Domestic All contemporary domestic government officials in
The West Wing universe are fictional. President Bartlet has made three appointments to the fictional Supreme Court and maintains a full cabinet, although not all names and terms of the members are revealed. Some cabinet members, such as the
Secretary of Defense, appear more often than others. Many other government officials, such as mayors, governors, judges, representatives, and senators, are mentioned and seen as well. Fictional locations inside the United States are created to loosely represent certain places:
San Andreo San Andreo is a fictional California city. It is located near
San Diego, has a population of 42,000 and is the location of the San Andreo Nuclear Generating Station. The fictional station was based on the real-life
San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in San Diego County. A near
meltdown at the nuclear plant becomes the focus of an
October surprise for Republican nominee
Senator Arnold Vinick during the 2006 presidential election, due to Vinick's strong pro-nuclear stance and revelations of his active lobbying for the construction of the plant. This is seen to be a key factor in Vinick's narrow defeat in the election by Democratic nominee
Congressman Matt Santos.
Hartsfield's Landing Hartsfield's Landing is a fictional town in New Hampshire. It is stated to be a very small community of only 63 people, of whom 42 are registered voters, that votes at one minute past midnight on the day of the
New Hampshire primary, hours before the rest of the state, and has accurately predicted the winner of every
presidential election since
William Howard Taft in
1908. It is based on three real-life New Hampshire communities, one of which is
Hart's Location, which indeed vote before the rest of the state during the primaries.
Kennison State University Kennison State is a fictional
university in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, used as the setting of a bombing in the beginning of the fourth season.
Foreign While several real-world leaders exist in the show's universe, most foreign countries depicted or referred to on the show have fictional rulers. Real people mentioned on
The West Wing include
Muammar Gaddafi,
Yasser Arafat,
Fidel Castro,
Queen Elizabeth II,
King Bhumibol Adulyadej,
King Carl XVI Gustaf,
Thabo Mbeki, and
Osama bin Laden. Entire countries are invented as composite pictures that epitomize many of the problems that plague real nations in certain areas of the world: • Qumar is a fictional, oil-rich, powerful, Middle Eastern state. A former British protectorate now ruled by a
sultan and his family, it hosts a major US airbase and is frequently a source of trouble for the Bartlet administration. The nation is
first introduced in the third season as a close ally of the United States but is criticized for its harsh treatment of women. After the
September 11 attacks, it became a major venue for the show's terrorism subplots, including one where convincing evidence is discovered that Qumari Defense Minister Shareef is planning terrorist acts against U.S. infrastructure, including a failed conspiracy to destroy the
Golden Gate Bridge, and President Bartlet authorizes his assassination by a covert operations team. Geographically, as it is depicted on maps, it roughly corresponds to the
Hormozgan Province of
Iran. • Equatorial Kundu is a fictional African nation introduced early in the second season as one blighted by a rife
AIDS epidemic, a ''coup d'état'', and an ensuing civil war, resembling the 1994
Rwandan genocide. Its location, when depicted on maps, is roughly that of
Equatorial Guinea. President Bartlet launches a military intervention in Equatorial Kundu during the fourth season in order to put an end to ethnic cleansing. Equatorial Kundu is also used during the third season of Sorkin's later television series
The Newsroom.
Fictional timeline The
West Wing universe diverges from history after
Richard Nixon's presidency, although there is occasional overlap; for instance, in the second episode of the series' second season "
In the Shadow of Two Gunmen" Toby Ziegler speaks to a Secret Service agent outside a building named for
Ronald Reagan, although this may have just been a production oversight. Fictional Presidents who are shown to have served between Nixon and Bartlet include one-term Democrat
D. Wire Newman (
James Cromwell) and two-term Republican
Owen Lassiter. Leo McGarry is mentioned as being
Labor Secretary in the administration that was in office in 1993 and 1995. In the first season, an outgoing Supreme Court Justice tells Bartlet that he had been wanting to retire for five years but waited "for a Democrat" because he did not want a Republican president to replace him with a conservative justice (the Justice then snidely tells President Bartlet, "Instead, I got you."). The season 4 episode "
Debate Camp" features a flashback to the days just before Bartlet's inauguration, as
Donna Moss meets with her Republican predecessor, Jeff Johnson. In season six Leo says that the Republicans have been "out of power for eight years", and Republicans at their convention say "eight (years) is enough". The passage of time on the show relative to that of the real world is somewhat ambiguous when marked by events of shorter duration (such as votes and campaigns). Sorkin noted in a DVD
commentary track for the second-season episode "
18th and Potomac" that he tried to avoid tying
The West Wing to a specific period of time. Despite this, real years are occasionally mentioned, usually in the context of elections and President Bartlet's two-term administration. The show's presidential elections are held in 2002 and 2006, which are the years of the
midterm elections in reality (these dates come from the fact that in the season 2 episode "
17 People", Toby mentions 2002 as the year of the President's reelection campaign). The election time line on
The West Wing matches up with that of the real world until early in the sixth season, when it appears that a year is lost. For example, the filing deadline for the
New Hampshire primary, which would normally fall in January 2006, appears in an episode airing in January 2005. In an interview, John Wells stated that the series began one and a half years into Bartlet's first term and that the election to replace Bartlet was being held at the correct time. However, the season 1 episode "He Shall from Time to Time" shows the preparations for Bartlet's first regular State of the Union address, which would occur one year into his presidency. In the season 1 episode "Let Bartlet Be Bartlet", Josh Lyman asks Toby Ziegler, "Our second year isn't going much better than our first year, is it?" In the season 5 episode "
Access", it is mentioned that the Casey Creek crisis occurred during Bartlet's first term and got his presidency off to a calamitous start, and network footage of the crisis carries the date of November 2001.
1998 presidential election Bartlet's first campaign for president is never significantly explored in the series. Bartlet is stated to have won the election with 48% of the popular vote, 48 million votes, and a 303–235 margin in the
Electoral College. Of three debates between Bartlet and his
Republican opponent, it is mentioned that Bartlet won the third and final debate, held eight days before election day in
St. Louis, Missouri.
Josh Lyman says that in the days prior to the election, "Bartlet punched through a few walls" since the result seemed too close to call before the result broke his way.
Leo McGarry says the same thing in "
Bartlet for America" when he says, "It was eight days to go, and we were too close to call". The campaign for the Democratic nomination is extensively addressed. In the episodes "
In the Shadow of Two Gunmen, Part I", "
In the Shadow of Two Gunmen, Part II", and "Bartlet for America", flashbacks are used to show Bartlet defeating Texas Senator
John Hoynes (
Tim Matheson) and
Washington Senator William Wiley for the Democratic nomination and later choosing Hoynes as his running mate. The flashbacks also show Leo McGarry persuading Bartlet, then
Governor of New Hampshire, to run for president.
2002 presidential election The West Wing 2002 presidential election pits Bartlet and Vice President John Hoynes against
Florida Governor Robert Ritchie (
James Brolin) and his running mate, Jeff Heston. Bartlet faces no known opposition for renomination, though
Minnesota Democratic Senator Howard Stackhouse launches a brief independent campaign for the presidency. Ritchie, not originally expected to contend for the nomination, emerges from a field of seven other Republican candidates by appealing to the party's conservative base with simple, "homey" sound bites. Bartlet's staff contemplates replacing Vice President John Hoynes on the ticket with
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Percy Fitzwallace (
John Amos), among others. After it is clear that Ritchie will be the Republican nominee, Bartlet dismisses the idea, declaring that he wants Hoynes in the number two spot because of "four words," which he writes down and hands to Hoynes and McGarry to read: "Because I could die." Throughout the season, it is anticipated that the race will be close, but a stellar performance by Bartlet in the sole debate between the candidates helps give him a landslide victory in both the popular vote and the electoral vote.
2006 presidential election A speed-up in
The West Wing timeline, in part due to the expiration of many cast members' contracts and a desire to continue the program with lower production costs, resulted in the omission of the 2004 midterm elections and an election during the seventh season. The sixth season extensively details the Democratic and Republican primaries. The seventh season covers the lead-up to the general election, the election, and the transition to a new administration. The timeline slows down to concentrate on the general election race. The election, normally held in November, takes place across two episodes originally broadcast on April 2 and 9, 2006. Congressman
Matt Santos (D-
TX) (
Jimmy Smits) is nominated on the fourth ballot at the
Democratic National Convention, during the sixth-season finale. Santos, having planned to leave
Congress before being recruited to run for the presidency by
Josh Lyman, polls in the low single digits in the
Iowa caucus. He is virtually out of the running in the
New Hampshire primary before a last-ditch live television commercial vaults him to a third-place finish with 19% of the vote. Josh Lyman, Santos's campaign manager, convinces
Leo McGarry to become Santos's running mate. Senator
Arnold Vinick (R-
CA) (
Alan Alda) secures the Republican nomination, defeating Rep. Glen Allen Walken (R-MO) (
John Goodman) (who had served briefly as Acting President during Bartlet's recusal during the Zoey Bartlet kidnapping crisis in season 4) and the
Reverend Don Butler (
Don S. Davis), among others. Initially, Vinick wants Butler to become his running mate. However, Butler does not want to be considered because of Vinick's stance on
abortion. Instead,
West Virginia Governor Ray Sullivan (
Brett Cullen) is chosen as Vinick's running mate. Vinick is portrayed throughout the sixth season as virtually unbeatable because of his popularity in California, a typically Democratic state, his moderate views, and his wide crossover appeal. Vinick, however, faces difficulty with the
anti-abortion members of his party as an
abortion rights candidate, and criticism for his support of nuclear power following a serious accident at a Californian nuclear power station. On the evening of the election, Leo McGarry suffers a massive
heart attack and is pronounced dead at the hospital, with the polls still open on the
West Coast. The Santos campaign releases the information immediately, while
Arnold Vinick refuses to use Leo's death as a "stepstool" to the presidency. Santos emerges as the winner in his home state of Texas, while Vinick wins his home state of California. The election comes down to
Nevada, where both candidates need a victory to secure the presidency. Vinick tells his staff repeatedly that he will not allow his campaign to demand a recount of the votes if Santos is declared the winner. Josh Lyman gives Santos the same advice, although the Santos campaign sends a team of lawyers down to Nevada. Santos is pronounced the winner of the election, having won Nevada by 30,000 votes, with an electoral vote margin of 272–266. According to executive producer
Lawrence O'Donnell Jr., the writers originally intended for Vinick to win the election. However, the death of Spencer forced him and his colleagues to consider the emotional strain that would result from having Santos lose both his running mate and the election. It was eventually decided by
John Wells that the last episodes would be rescripted. Other statements from John Wells, however, have contradicted O'Donnell's claims about a previously planned Vinick victory. The script showing Santos winning was written long before the death of John Spencer. In 2008, O'Donnell stated to camera, "We actually planned at the outset for Jimmy Smits to win, that was our .. just .. plan of how this was all going to work, but the Vinick character came on so strong in the show, and was so effective, it became a real contest ... and it became a real contest in the West Wing writer's room."
Similarities to 2008 United States presidential election Similarities between the fictional 2006 election and the real-life
2008 United States presidential election have been noted in the media: • The Democratic candidate is a young ethnic minority representing a populous state: Matthew Santos of Texas on the show,
Barack Obama of
Illinois in real life. • He has a grueling but successful primary campaign against a more experienced candidate: Bob Russell on the show,
Hillary Clinton in real life. • A third candidate from a Southern state has been damaged by claims of infidelity: John Hoynes of Texas on the show,
John Edwards of
North Carolina in real life. • The Democratic nominee chooses an experienced Washington insider as his running mate: Leo McGarry on the show,
Joe Biden in real life. • The Republican contest is determined early in the primary season with an aging "maverick" senator of a western state being the nominee: Arnold Vinick of California on the show,
John McCain of
Arizona in real life. • The nominee defeats a staunchly
anti-abortion opponent with pastoral experience, among others: Reverend Don Butler on the show,
Mike Huckabee in real life. • He then chooses a younger, socially conservative running mate in the midst of their first term as governor of a sparsely populated, resource-rich state: Ray Sullivan of West Virginia on the show,
Sarah Palin of
Alaska in real life. According to David Remnick's biography of Obama,
The Bridge, when writer and former White House aide
Eli Attie was tasked with fleshing out the first major Santos storylines, he looked to then-U.S. Senator Obama as a model. Attie called
David Axelrod, with whom he had worked in politics, "and grilled him about Obama." While Attie says that he "drew inspiration from [Obama] in drawing [the Santos] character," actor Jimmy Smits also says that Obama "was one of the people that I looked to draw upon" for his portrayal of the character. Writer and producer
Lawrence O'Donnell says that he partly modeled Vinick after McCain. Obama's former Chief of Staff,
Rahm Emanuel, is said to be the basis of the
Josh Lyman character, who becomes Santos's Chief of Staff. However, O'Donnell denied this claim. Ahead of the inauguration, a fan posted a video mash-up of
The West Wing opening credits with Obama administration officials on YouTube that was featured on
HLN's program
Showbiz Tonight.
Santos transition As the series sunsets with Bartlet's final year in office, little is revealed about Matt Santos's presidency, with the last few episodes mainly focusing on the Santos team's transition into the White House. Santos chooses
Josh Lyman as Chief of Staff, who in turn calls on former colleague Sam Seaborn to be Deputy Chief of Staff. Seeking experienced cabinet members, Santos taps Arnold Vinick as
Secretary of State, believing the senior statesman to be one of the best strategists available and respected by foreign leaders. Vinick is at first highly skeptical of Santos' offer, and initially rejects it, but is convinced to accept after a more extensive discussion with Santos leaves him satisfied their foreign policy philosophies will be compatible. Santos eventually decides on Eric Baker, the Democratic Governor of Pennsylvania and at one point the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination, as his choice to replace Leo McGarry for vice president, and submits his name to Congress under the terms of the
Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. While
the show ends before he can be confirmed, it is implied he will likely face little opposition from Republicans. President Bartlet's final act as President of the United States is pardoning
Toby Ziegler, who had violated federal law by leaking classified information about a military Space Shuttle. The series ends with Bartlet returning to New Hampshire. Having said his goodbyes to his closest staff, former President Bartlet tells President Santos, "Make me proud, Mr. President," to which Santos responds, "I'll do my best, Mr. President." ==Other broadcasts==