM
    You know what?
    
    JOSH
    What?
    
    SAM
    We might be.
    
    JOSH
    Why?
    
    SAM
    It was made out of spruce.
    
    JOSH
    [to Donna] Where’s C.J.?
    
    DONNA
    She’s over in the Roosevelt Room.
    
    JOSH
    Is she doing the seating chart?
    
    DONNA
    Yeah.
    
    JOSH
    Jancowitz has a hearing aid that seldom works, he needs to be seated near the center. 
    Would you tell her that?
    
    DONNA
    Yeah. [beat] You’re not using lighter fluid or anything are you?
    
    JOSH
    No... no flammable liquids of any kind to start a fire, ever.
    
    Donna starts to leave when Sam re-enters carrying a kerosene lamp.
    
    SAM
    Found it!
    
    JOSH
    What?
    
    SAM
    Kerosene.
    
    DONNA
    [whips around] Josh...
    
    JOSH
    Go.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE ROOSEVELT ROOM - NIGHT
    C.J., Carol, Ed, Larry, and some other staffers are standing around a large seating chart 
    for the leadership breakfast. They are all in heavy coats and many are holding steaming 
    coffee, including C.J. who is wearing gloves. C.J. is walking around the board, placing 
    and pointing to stands, which hold handwritten cards.
    
    C.J.
    Speaker [places stand], House Majority [places stand], House Minority, Senate Majority, 
    Senate Minority, Whip, Whip, Deputy, Deputy.
    
    CAROL
    Right.
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    ED
    Then...
    
    C.J.
    What?
    
    ED
    The committee chairs.
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    ED
    Ways and Means goes here.
    
    LARRY
    Finance goes here, House Appropriations goes here.
    
    ED
    Senate Appropriations here, House Budget...
    
    LARRY
    Senate Budget
    
    C.J.
    Excellent.
    
    ED
    Which brings us to...
    
    CAROL
    White House staff.
    
    ED
    That’s right. So, we’ve got the Chief of Staff.
    
    LARRY
    Next to him will be the Deputy Chief of Staff. On the other side of Leo will be the 
    Congressional Liaison, and the Political Liaison.
    
    ED
    Next to them will be the Communications Director and the Deputy Communications Director.
    
    C.J.
    What about staff aides?
    
    ED
    The aides will stand around the wall.
    
    C.J.
    So we’re done?
    
    ED
    We’re set.
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    DONNA
    [enters] C.J.?
    
    C.J.
    Don’t give me a thing.
    
    DONNA
    Josh says Jancowitz has to sit closer to the center.
    
    C.J.
    Why?
    
    DONNA
    He doesn’t hear well.
    
    C.J.
    He can’t sit closer to the center!
    
    DONNA
    His hearing aid malfunctions.
    
    C.J.
    Who cares? [beat] It’s a breakfast to trumpet a new spirit of bi-partisanship cooperation 
    and understanding in a new year, no ones going to be listening to each other anyways!
    
    DONNA
    I’m just a messenger but I think he’s saying we don’t snub Jancowitz...
    
    C.J.
    Because of the thing...
    
    DONNA
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    All right, we’re gonna have to move somebody. Would you ask him if it’s better to dis 
    the House Whip or the Senate Whip?
    
    DONNA
    Yeah.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE MURAL ROOM - NIGHT
    Josh and Sam are still working in front of the fireplace.
    
    JOSH
    You want to stand them in a tripod right?
    
    SAM
    Yeah, standing 3 sticks on an end and slanting them to a common center.
    
    JOSH
    Isn’t that a tripod?
    
    SAM
    Yeah, but...
    
    JOSH
    You just thought you’d say more words.
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    DONNA
    [enters] Josh...
    
    JOSH
    Hang on. [to Sam] You know what we need?
    
    SAM
    Dried leaves.
    
    JOSH
    We need dried leaves.
    
    DONNA
    To move Jancowitz, we’ve got to move either the House or Senate Whip.
    
    JOSH and SAM
    House.
    
    DONNA
    Why?
    
    SAM
    ‘Cause life is tough in the big cruel world, and if he doesn’t like it, he can kiss me!
    
    DONNA
    So, the spirit of bi-partisanship begins!
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    JOSH
    Could you possible get us some dried leaves?
    
    DONNA
    Yeah, I’ll just run out to the forest and be right back. [leaves]
    
    SAM
    You know what?
    
    JOSH
    You think she was being sarcastic?
    
    SAM
    Yeah, I don’t think she’s getting the leaves.
    
    JOSH
    You know what we could use?
    
    SAM
    Newspaper?
    
    JOSH
    See, this is what I’m talking about, this is teamwork!
    
    SAM
    It really is!
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE ROOSEVELT ROOM - NIGHT
    
    DONNA
    [enters] House.
    
    C.J.
    House?
    
    DONNA
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    So, we’ll move the House Whip to the left of Sam and move Jancowitz across from Leo and 
    we’re all set right?
    
    CAROL
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Larry, Ed we’re set? [beat] Either one of you?
    
    ED
    Yeah.
    
    LARRY
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    Thank you, you see, you guys thought it was going to take a long time and it only ended 
    up taking 7 and a half hours.
    
    TOBY
    [enters] Somebody working on the heat?
    
    C.J.
    Seating arrangement is set.
    
    TOBY
    That took some time.
    
    C.J.
    It was hard.
    
    TOBY
    You got to find a magic marker.
    
    C.J.
    Toby, when people are sitting with the President, there’s excruciating protocol involved.
    
    TOBY
    Uh-oh.
    
    C.J.
    What?!?
    
    TOBY
    Missed one...
    
    C.J.
    Who?
    
    TOBY
    Take a look.
    
    C.J. and the others are bent over the table looking.
    
    C.J.
    I’m looking...
    
    TOBY
    It’ll happen.
    
    C.J.
    Okay, guys. You know what we did? We forgot the President.
    
    TOBY 
    [holding up card holder off to side of the board] There it is!
    
    GINGER
    [enters] Does anybody smell smoke?
    
    DONNA
    Oh God! [leaves quickly]
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE MURAL ROOM - NIGHT
    Josh and Sam are backing away in a cloud of smoke. Josh coughs.
    
    SAM
    I think this might be because the wood is wet.
    
    JOSH
    Well, the fire ought to dry it pretty quick shouldn’t it?
    
    SAM
    You’d think.
    
    DONNA
    [rushes in] What’d you do?!
    
    JOSH
    It’s going pretty good now.
    
    DONNA
    There’s smoke in the hallways!
    
    Toby and C.J. enter.
    
    TOBY
    What the hell is going on?
    
    JOSH
    The wood’s drying out.
    
    C.J.
    Are you burning a dining room table?!
    
    JOSH
    Spruce is a slow drying wood.
    
    TOBY
    Do you have any idea whet you’re talking about?
    
    JOSH
    No.
    
    SAM
    Hang on. [reads a small plaque on the wall next to the fireplace]
    
    C.J.
    Are those instructions?
    
    SAM
    It says this fireplace was a favor to President Andrew Johnson and he would sip whiskey 
    from a charcoal keg while reading by its light.
    
    JOSH
    That doesn’t help.
    
    SAM
    The flue’s been welded shut since 1896.
    
    JOSH
    Well that’s probably it then.
    
    CHARLIE
    [enters] What are you doing?!
    
    JOSH
    Somebody started a fire in this fireplace, Charlie.
    
    CHARLIE
    If the smoke alarms go off, they’re going to make me wake up the President!
    
    SAM
    The President’s a thousand yards over and two flights up.
    
    CHARLIE
    It’s Secret Service procedure.
    
    JOSH
    Well, let’s get a fire extinguisher and put it out before the smoke alar...
    
    Smoke alarms begin to blare. All the staffers look at each other, and C.J. covers her ears.
    
    CUT TO: INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE THE PRESIDENTIAL BEDROOM - NIGHT
    The door flies open to reveal a very unhappy Bartlet.
    
    BARTLET
    What?!
    
    CHARLIE
    Mr. President, you know how you told me not to wake you up unless the building was on fire?
    
    SMASH CUT TO: MAIN TITLES.
    END TEASER
    * * *
    
    ACT ONE
    
    FADE IN: INT. THE OVAL OFFICE - DAY
    
    TOBY 
    These are the rules.
    
    LEO 
    They're the guidelines.
    
    TOBY 
    The meeting will last 90 minutes.
    
    LEO 
    Yes.
    
    TOBY 
    And the rules.
    
    LEO 
    The guidelines.
    
    TOBY 
    We can't talk about the Patient's Bill of Rights?
    
    LEO 
    We can talk about the Patient's Bill of Rights. We just can't talk about dropping the 
    provision that would allow for litigation.
    
    TOBY 
    Why not?
    
    LEO 
    Because that's not what the breakfast is for.
    
    TOBY 
    What's it for?
    
    LEO 
    Symbolize the spirit of cooperation as the new session begins and to eat pancakes.
    
    TOBY 
    So with regard to the Patient's Bill of Rights we'll just be debating the things we 
    agree on?
    
    LEO 
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY 
    And raising the minimum wage?
    
    LEO 
    We won't be talking about that at all.
    
    TOBY 
    No, we shouldn't because there's a chance it could lead to something.
    
    SAM 
    We can't talk about the patient's bill of rights?
    
    TOBY 
    We can talk about it. We just can't talk about dropping the no litigation clause.
    
    SAM 
    Leo, what's the point of having rights if you can't sue for them in court?
    
    LEO 
    That's a fine argument.
    
    TOBY 
    We won't be making it.
    
    LEO 
    Not at this breakfast.
    
    SAM 
    And the minimum wage?
    
    LEO 
    Not so much.
    
    JOSH 
    I see won't be talking about the 993 tax cut.
    
    LEO 
    We won't be. But we've agreed to call it tax relief instead of a tax cut.
    
    JOSH 
    We're calling it tax relief.
    
    LEO 
    Yeah.
    
    JOSH 
    But we won't be talking about it.
    
    LEO 
    No.
    
    JOSH 
    Leo, the Patient's Bill of Rights.
    
    LEO 
    Which we'll be referring to as the Comprehensive Access and Responsibility Act.
    
    SAM 
    What's the Comprehensive Access and Responsibility Act?
    
    LEO 
    It's the Patient's Bill of Rights, but the CARA was introduced in 1999. It's fundamentally 
    the same thing and the Republicans have agreed to discuss changing the name back.
    
    JOSH 
    In exchange for calling tax breaks tax relief.
    
    LEO 
    Or income enhancement.
    
    TOBY 
    I'm in a musical.
    
    LEO 
    Getting it renamed for the old bill is a hell of a concession.
    
    TOBY 
    Leo, I'm gonna check in with you for a second, OK?
    
    LEO 
    Sure.
    
    TOBY 
    Sick people...
    
    LEO 
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY 
    Not getting proper medical care...
    
    LEO 
    Right.
    
    TOBY 
    Because they can't afford it...
    
    LEO 
    Yes.
    
    TOBY 
    Probably don't care that we've agreed to change the name of the bill.
    
    LEO 
    We've agreed to discuss changing the name of the bill.
    
    Bartlet and Charlie enter THE OVAL OFFICE. Sam, Leo, Josh, and Toby are lined up at 
    the desk.
    
    BARTLET 
    What's after that?
    
    CHARLIE 
    Security briefing.
    
    BARTLET 
    After that?
    
    CHARLIE 
    Agriculture.
    
    BARTLET 
    Who was the idiot who set off the smoke detector?
    
    JOSH 
    Well it sounds a lot like you are talking about Sam, Mr. President.
    
    SAM 
    What, were you inconvenienced, Sir?
    
    BARTLET 
    They had me on the Truman balcony for 6 minutes in my underwear.
    
    SAM 
    Was it cold?
    
    BARTLET 
    In January? No. Why do you ask?
    
    TOBY 
    Mr. President I'd like to talk about those rules in that memo you’re reading.
    
    LEO 
    It's a breakfast. Toby, it's a pancake breakfast. There's nothing in that memo that's 
    important.
    
    BARTLET 
    We're having Vermont maple syrup?
    
    TOBY 
    Mr. President, if you read item 4 you'll see that time at this breakfast will be 
    spent discussing calling the Patient's Bill of Rights the Comprehensive Access and 
    Responsibility Act.
    
    BARTLET 
    I don't give a damn if they call it the Monroe doctrine. What the hell are we doing 
    serving Vermont maple syrup?
    
    TOBY 
    On the minimum wage, if we all turn our attention to item 5 of the Rules of Bipartisan 
    Breakfast.
    
    LEO 
    They're guidelines. You keep calling them rules.
    
    TOBY 
    Margaret, what does it say at the top of the memo?
    
    MARGARET 
    Rules for Bipartisan Breakfast.
    
    LEO 
    [to Margaret] I keep meaning to fire you.
    
    MARGARET 
    Yeah.
    
    BARTLET 
    New Hampshire syrup is what we serve in this White House.
    
    SAM 
    Sir.
    
    BARTLET 
    It's a breakfast. We eat. We pose for pictures. You do a post-game conference. Everybody 
    gets the hell out of here and I don't have to be so Officer Crupky.
    
    LEO 
    Anything else?
    
    SAM 
    An ONB efficiency expert has said we could free up much need office space by moving the 
    Press Room across the street. 
    
    LEO 
    What else?
    
    No response.
    
    LEO 
    Thank you, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET 
    Thank you. 
    
    Everyone leaves. Leo motions for Josh to enter his OFFICE.
    
    LEO
    Josh.
    
    JOSH 
    Yeah.
    
    LEO 
    You feeling all right?
    
    JOSH 
    Yeah.
    
    LEO 
    You're sure?
    
    JOSH 
    Yeah.
    
    LEO 
    You don't mind me asking?
    
    JOSH 
    Nah.
    
    LEO 
    Because I'm gonna ask you once a day, okay?
    
    JOSH 
    Okay, but you just asked me four times in the last ten seconds.
    
    LEO 
    I want you to go to Ben and Sally's for dinner tonight.
    
    JOSH 
    Are you going?
    
    LEO 
    No.
    
    JOSH 
    Was I invited?
    
    LEO 
    No.
    
    JOSH 
    Are Ben and Sally asking for me?
    
    LEO 
    No, they'd rather you didn't come, but they'll do me a favor and I need you to do me one too.
    
    JOSH 
    What's at Ben and Sally's?
    
    LEO 
    Karen Cahill.
    
    JOSH 
    And what stupid-ass Irish thing did you say to Karen Cahill that you now need me to apologize 
    at Ben and Sally 's like a little girl?
    
    Leo glares at Josh rather sternly.
    
    JOSH 
    Let me tell you what was surprising about that moment just then. I said that only 12 hours 
    after you were very cool about my almost accidentally setting the building on fire.
    
    LEO 
    I made a joke about her shoes.
    
    JOSH 
    I'm sorry?
    
    LEO 
    I made a remark about her shoes.
    
    JOSH 
    You're the second most powerful man in the country...
    
    LEO 
    And she relates a column for the New York Times and who knows what kind of special 
    relationship women have with their shoes!
    
    JOSH 
    What could you possibly have said...?
    
    LEO 
    It doesn't matter. It was perfectly benign to anyone who doesn't take shoes that seriously. 
    Just tell her that I love her and that I'm sorry and I'll take her shoe shopping.
    
    JOSH 
    Why don't you tell her?
    
    LEO 
    If someone else tells her it seems like I was thoughtful enough to mention it. If I tell her 
    it just makes me seem feminine.
    
    JOSH 
    You don't think the shoe shopping's gonna take care of that?
    
    LEO 
    Let's call the insurance company and see how much water damage was done in the mural room.
    
    JOSH 
    You don't need to wave a stick, Leo. I am totally there for you. 
    
    LEO 
    Thank you.
    
    JOSH 
    Can I get Sam to do it?
    
    LEO 
    Fine.
    
    JOSH 
    Anything else?
    
    LEO 
    Nope.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE ROOSEVELT ROOM - DAY
    C.J. and Carol are meeting with ANN STARK and three of her staffers.
    
    CAROL 
    This isn't about what they say after the meeting so let's decide what they're gonna say.
    
    STAFFER 1 
    It'll be simple enough.
    
    CAROL 
    Like what?
    
    STAFFER 2 
    We appreciate the President's invitation and welcome him to the cause of bipartisanship.
    
    C.J. 
    [while eating breakfast] And I'll end the press conference.
    
    STAFFER 1
    C.J..
    
    C.J. 
    You're gonna walk him into the cause of bipartisanship?
    
    STAFFER 1 
    What's the problem?
    
    ANN STARK 
    I think C.J.'s objecting to the implication that we got there first.
    
    C.J. 
    Yes.
    
    ANN 
    How about ‘we all agree on a need for renewed spirit of bipartisanship.’
    
    C.J. 
    The meeting was positive.
    
    ANN 
    Yes.
    
    C.J. 
    Friendly, frank, and productive
    
    ANN 
    Yes.
    
    CAROL 
    And we're certain our goals can be met under the President's leadership.
    
    STAFFER 1 
    No way.
    
    CAROL 
    What's the problem?
    
    ANN 
    I think what my aide is objecting to is the implication it's the President's leadership 
    under which our goals will be met.
    
    C.J. 
    Meeting was positive, friendly, frank and productive.
    
    ANN 
    With a spicy bouquet that suggests a fine Merlot. 
    
    Her staffers smile.
    
    CAROL 
    [looking over her notes] The President will be at the northwest entrance. Assuming we're done 
    at 1030, the Majority Leader will speak and take questions, the Minority Leader, then C.J. 
    will answer questions 20 minutes later in the Briefing Room.
    
    C.J. 
    If all goes well we should...
    
    ANN 
    [cuts her off] I got to stop you. Why in the Briefing Room?
    
    C.J. 
    That's where I brief.
    
    ANN 
    The Majority Leader is briefing first and outside. You're doing it last in back of a podium 
    and in front of a blue curtain with a big picture of the White House.
    
    C.J. 
    And the Majority Leader'll be doing it in front of the actual White House. 
    
    ANN 
    No, he'll be doing it on the Capitol steps.
    
    C.J. 
    Traditionally, these kinds of things are done in front of the White House.
    
    ANN 
    Traditionally, the person in my job has cared what's traditional.
    
    C.J. 
    The President's not gonna want to end a bipartisan breakfast with the Republicans speaking 
    from one place and the Democrats...
    
    ANN 
    And the Majority Leader's not gonna stand at a cardboard podium in your front yard while you 
    stand in White House Press briefing room and with good reason.
    
    C.J. 
    Which is?
    
    ANN 
    I don't think they're on equal footing.
    
    C.J. 
    My boss and your boss?
    
    ANN 
    Yes.
    
    C.J. 
    I don't think they are either.
    
    ANN 
    C.J..
    
    C.J. 
    And, the Majority Leader is gonna brief outside. If the majority leader wants to skip 
    breakfast there'll be more pancakes for the rest of us. My press room can write about why.
    
    ANN
    [shrugs] Well, you can't blame a girl for trying.
    
    Toby enters.
    
    C.J. 
    You need me?
    
    TOBY 
    [points to Ann] Can I borrow her for a moment?
    
    C.J. 
    We'll wait.
    
    Toby and Ann step out to the HALLWAY.
    
    TOBY 
    These rules are crap.
    
    ANN 
    The guidelines. We're working with C.J. right now.
    
    TOBY 
    I could care less who says what in what order. I'm talking about what we say when we sit down.
    
    ANN 
    You've got concerns.
    
    TOBY 
    Yes, I do.
    
    ANN 
    Name one.
    
    TOBY 
    The president prefers maple syrup from New Hampshire. [Ann laughs.] I'm not kidding.
    
    ANN 
    Then we'd better meet on this.
    
    TOBY 
    Breakfast tomorrow.
    
    ANN 
    What should I wear?
    
    TOBY 
    I don't give a damn. [opens the door for her]
    
    ANN 
    I've heard different. 
    
    Ann returns to her meeting in THE ROOSEVELT ROOM.
    
    CAROL 
    945. So we got that straight. Where were we?
    
    ANN 
    You were giving me and my staff an ultimatum.
    
    CUT TO: INT. SAM'S OFFICE - DAY 
    Donna walks in.
    
    DONNA 
    Sam.
    
    SAM 
    Did you know there's a swimming pool underneath the press Briefing Room?
    
    DONNA 
    I didn't.
    
    SAM 
    There's a swimming pool underneath there. And I'll tell you what else. According to the OMB 
    efficiency auditor, there are more people working in the West Wing of the White House than 
    in any point in history.
    
    DONNA 
    You wanna free up office space by kicking out the press corps.
    
    SAM 
    Yeah.
    
    DONNA 
    And putting in a swimming pool...
    
    SAM 
    I realize that there are some flaws in my logic.
    
    DONNA 
    Yeah. Leo needs a favor. 
    
    SAM 
    What?
    
    DONNA 
    He needs you to go to dinner at Ben and Sally's and apologize to Karen Cahill for making fun 
    of her shoes.
    
    SAM 
    I didn't make fun of her shoes.
    
    DONNA 
    He did.
    
    SAM 
    I don't have any problem with her shoes.
    
    DONNA 
    Leo did.
    
    SAM 
    What was his problem with her shoes?
    
    DONNA 
    Doesn't matter. Just do what you usually do.
    
    SAM 
    Here's the thing. 
    
    Sam stands up nervously and walks out of his office. Donna follows.
    
    DONNA 
    What?
    
    SAM 
    I don't do well with Karen.
    
    DONNA 
    Why?
    
    SAM 
    I get nervous.
    
    DONNA 
    What happens?
    
    SAM 
    I become unimpressive.
    
    DONNA 
    In what way?
    
    SAM 
    In many ways.
    
    DONNA 
    You don't fall down, do you?
    
    SAM 
    Once.
    
    DONNA 
    You'll be fine.
    
    SAM 
    You think?
    
    DONNA 
    You'll be impressive.
    
    SAM 
    I never have been before, but that's no reason to think I'm not gonna do it.
    
    DONNA 
    Right.
    
    SAM 
    You know why?
    
    DONNA 
    Doesn't really matter.
    
    SAM 
    Perseverance. You get right back on the horse. I'm gonna sit there and she's gonna go home 
    saying, "that Sam Seaborn's impressive." I'm gonna say nice things about her.
    
    DONNA 
    Reach for the stars, Sam!
    
    SAM 
    I will! 
    
    DONNA 
    Good.
    
    They part.
    
    CUT TO: INT. LEO'S OFFICE - DAY
    Toby enters.
    
    LEO 
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY 
    I'm gonna have breakfast with Ann Stark tomorrow.
    
    LEO 
    Leave it alone.
    
    TOBY 
    I think we should be able to discuss the minimum wage and-
    
    LEO 
    Toby. It's a brand new year. 
    
    TOBY 
    Let's not faf around!
    
    LEO 
    It's breakfast.
    
    TOBY 
    I know. It's breakfast. We're not gonna come up with solutions in 90 minutes. But we have 
    the principles in a room and no cameras. The-[utters a small laugh] the leaders of the land. 
    And not to talk about how we're gonna approach the minimum wage, the Patient's Bill of Rights, 
    Tax relief, and education in the legislative session that's about to begin is a criminally 
    negligent and cowardly refusal to do... what we were all sent her to do. [beat] This is what 
    my ex-wife and I did for years. We had these rules. We could talk about anything but why we 
    couldn't live with each other. I could've been two years younger right now.
    
    LEO 
    There was a freshman democrat who came to Congress 50 years ago. He turned to a senior 
    Democrat and said, "Where are the Republicans? I want to meet the enemy. The senior Democrat 
    said, "The Republicans aren't the enemy. They're the opposition. The Senate is the enemy." 
    Those days are over. Toby, in this climate...
    
    TOBY 
    This climate is exactly what real bipartisan debate should look like.
    
    LEO 
    This woman's had this job two weeks. I don't like dealing with people who are trying to 
    impress me.
    
    TOBY 
    I know her a little.
    
    LEO 
    Have breakfast with her.
    
    TOBY 
    Thank you.
    
    LEO 
    Toby.
    
    TOBY 
    Yeah.
    
    LEO 
    Jenny and I wouldn't talk about it either. You know why?
    
    TOBY 
    Why?
    
    LEO 
    Because we loved each other and it was awful and we knew it was never gonna change. Ever.
    
    Toby leaves.
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT ONE
    * * *
    
    ACT TWO
    
    FADE IN: EXT. THE WHITE HOUSE - DAY
    
    	TUESDAY
    
    TOBY [VO]
    I want them to talk about the minimum wage and I want them to talk about the Patient’s Bill 
    of Rights.
    
    CUT TO: INT. WHITE HOUSE MESS - DAY
    Toby and Ann Stark are having breakfast.
    
    ANN
    I believe you might be talking about the Comprehensive Access and Responsibility Act there, 
    Toby.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah, well...
    
    ANN 
    [pulls out a bag] I brought you a present.
    
    TOBY
    What is it?
    
    ANN
    Guess.
    
    TOBY
    Really?
    
    ANN
    Sure.
    
    TOBY
    Why?
    
    ANN
    I would think it’d be fun.
    
    TOBY
    You don’t think it’d be a colossal waste of time?
    
    ANN
    You’ve lost your sense of humor.
    
    TOBY
    It’s a bottle of New Hampshire maple syrup.
    
    ANN
    It’s a CAN of New Hampshire maple syrup [unwraps the can with a red bow on it] and you just 
    ruined what I think could have been a nice moment.
    
    Ann slides over the can, and Toby fingers it on the table.
    
    TOBY
    Ann.
    
    ANN
    You know, tax breaks are tax relief now and we’re changing South Carolina to Italy.
    
    TOBY
    The minimum wage.
    
    ANN
    You cannot muster up the behavior to say thank you?
    
    TOBY
    For the syrup?
    
    ANN
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    Thank you.
    
    ANN 
    [smiles] You’re welcome!
    
    TOBY
    And congratulations.
    
    ANN
    Thank you.
    
    TOBY
    You are now the Chief of Staff to the most powerful Republican in the country. Obviously, 
    a great deal of confidence has been placed into you...
    
    ANN
    Where’s my present?
    
    TOBY
    For being promoted?
    
    ANN
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY 
    [clapping his pockets] Uh... I don’t have one.
    
    A waiter approaches their table.
    
    ANN
    Then give me my syrup back. [takes the syrup back]
    
    WAITER
    Are you ready to order?
    
    ANN
    He’s going to need syrup; I have syrup here but he doesn’t have any.
    
    TOBY
    Scrambled eggs, wheat toast and coffee, please.
    
    CUT TO: INT. C.J.’S OFFICE - DAY
    C.J. is reflected in the glass in front of Carol.
    
    C.J.
    Carol, did the President say that the stats were even more staggering right here, 
    in Washington, D.C.?
    
    Carol walks inside.
    
    CAROL
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Would you remind me to clarify that?
    
    CAROL
    Why?
    
    C.J.
    He was in Louisville, Kentucky, when he said it.
    
    Carol nods and exits the office. Sam walks in.
    
    SAM
    Hey!
    
    C.J.
    Hey.
    
    SAM
    You got my note?
    
    C.J.
    About moving the Press Room to the OEOB...
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    C.J. 
    [in a sweetly patronizing tone] I did. 
    
    She walks past him outside her office. Sam follows.
    
    SAM
    And?
    
    C.J.
    Don’t let anyone ever know that you wrote it and don’t ever mention it again under any 
    circumstances!
    
    SAM
    Moving the Press Room?
    
    C.J.
    See what you did?
    
    SAM
    C.J....
    
    C.J.
    You mentioned it.
    
    SAM
    Look, if...
    
    C.J.
    You did it again.
    
    SAM
    No, I didn’t.
    
    C.J.
    You were about to.
    
    SAM
    Just to OEOB, just across the street.
    
    C.J.
    We’re not getting a swimming pool, Sam.
    
    SAM
    I know we’re not getting a swimming pool, but we can get the much-needed office space. 
    And we can put a little physical distance between the press and the President. And we can 
    put them just across the street in a state-of-the-art facility.
    
    C.J. 
    [constantly in motion, while Sam follows] By ‘state-of-the-art,’ you mean...
    
    SAM
    A room with... electricity.
    
    C.J.
    The press doesn’t want physical distance from the President, and the American people would 
    prefer it the President didn’t have physical distance from the press!
    
    SAM
    C.J.!
    
    C.J.
    We can’t exile the press!
    
    SAM
    The room I’m talking about is one hundred yards from where we’re standing!
    
    C.J.
    It sends a signal we’re trying to hide things from them.
    
    SAM
    We are trying to hide things from them. But I don’t think we’re going to be any better at it 
    if they’re across the street.
    
    C.J. 
    [stops, very articulately] NO!
    
    SAM
    I’ll get some more information for you.
    
    C.J. 
    [walking away from him] I don’t need more information.
    
    SAM
    So that you can ruminate on it.
    
    C.J.
    I don’t need to ruminate!
    
    SAM
    Excellent! 
    
    Donna walks by him.
    
    SAM
    Josh!
    
    DONNA
    How did it go?
    
    SAM
    Hang on a second.
    
    Sam follows Josh into JOSH'S OFFICE.
    
    JOSH 
    [walking into his office with coffee] What do you need?
    
    SAM
    Did the monthly DNC go out yet?
    
    JOSH
    It’s going out now.
    
    SAM
    Is there time to tack on a question?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah. Donna, get me the polling center at Global Strategies Group!
    
    DONNA [OS]
    Yep.
    
    JOSH
    What’s the question?
    
    SAM
    C.J. thinks if we move the press out of the West Wing, the American people will object.
    
    JOSH
    She’s crazy.
    
    SAM
    So I want to show her numbers.
    
    DONNA [OS]
    Mike at Global Strategies.
    
    JOSH 
    [picks up the phone] I want to tack on a question, okay? "Would you object?.." "Would you 
    have?.." "Yes or no would you have an objection if..." [to Sam, closing the mouthpiece] 
    What should the question be?
    
    SAM
    "If the White House would move the Press Corps to Trenton, New Jersey, would you give a 
    flying...?"
    
    JOSH
    Okay. [into the phone] "Would you object to the White House moving the Press Room out of the 
    West Wing and into a facility across the street?" Read it back.
    
    Donna comes and stands at the threshold.
    
    DONNA 
    [to Sam] How’d it go?
    
    SAM
    It went great. [to Josh] I had to talk to Karen Cahill last night.
    
    DONNA
    Did you fall down at all?
    
    SAM
    I did not. In fact, we were talking about the stability of former Soviet Republics and their 
    fear of Islamic extremism and I have to say that I made some very scholarly points regarding 
    the remains of nuclear weapons in Kyrgyzstan, and I have to believe...
    
    JOSH 
    [behind him, reading a paper at his desk] Kazakhstan.
    
    SAM 
    [turning to him] Hmmm?
    
    JOSH
    The nuclear weapons are in Kazakhstan.
    
    SAM
    I said Kyrgyzstan?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    SAM
    Yeah, well, Kyrgyzstan has no nuclear weapons.
    
    JOSH
    No.
    
    SAM 
    Kazakhstan is a country four times the size of Texas and has a sizable number of former 
    Russian missile silos.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    SAM
    Kyrgyzstan is on the side of a hill near China and has mostly nomads and sheep.
    
    DONNA
    I’m sure you got it right last night.
    
    SAM
    Yes. I’m sure. Okay. [leaves as in complete panic]
    
    CUT TO: INT. HALLWAY - DAY
    Toby and Ann are walking back to TOBY'S OFFICE.
    
    ANN
    It’s a photo-op, Toby. Let them talk about the Redskins and their kids.
    
    TOBY
    And why not talk about the minimum wage?
    
    ANN
    Because, you’ll say you want it raised two dollars in 50-cent increments over two years and 
    we’ll say three years.
    
    TOBY
    Ann, do you know what a full-time worker, employed at five dollars and fifteen cents an hour, 
    makes in a year?
    
    ANN
    Ten thousand seven hundred and twelve dollars.
    
    TOBY
    Which is 26 hundred dollars below the poverty line. Why have a minimum wage?
    
    ANN
    Now you’re talking!
    
    TOBY
    Ann, I was just...
    
    ANN
    Do you really think raising the minimum wage is gonna put a dent in the poverty rate?
    
    TOBY
    I’m saying it could at least keep up with inflation! In the last thirty years, the purchasing 
    power of the minimum wage has gone down 30%, while you know how much the stock market has 
    gone up?
    
    ANN
    A hundred and fifteen percent. Toby, small businesses will fold or produce less because they 
    can’t afford to pay a federally mandated wage! The unemployed will, in turn, face higher 
    prices while receiving no wage.
    
    TOBY
    Fine, so let’s talk about it at breakfast!
    
    ANN
    No!
    
    TOBY
    Why?
    
    ANN
    Because, 20 senators will call me and say, ‘What the hell are you doing, starting the ball 
    rolling without us?’
    
    TOBY
    No, they will call and say, ‘What the hell are you doing, rolling the ball at all?’ You’re 
    gonna sandbag the thing in committee. You’ve shown us your whole hand. You’re playing a game 
    and not that well.
    
    ANN
    I just got here!
    
    TOBY
    Your predecessor didn’t play it well.
    
    ANN
    Maybe that’s why they gave me her job.
    
    TOBY
    Ann, we’re not going to get screwed around on the wage hike.
    
    ANN
    No?
    
    TOBY
    We have the votes and you know it.
    
    ANN
    Well, having the votes doesn’t matter that much if the leader decides there isn’t going to be 
    a vote.
    
    TOBY
    There is going to be a vote, straight up or down, and if there isn’t, we’ll offer the wage 
    hike as an amendment on everything that moves!
    
    ANN
    Say that again?
    
    TOBY
    You heard me the first time.
    
    ANN
    Do you not remember that I am the same person who bought you a can of syrup?
    
    TOBY 
    [smiles] Ann...
    
    ANN
    Toby, what have I done to make you think I’m scared of you? [beat] The Patient’s Bill of 
    Rights.
    
    TOBY
    We can talk about it?
    
    ANN
    We can spend fifteen minutes on dropping the litigation field.
    
    TOBY
    In exchange for what?
    
    ANN
    Some flowers wouldn’t be out of line.
    
    TOBY
    In exchange for what?
    
    ANN
    The spirit of bipartisanship?
    
    TOBY
    In. Exchange. For what?
    
    ANN
    I want the press conference at the Hill. Our guys are tired of looking like the President’s 
    stupid cousin.
    
    TOBY
    That’s all?
    
    ANN
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    You want the press conference at the Hill?
    
    ANN
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    Done.
    
    ANN
    C.J. Cregg says no.
    
    TOBY
    C.J. works for me.
    
    ANN 
    [laughs, stands up as Toby walks her out] Thank you for breakfast.
    
    TOBY
    You’re welcome. 
    
    Ann leaves.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE OVAL OFFICE - DAY
    Bartlet is reading in a chair as Charlie walks in. Bartlet, not seeing him, yells.
    
    BARTLET 
    Charlie!
    
    CHARLIE 
    [quietly] Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Who’s the next meeting?
    
    CHARLIE
    Kim Woo of Singapore. You want the cheat sheet?
    
    BARTLET
    I don’t need a cheat sheet. [takes his glasses off] Kim Woo, he won a bronze medial for 
    fencing, he’s a Buddhist, and he enjoys European History. You see Charles’s even thought 
    it’s a handshake, I’m able to make him feel like a friend and that’s a little thing they 
    call ‘people skills.’
    
    CHARLIE
    Kim Woo’s a woman, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    The man’s an Olympic athlete, Charlie. I wouldn’t say that to his face.
    
    CHARLIE
    Sir?
    
    BARTLET
    What else?
    
    CHARLIE
    [gives Bartlet a file] Sam wanted me to show you some remarks he jotted down for your toast 
    at the breakfast tomorrow.
    
    BARTLET 
    on glasses, reads] Ladies and Gentleman. [beat] That’s funny. [pause, while he reads] Yeah, 
    that’s funny. [laughs, to Charlie] She’s a woman?
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes.
    
    BARTLET
    Did you mark that down? 
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET 
    [reads the speech] "We spend so much time demonizing the other side, treating our opponents 
    as if they were strangers with which we share nothing in common that we’ve lost sight perhaps 
    of the greater truths." [beat, to Charlie] Did you know it’s bad luck to toast with water?
    
    CHARLIE
    I didn’t.
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah, you don’t want to make a toast with water.
    
    CHARLIE
    Should we go, sir? [about to leave]
    
    BARTLET
    From Greek mythology, I’m almost sure. You lose your spirit. [reads again]
    
    CHARLIE
    To what?
    
    BARTLET 
    [continues reading] Hmm?
    
    CHARLIE
    To what do you loose your spirit?
    
    BARTLET
    That’s a great question, Charlie, and I could tell you, but I think it’s better if you look 
    it up on your own.
    
    CHARLIE
    I’ll hit the library as soon as I get off work tonight at 1:00 AM. [gathers his coat]
    
    BARTLET 
    [reads] "That we lost sight of the greater truths. There’s a lot more that unites Americans 
    than divides them." That’s good. "There’s a lot more that unites Americans than divides them." 
    [stands up] Remind me to tell Sam that’s good.
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    And remind me not to make a toast with water.
    
    CHARLIE 
    [helping him put his jacket on] Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Ah. Let’s go...
    
    As they leave, Bartlet puts on his jacket.
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT TWO
    * * *
    
    ACT THREE
    
    FADE IN: INT. JOSH'S BULLPEN AREA - DAY
    Donna is at her desk. Sam stands in the doorway behind her. 
    
    SAM 
    I said the wrong one. 
    
    DONNA 
    Maybe not. 
    
    SAM 
    I'm fairly certain. 
    
    DONNA 
    You had a 50/50 chance. 
    
    SAM 
    It was Karen Cahill. There was a 99 of a 100 chance of saying the right one. I said the 
    wrong one. 
    
    DONNA 
    [walking over to a filing cabinet] Why do you guys get worked into a lather over Karen Cahill? 
    
    SAM 
    [following her] She's a very influential woman. 
    
    DONNA 
    You're a very influential man. 
    
    SAM 
    She's a columnist, she gets the last word. 
    
    DONNA 
    You talk to lots of columnists. 
    
    SAM 
    She has some kind of special powers. 
    
    DONNA 
    You think? 
    
    SAM 
    Yeah. 
    
    DONNA 
    Well, maybe you didn't get it wrong. 
    
    SAM 
    I got it wrong. 
    
    DONNA 
    No, maybe there really are remaining nuclear weapons in Kyrgizstan. 
    
    SAM 
    There are barely pots and pans in Kyrgizstan. 
    
    DONNA 
    You think the New York Times is going to make fun of you? 
    
    SAM 
    I do. 
    
    DONNA 
    Well you're kind of used to that by now, right? 
    
    She begins walking down the hallway.
    
    SAM 
    Yeah. [again following her] Here's what we're gonna do. 
    
    DONNA 
    We're gonna do something? 
    
    SAM 
    You're gonna talk to her. 
    
    DONNA 
    [stopping] I don't even know her. 
    
    SAM 
    You've met. 
    
    DONNA 
    Ohhuh we've been introduced. 
    
    SAM 
    And you said you felt the two of you made a connection. 
    
    DONNA 
    That's true. [starts walking again] 
    
    SAM 
    Here's what you're gonna do. 
    
    DONNA 
    [placing files on a desk] I connect with people, Sam. 
    
    SAM 
    Yes. 
    
    DONNA 
    I'm a people person. 
    
    SAM 
    That's great. You're going to the Southstreet Exhibit tonight. 
    
    DONNA 
    How did you know? 
    
    SAM 
    You told me. She's going too. 
    
    DONNA 
    How do you know? 
    
    SAM 
    She told me. 
    
    DONNA 
    So there's quite a bit of reconnaissance that went into this thing. 
    
    SAM 
    Yes. Here's what you're gonna do. You're gonna go up to her 'Hi I'm Donna Moss, I don't 
    know if you remember me, I'm Josh Lyman's assistant.' You just had to come up to her cause 
    you knew she'd get a kick out of this. Sam Seaborn's being so cute, he was talking to you 
    and he thinks he may have said Kyrgizstan when he obviously meant Kazakhstan. 
    
    DONNA 
    Sam Seaborn's being so cute? 
    
    SAM 
    It 'd kill you? 
    
    DONNA 
    No. 
    
    SAM 
    Thank you. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. C.J.'S OFFICE - DAY
    C.J. is leaning over her table when Toby knocks on the open door.
    
    C.J. 
    Yeah? 
    
    TOBY 
    Yeah. I just had breakfast with Ann Stark. 
    
    C.J. 
    Minimum wage? 
    
    TOBY 
    No. 
    
    C.J. 
    It's for the best. [moves to her desk] 
    
    TOBY 
    Why? 
    
    C.J. 
    Cause they'll be a fight. 
    
    TOBY 
    Yes. 
    
    C.J. 
    Toby...
    
    TOBY 
    There should be a fight. We disagree on something important and immediate. 
    
    C.J. 
    Which means there should be a compromise.
    
    TOBY 
    Which isn't going to happen by posing for a picture. 
    
    C.J. 
    It isn't gonna happen eating pancakes either, Toby, so let 'em tell dirty jokes for 
    90 minutes, shake hands, and start the year. 
    
    TOBY 
    Not when it's the taxpayers’ pancakes. 
    
    C.J. 
    The taxpayers will be happy to know that the Democrats are trying to tighten heir belts 
    where they can. 
    
    TOBY 
    They're willing to put a provision of the patients’ bill up for discussion. 
    
    C.J. 
    Well, that's a little something you can all disagree on. 
    
    TOBY 
    Fifteen minutes. 
    
    C.J. 
    You can do a lot of disagreeing in fifteen minutes. 
    
    TOBY 
    In exchange she wants the press conference on the hill. 
    
    C.J. 
    Now she wants the whole thing on the hill?! 
    
    TOBY 
    Yeah, listen- 
    
    C.J. 
    I said ‘no’ yesterday to the split conference what makes her think...
    
    TOBY 
    Because I'm asking you to. 
    
    C.J. 
    What!? 
    
    TOBY 
    That's what they get in exchange. 
    
    C.J. 
    Are you kidding me?! 
    
    TOBY 
    Look...
    
    C.J. 
    Toby, are you kidding me?! 
    
    TOBY 
    Who cares whether...?
    
    C.J. 
    First of all, I don't even know where to start...
    
    TOBY 
    C.J. 
    
    C.J. 
    But first of all, if they say anything that needs a response I need twenty minutes with 
    staff. I can't stand around there and huddle in front of the White House and Congressional 
    Press Corps. 
    
    TOBY 
    There's not gonna be a surprise, you've already decided what you're gonna say, which is not 
    much of anything at all! 
    
    C.J. 
    [steps in front of him] We don't speak for the President on the steps of the capital, 
    we don't need to be offered their microphone it makes us look like less than what we are, 
    in fact, it makes us look small!
    
    TOBY 
    We're calling tax breaks tax reliefs, refusing to discuss raising the salary of those living 
    in poverty, arguing the seating arrangement and you think that's going to make us look small? 
    
    C.J. 
    Toby. 
    
    TOBY 
    We're talking about the no litigation clause for fifteen minutes. I don't care if the damn 
    press conference is outside the rotary club. 
    
    She's clearly not happy, as she turns back to her desk.
    
    C.J.
    It shouldn't be me then. 
    
    TOBY 
    Fine. 
    
    C.J. 
    It should be the deputy. 
    
    TOBY 
    I'll tell Ann it's not going to be you. 
    
    C.J. 
    I think this is a bad idea. I think the first visual we get is that Congress is the seat of 
    power and the President is irrelevant. Not only that, but you just took my legs out from 
    under me with Ann! Are you ordering me to move it to the hill? 
    
    TOBY 
    I don't like doing that. 
    
    C.J. 
    You're gonna have to. 
    
    TOBY 
    [beat] Do it. 
    
    FADE TO BLACK.
    
    	WEDNESDAY
    
    FADE IN: EXT. OUTSIDE CAPITOL HILL - DAY
    This next part cuts back and forth between Toby's office, C.J.'s office, in front of the 
    Capitol Building, and the room where Ann is watching the press conference. The speakers 
    voices at the press conference fade in and out. Cuts will be marked by ~. 
    
    Reporters and Congressman getting ready for the press conference. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. C.J.'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS 
    Steve, the reporter, is waiting for C.J., as she walks in.
    
    C.J. 
    It's about to start.
    
    STEVE 
    C.J. 
    
    C.J. 
    Hey Steve, you should be up on the hill. 
    
    STEVE 
    I'm gonna watch it on TV. I wanted to ask you, are you guys thinking about moving the press 
    room across he street? 
    
    C.J. 
    No. 
    
    STEVE 
    I heard you were discussing it. 
    
    C.J. 
    From who? 
    
    STEVE 
    Chris. 
    
    C.J.
    It's starting. 
    
    STEVE 
    She seemed pretty sure you were discussing it. 
    
    C.J. 
    Why? 
    
    STEVE 
    She got called by a pollster who asked her how she felt...
    
    C.J. 
    She got called by a pollster. 
    
    STEVE 
    Yeah. 
    
    C.J. 
    She herself got called. 
    
    STEVE 
    Anyway. 
    
    CAROL 
    It's starting. 
    
    C.J. 
    Let me get into it. 
    
    STEVE 
    Thanks. 
    
    He leaves, as Carol comes in. A Congressman is speaking through the television.
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    Good morning. We're joined to day by Congressman Dade, Congressman Shallot, Senator Hammond 
    and Senator Ford. Unfortunately the Senate Majority Leader has a sore throat and is unable 
    to join us here, he's gone back to his office. We've just concluded a very frank and 
    productive... 
    
    C.J. 
    When did he get a sore throat? 
    
    CAROL 
    I-I don't...
    
    C.J. 
    She took the Majority Leader off the board. 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE CAPITOL HILL - CONTINUOUS
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN 
    ...we all feel is an important moment of bipartisanship as we face the coming legislative 
    session. We thought we'd answer some questions for a few moments this morning. Yes? 
    
    FIRST REPORTER 
    Was the Patients Bill of Rights discussed? 
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN 
    The Comprehensive Access and Responsibility Act, yes it was discussed.
    
    CUT TO: INT. C.J.'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    
    C.J. 
    She took him off the board. 
    
    A pause. C.J. appears to be thinking out loud.
    
    C.J.
    Was it a balance thing? No, she didn't want balance she wanted power. 
    
    CAROL 
    Maybe...
    
    C.J. 
    Why would she take her boss off the board? 
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    We discussed the litigation clause but again I don't want to get into the specifics of... Yes? 
    
    C.J. 
    We're about to get hit.
    
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE CAPITOL HILL - CONTINUOUS
    
    SECOND REPORTER 
    What about minimum wage hike? 
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN 
    The wage hike was not discussed. 
    
    SECOND REPORTER 
    Well, are you considering a two-dollar increase over two years? 
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN 
    Well, we want the same thing over three years, certainly...
    
    CUT TO: INT. ANN STARK'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Ann watches the conference from a monitor.
    
    ANN 
    C'mon, Simon.
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN 
    Greg?
    
    ANN 
    Call on Simon.
    
    GREG 
    Is it fair to say it's the Majority Leader whose holding this up and not the majority? 
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN 
    Well I don't think it's fair to say either. Yeah, in the back, Simon? 
    
    SIMON 
    Congressman, I'm quoting a Senior White House Aid who says they have the votes. The aid said 
    that unless they get a straight vote up or down from the leader, and this is the quote, we're 
    gonna attach it as an amendment on everything that moves.
    
    Ann smiles, like a coach whose player just hit a home run.
    
    CUT TO: INT. TOBY'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Toby is starting to pay more attention, and he looks worried.
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    Could you say that again please? 
    
    SIMON [on T.V.]
    The Senior Aide- 
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    Listen, I don't want to comment on this 
    
    CUT TO: INT. C.J.'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    C.J. is watching the television intently.
    
    FIRST CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    I think I'd like to get back to the breakfast meeting. 
    
    SECOND CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    Excuse me, but uh, my friend from Michigan is far too polite to comment on this. I am not 
    burned with any such sense of etiquette. 
    
    THIRD REPORTER [on T.V.]
    Congressman...
    
    SECOND CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    This is disgraceful. I think the record should show that a spit ball contest was begun behind 
    our back through the press and before the 107th Congress was even gaveled into session.
    
    C.J.'s phone rings. 
    
    SECOND CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    Want some quotes? Open your notepads. 
    
    CAROL 
    It's Toby. 
    
    SECOND CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    It's sadly not atypical of this White House... ~ 
    
    TOBY 
    I'm the Senior Aide.
    
    C.J. 
    No kidding. [to Carol] Get me Henry. 
    
    SECOND CONGRESSMAN [on T.V.]
    We came her in an honest effort to find common ground... 
    
    CAROL 
    [holding the cell] Henry. 
    
    C.J. 
    I've got Henry. What do you want? 
    
    CUT TO: INT. TOBY'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Toby is silent.
    
    SECOND CONGRESSMAN
    ...in this legislative session. If the White House insists on saying one thing to our face 
    and another...
    
    CUT TO: INT. ANN STARK'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Ann is satisfied with the result.
    
    SECOND CONGRESSMAN 
    ...to us through the media. If the White House insists on ambushing us with ultimatums in 
    the press... 
    
    CUT TO: INT. C.J.'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    
    C.J. 
    What do you want me to do, Toby?
    
    TOBY 
    [pause] Don't let him take the podium. You'll take questions in the briefing room in 
    20 minutes.
    
    C.J. hangs up, and speaks through the cell phone.
    
    C.J.
    Henry, get home.
    
    CUT TO: INT. TOBY'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Toby slams the phone down. He's been played and he's not happy.
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT THREE
    * * *
    
    ACT FOUR
    
    FADE IN: INT. OUTSIDE LEO'S OFFICE - DAY
    Toby, C.J., Sam, and Josh are waiting outside Leo’s office. No one wants to speak. 
    Leo enters and conversation moves into LEO'S OFFICE.
    
    LEO
    Hey, what the hell happened?
    
    TOBY
    That was me. [sighs] I gave Ann Stark the quote and she fed it to a reporter.
    
    LEO
    Why’d you give her the quote?
    
    TOBY
    It wasn’t a quote when I gave it to her.
    
    LEO
    What the hell was it?
    
    TOBY
    I was letting her know we have the votes...
    
    LEO
    She knows we have the votes.
    
    TOBY
    I wasn’t...
    
    LEO
    She was just promoted to Chief of Staff of the Senate Majority Leader. You don’t think she 
    knows we have the votes?
    
    TOBY
    [sighing] I misunderstood my relationship with Ann Stark.
    
    LEO
    Yes, you did. And now it looks like we went to the press and went for his knees.
    
    SAM
    Excuse me but Toby’s not the one who gave it to the press!
    
    LEO
    You think the Majority Leader’s going to believe that? 
    
    TOBY
    No.
    
    LEO
    It was a breakfast. It was a damn photo opportunity. The year is one week old. The legislative 
    session hasn’t begun and we can’t put a forkful of waffles in our mouth without coughing up 
    the ball. You got beat.
    
    TOBY
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    I have press in ten minutes...
    
    LEO
    Figure it out. Tell me what you’re going to do.
    
    They all exit and begin walking down the HALLWAY.
    
    JOSH
    We can take the high road and say we don’t want it to disintegrate into a war of words.
    
    SAM
    We don’t want to disrupt the fragile peace...
    
    C.J.
    The fragile peace has been disrupted. We’ve been accused of ambushing the Majority Leader 
    in the press.
    
    JOSH
    Also Labour’s going to want to know if we stand by the minimum wage.
    
    SAM
    Why don’t we pass it off to Labour? Have the Labour Secretary make a statement "We support 
    the two dollar minimum wage."
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, let’s emphasize the close we are on this.
    
    SAM
    "We support the minimum wage hike over two years. The Republicans want it over three years. 
    We’re close to an agreement..."
    
    C.J.
    Sounds like we’re close to agreeing on 30 months which we’re not, and no one’s going to 
    want to cover a statement from the Labour Secretary which is good, ‘cause if they did it’d 
    look like we’re ducking.
    
    SAM
    No, I don’t think...
    
    TOBY
    She’s right. We can’t be passive and the high road doesn’t go where we need it to.
    [All sigh.] Be cool, be funny, smack them down hard.
    
    SAM
    The Majority Leader is tragically out of touch with the needs of real people.
    
    JOSH
    And why wasn’t he at the podium? A sore throat? We know how tough that can be. Thank goodness 
    he had health insurance.
    
    SAM
    There it is!
    
    C.J.
    That’s the sound bite.
    
    JOSH
    And that’s the new story.
    
    C.J.
    Toby?
    
    TOBY
    Do it.
    
    C.J.
    Carol, I need voting stats on health care. [walks off]
    
    CAROL [OS]
    Five minutes!
    
    JOSH
    How’s this for a phrase "You can lay down in front of the train or you can get on board?"
    
    SAM
    That’s a really bad phrase.
    
    JOSH
    Is it better if it’s "You can get on board the train or you can lay down in front of it?"
    
    SAM
    No it’s really bad either way.
    
    Donna walks in from the bullpen.
    
    DONNA
    Josh, this was delivered by messenger.
    
    JOSH
    What is it?
    
    Donna lifts the yellow envelope to her eyes.
    
    DONNA
    It’s... wait... wait... no. Damn, my x-ray vision is failing me today.
    
    JOSH
    Give me that.
    
    Josh wanders off. Sam and Donna move into JOSH'S BULLPEN AREA.
    
    SAM
    How’d it go?
    
    DONNA
    Last night?
    
    SAM
    Did you talk to her?
    
    DONNA
    Yes, I did and I explained you might have said "Kyrgyzstan" when of course you meant 
    "Kazakhstan."
    
    SAM
    Did you say it was cute the way I worried about it?
    
    DONNA
    I did.
    
    SAM
    Did it turn out I got it wrong?
    
    DONNA
    She said she wasn’t really listening while you were talking.
    
    SAM
    Okay...
    
    DONNA
    I, on the other hand, had a most stimulating conversation with her. It was pithy, it was 
    erudite, and most importantly it required no next day follow up explanation.
    
    JOSH [OS]
    Donna?
    
    Josh wanders back in.
    
    DONNA
    What was in the envelope?
    
    JOSH
    Your underwear.
    
    Donna's face falls.
    
    DONNA 
    What?
    
    JOSH
    I’m holding... your underwear... in my hand... right now. And the way I know it’s your 
    underwear is that your name sewn in the back, which is obviously something we’ll spend 
    some time talking about at a later date.
    
    DONNA
    How did you get my underwear?
    
    SAM
    Donna, did you by any chance where the same pair of pants two days in a row this week?
    
    DONNA
    No.
    
    JOSH
    Donna?
    
    DONNA 
    [reluctantly] Yes.
    
    JOSH
    Okay, when you get dressed on day two did you check the pant leg for the previous day’s 
    underwear?
    
    DONNA
    I don’t need to check the pant leg for...
    
    JOSH
    Donna.
    
    DONNA 
    [sighs] They fell out of my pants?
    
    JOSH
    It would appear that way.
    
    DONNA
    Where?
    
    JOSH
    The South Street exhibit.
    
    DONNA
    Where?
    
    JOSH
    On the floor in front of Karen Cahill.
    
    DONNA
    Please tell me she’s not the one...
    
    JOSH
    She sent a note.
    
    Donna gasps.
    
    C.J. 
    [walks by] Fred and Ethel, would you follow me please?
    
    JOSH
    She’s talking about us.
    
    Josh tosses Donna her underwear and exits with Sam. She stuffs them in a desk drawer.
    
    C.J.
    Did a question get tacked on to the monthly DNC tracking poll about moving the press room?
    
    SAM
    Yes, it did. Because I at least wanted to shoot down the argument that the public...
    
    C.J.
    The public gets their news from the press, and the press gets their news...
    
    SAM
    It’s a private poll. The press doesn’t have access to it.
    
    C.J.
    So they don’t know what questions we’re asking?
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Are you sure?
    
    SAM
    The only way they’d know what questions were being asked is if they were actually called 
    by one of the pollsters and... Oh my god! 
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    SAM
    A reporter got called by one of the pollsters?
    
    C.J.
    Yes, indeed.
    
    JOSH
    Wow. What are the chances of that?
    
    SAM
    The chances of that are astronomical.
    
    C.J.
    Guys...
    
    JOSH
    We can calculate it. They sample 800 respondents...
    
    C.J.
    Would the two of you stop being amazed by the mathematics!
    
    SAM
    All right, I’d pass it off. Just say some poor schnook in the management office got the 
    idea and wanted to kick it around.
    
    C.J.
    Sam.
    
    SAM
    It’s going to be me, right?
    
    C.J.
    Yeah.
    
    SAM
    Ok.
    
    JOSH
    You ready?
    
    C.J.
    Yeah.
    
    JOSH
    You had a lot of opportunities today to say ‘I told you so’ and score some points with Leo. 
    You’re a class act.
    
    C.J.
    Why were you holding women’s underwear before?
    
    JOSH
    Never really needed a reason. Eat ‘em up.
    
    C.J. enters THE BRIEFING ROOM.
    
    REPORTERS
    C.J.! C.J.! C.J.!
    
    CUT TO: EXT. SHOT OF THE CAPITOL BUILDING - NIGHT
    
    	11:05 P.M. 
    
    NEWCASTER [VO]
    White House Press Secretary C.J. Cregg characterized the Republican response as bizarre...
    
    CUT TO: INT. ANN STARK'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Ann is watching C.J. on TV.
    
    C.J. [on T.V.]
    There was no intent to ‘ambush’ the Republican Party with an issue that’s been on the table 
    for over a year.
    
    NEWCASTER
    Ann Stark, recently installed Chief of Staff in the Majority Leader’s office, said that she 
    was surprised by the White House’s information...
    
    Knocking on the door and Toby enters.
    
    TOBY
    And shocked. Shocked, I say, to discover that there is gambling going on in this establishment.
    
    ANN
    Maybe if you’d gotten me a gift of some kind...
    
    TOBY
    You think this is funny?
    
    ANN
    You used to have a sense of humor, Toby.
    
    Toby grunts.
    
    ANN
    Nah, you never used to have a sense of humor, Toby.
    
    TOBY
    Ann...
    
    ANN
    I think you’re going to have to start getting next to the idea that your party isn’t in the 
    majority.
    
    TOBY
    My party’s in the White House.
    
    ANN
    A building with which the Constitution does not endow sovereign power.
    
    TOBY
    You think I’m going to sit around while you reduce the President to Prime Minister?
    
    ANN
    Stand or sit, we’re in the majority and things are going to have to look it. And by the way, 
    don’t ever walk into my office without an appointment!
    
    TOBY
    You think this could wait until an election year?
    
    ANN
    When is it not an election year?
    
    TOBY
    Because ten years ago we used to be able to sit down, we’d order a couple of bourbons, 
    we’d talk about health care, we’d talk about the minimum wage. [chuckles softly] He didn’t 
    have a sore throat.
    
    ANN
    No.
    
    TOBY
    You kept him off the board so he could come back on and fix it.
    
    ANN
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    When are you going to announce?
    
    ANN
    Announce what?
    
    TOBY
    That he’s running for President.
    
    ANN
    I’m pretty sure we just did.
    
    Toby exits.
    
    CUT TO: INT. OUTER OVAL OFFICE - NIGHT
    Bartlet and Charlie are watching C.J. on Mrs. Landingham’s T.V.
    
    C.J.
    Good morning. I’m going to read a short statement in response to the rather bizarre take 
    on what was otherwise an unremarkable...
    
    BARTLET
    I think the whole damn thing is bizarre.
    
    They walk into THE OVAL OFFICE.
    
    CHARLIE
    Mr. President, I don’t know if this is the right moment...
    
    BARTLET
    The right moment for what?
    
    CHARLIE
    Donna Moss needs a favor. While talking last night to Karen Cahill, she accidentally dropped 
    her underwear. She feels that there’s a chance Karen Cahill may have misinterpreted that and 
    Donna asked me to ask you if you would call Karen Cahill and make it clear she wasn’t making 
    a sexual advance.
    
    BARTLET
    Well, I’m not sure there is a right moment for you to ask me that, Charlie.
    
    CHARLIE
    So I should tell her no?
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah.
    
    LEO
    [enters] Good evening, Mr. President
    
    BARTLET
    Donna wants me to call Karen Cahill and make it clear she wasn’t hitting on her when she gave 
    her her underwear.
    
    LEO
    Yeah, that’s ‘cause I made fun of her shoes and Sam said there were nuclear weapons in 
    Kyrgyzstan and Donna went to clear up the mix up and accidentally left her underwear.
    
    BARTLET
    There can’t possibly be nuclear weapons in Kyrgyzstan.
    
    LEO
    Mr. President, please don’t wade hip deep into this story.
    
    CHARLIE
    Sir?
    
    BARTLET
    Okay. Yeah.
    
    CHARLIE
    Toby.
    
    BARTLET 
    [shaking his head] I’m going to bed. If anybody thinks of new ways for us to make friends 
    don’t hesitate to wake me. Or, you know, just feel free to start a fire.
    
    LEO
    Thank you, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    Good night.
    
    Bartlet exits along the outside corridor, passes all the windows, which Toby can see.
    Charlie exits the Oval Office.
    
    CHARLIE
    Toby.
    
    Toby enters the Oval Office.
    
    TOBY
    He didn’t want to see me.
    
    LEO
    He’ll be all right in the morning.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    LEO
    You’re the Communications Director. It was a TV show.
    
    TOBY
    It was a blunder from top to bottom. You should know it could have been avoided at several 
    points along the way if I’d listened to C.J.
    
    LEO
    Or me.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    LEO
    Alexander Hamilton didn’t think we should have political parties. Neither did John Adams. 
    He thought political parties led to divisiveness.
    
    TOBY
    They do. They should. We have honest disagreements. Arguments are good.
    
    LEO
    Only if they lead to statesmanship. Or it’s just theatre. And statesmanship is compromise.
    
    TOBY
    What about persuasion? They’re coming for us, Leo.
    
    LEO
    I know.
    
    TOBY
    I mean they’re coming for us now.
    
    LEO
    Toby, if you knew what it was like getting him to run the first time...
    
    TOBY
    I know.
    
    LEO
    Like pushing molasses up a sandy hill. If I go and tell him it’s time to run again he’s 
    going to get crazy... and frustrated. He’s going to sink into his head and he’s going to 
    say he’s not running.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    LEO
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    So we’ve got to do it for him. We’ll keep it away from this office but we’ve got to get real 
    now. Leo, Ann Stark’s a war time consigliere. That’s why she was bumped up.
    
    LEO
    I’m a wartime consigliere too, Toby. I was just hoping it’d be peace time a little longer.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    LEO
    Son of a bitch!
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    LEO
    Shake my hand.
    
    Toby does.
    
    LEO
    We just formed it.
    
    TOBY
    Formed what?
    
    LEO
    The Committee to Reelect the President.
    
    DISSOLVE TO: END TITLES.
    FADE TO BLACK.
    THE END
    * * *
    
    The West Wing and all its characters are properties of Aaron Sorkin, John Wells 
    Production, Warner Brothers Television, and NBC. No copyright infringement is intended.
    
    Episode 2.11 -- "The Leadership Breakfast"
    Original Airdate: January 10, 2001, 9:00 PM EST
    
    Transcribed by: OutcastHippo, Leelee, Irene, AmyBecca, and BumbleLion

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