Laura Roslin
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| Laura Roslin | |
|---|---|
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| Race | Human |
| Gender | Female |
| Portrayed by | Mary McDonnell |
| First appearance | Miniseries |
| Rank | President of the Twelve Colonies of Kobol |
| Colony | Caprica |
| Affiliation | Twelve Colonies |
Laura Roslin is a fictional character in the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica series, portrayed by Mary McDonnell. She is the President of the Twelve Colonies. As of season 3, she is serving her second term.
[edit] Background
[edit] Cylon Attack and Escape
Just prior to the Cylon attack on the Colonies, Roslin is the Secretary of Education under President Richard Adar and has worked with him since he was mayor of Caprica City. Roslin appears to have been in a romantic relationship with Adar, which fell apart when Roslin successfully defused a large-scale teachers strike. Adar (who assumed Roslin would fail at breaking the strike through peaceful means) demanded Roslin's resignation, citing the fact that he wanted to use force against the teachers in order to intimidate the other unions on Caprica from striking.[1]
Roslin refused to resign and vowed to fight for her job, as she left to go to a doctor's appointment and to the decommissioning ceremony for the Galactica. At her doctor's appointment, Roslin is told that she has terminal breast cancer and a year to live. Regardless of the news, Roslin goes to the ceremony. Upon leaving the ceremony, the Cylons attack the twelve colonies, wiping out nearly all of humanity in the process. During the attack, she receives and responds to an automatic signal, and is informed that she is the highest ranking (and possibly last remaining) surviving member of the Presidential line of succession to respond. She was 43rd in the line of succession to the Presidency. She is therefore sworn in as President by Elosha, a priest, aboard her ship, in a scene highly reminiscent of the swearing-in of Lyndon Baines Johnson aboard Air Force One after the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy on 1963-11-22.[2] Roslin's assumption of the presidency may also be an allusion to Pat Frank's 1959 novel Alas, Babylon, in which the female Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare becomes President after a nuclear attack kills the President, Vice-President and Cabinet.
[edit] Early Presidency
Her first actions include organizing all FTL-capable ships together and convincing Commander William Adama to abandon a retaliatory attack on the Cylons, and instead join the "ragtag fleet" she has assembled in escaping. President Roslin and Billy Keikeya, her aide/press secretary/chief of staff, establish a working office space aboard her transport, renamed Colonial One (which the series' production team intentionally designed to resemble Air Force One). She immediately clashes with Commander Adama, the ranking Colonial military officer. They make an uneasy truce - that Adama will lead the military and the fleet's ships, while Roslin will preside over the fleet's personnel and look after the civilians' well-being.[2]
For the first few weeks, she acts as the sole voice of government, attending meetings and issuing orders alone.[3] Soon after the conflict depicted in the episode "Bastille Day", Roslin bows to popular pressure and agrees to establish a new Quorum of Twelve - the legislative branch of the colonial government, made up of a representative from each of the Twelve Colonies.[4]
It is at the first meeting of the new Quorum that Council member and former terrorist/freedom fighter Tom Zarek of Sagittaron moves to nominate a vice-president. Many, including Roslin, see this as a bid by Zarek to gain the vice-presidency so that he can have Roslin assassinated and assume control over the newly reorganized civilian government. To counter this, Roslin recruits an old political ally, Wallace Gray, to run for Vice-President, but he fares poorly against the well-connected Zarek. After he gives a stirring speech to the news media, it becomes clear that Dr. Gaius Baltar has become a popular individual in the fleet, and Roslin pressures Gray to drop out so that Baltar can enter the race. With Baltar in the race, the vote comes down to a 6-6 deadlock in the Quorum, and President Roslin breaks the tie in Baltar's favor.[4]
By the close of the first season, the soft-spoken Roslin has become a formidable leader who not only authorizes the use of torture against Cylon agents, but also orders their deaths by way of "airlocking": forcing Cylons to be airlocked into space, where they suffocate and freeze to death.[5]
[edit] Prophecies and Arrest
During the first season, Roslin opts to deal with her terminal illness through the use of a controversial herbal drug called chamalla.[6] After beginning the treatment, she begins to experience visions, which coincide with certain prophecies contained in the ancient scriptures of Kobol. She comes to believe, based on the prophecies, that she is the spiritual leader of the Colonials, and becomes intent on leading the fleet to Earth, a supposed safe haven.[5][7]
These beliefs begin to heavily influence her decisions as President, including sending Starbuck back to Caprica against Adama's orders, in order to retrieve the mythical Arrow of Apollo in accordance with the prophecies. As a result of this action, Commander Adama has her removed from power and thrown in the brig for breaking their agreement and interfering in military matters.[7]
During her imprisonment, Adama is shot, and Tigh takes charge of the fleet. With the aid of Lee Adama, Roslin escapes, and convinces a large part of the fleet to abandon Galactica and join her instead.[8][9] As Roslin begins searching for the Tomb of Athena on Kobol, Adama attempts to find her and reunite the fleet. After being joined by Adama, and with the help of Sharon Valerii, the group manages to find the tomb. With the Arrow of Apollo, the tomb reveals clues to Earth's location. After reconciling with Commander Adama, she is reinstated as President.[10]
[edit] Declining Health
After Roslin's reinstatement, her condition begins to worsen. She is told that she has, at most, about a month to live.[11] Shortly thereafter, Admiral Helena Cain of Battlestar Pegasus and Commander Adama came to the brink of a shooting war with each other over Cain's disregard for civil liberties and the civilian fleet.[12] Roslin realizes that Cain does not accept her as the true President, and with her health rapidly deteriorating, convinces Adama to have Cain assassinated pending a major operation against a Cylon fleet, with Cain secretly planning the same action against Adama. Though neither is ultimately willing to follow through, Cain is still killed by a Cylon she had imprisoned and tortured, and Roslin promotes Adama to Admiral.[13]
Weeks after the Pegasus joins the fleet, Roslin is admitted to the Galactica's sickbay, on the verge of death. At the height of her illness, Roslin has a flashback of an encounter between Baltar and Number Six prior to the Cylon attack, but is not able to fully process her memories. As part of these flashbacks, it is revealed that President Adar had demanded Roslin's resignation due to a conflict between the two regarding her efforts in resolving a labor dispute, her position effectively secured by the Cylon attack and resulting governmental upheaval.[1]
As Roslin nears death, her life is saved by the apparent curative properties discovered in the blood of the unborn child of Sharon Valerii, whose pregnancy Roslin had previously believed should be terminated. Ostensibly cured of her cancer, she returns to her duties.[1]
After the period on New Caprica, during the trial of Gaius Baltar, Roslin reveals that her terminal cancer has indeed returned. Although she does not disclose how long she is expected to survive, she does admit that she is again taking chamalla. She only admits to her cancer when Lee Adama confronts her regarding her chamalla use while on the stand in Baltar's trial.
[edit] Administration Strains
After recovering and processing her memories of Baltar and Six, Roslin asks Baltar to resign his post as Vice President. His pride already wounded by the letter Roslin left him, to read in the event of her death regarding his ascension to the position of "President", Baltar refuses. Roslin says that she will never give him another chance to do so.[14]
Following her return to duty Roslin discovered she had fallen behind in her work, and sought to again regularize internal trade within the Fleet. To these ends she sought to curtail rampant black market trading that had spread through the fleet, and Apollo began investigating it. However, he in the end reported to Roslin that their system would never be perfect, and there would always be some black market trading in the Fleet. Apollo killed the leader of the established black market network (an unscrupulous man that had the network dealing in drugs, killing with impunity, and engaged in child slavery, etc), and let the survivors continue black market trading with the warning that if any of these unsavory actions were continued, he would destroy them all. Roslin was less than happy that Apollo had made this decision and that trade could not be totally regulated, but had to endure it. Apollo had been put on the trail of the black market leadership by Councilman Tom Zarek, who said that he knew of the black market, but did not try to shut it down because it was a testament to Roslin's failures. After Apollo killed the old leadership and cleaned up the black market to a degree, Zarek was seen walking through the old trade bazaar of the black market; implying that he may have orchestrated the entire confrontation to have Apollo kill the old black market leadership, and then Zarek would step into the power vacuum.[14]
Furthermore, Roslin suffers more problems when her longtime aide Billy is murdered during a hostage crisis regarding a group of anti-Cylon activists who seek the death of Cylon traitor Sharon Agathon. Billy is replaced by a new aide, a woman named Tory Foster. Unlike Billy, Tory is shown to be a cold-blooded realist and supports Roslin in her most controversial action in the series, when she fakes the death of Sharon and Helo's baby and orders the child be given to a female fleet member.
[edit] Run Up To Election Campaign
When a young Gemenese woman stowed away to the Galactica in order to have her pregnancy terminated, President Roslin insisted that the girl was within her rights to control her own body; abortion had been legal under colonial law before the Cylon attack, and Roslin considered this law to be still in effect. Roslin commented that she had been fighting during the course of her entire political career in support of pro-choice policies; however, Admiral Adama reminded her of the day following the attacks on the Twelve Colonies, when she told him that the human race, in order to survive, would have to retreat and then start to make babies. She then conferred with Dr. Baltar, who confirmed that if the Fleet population continued its constant rate of decline, the human race would go extinct in 18 years. Subsequently, she reluctantly put forth an Executive Order banning the interference in any further pregnancies. The Gemenese girl's pregnancy had been terminated before the order was announced so neither she nor Dr. Cottle could be held criminally liable.[15]
This decision undoubtedly weighed heavily in the upcoming elections for the new Presidency, especially since Dr. Baltar, while admitting that he had to support her decision as a member of her administration, publicly announced his private objection to the ban and announced his candidacy for President. The Gemenese in the fleet, who are religiously very fundamentalist, originally supported Roslin, but the Colonial religion views abortion as an abomination in the eyes of the Gods. Although banning abortion may have kept the Gemenese vote (as well as furthering the survival of the species), the damage had been done as many in the fleet turned against Roslin and began to support Baltar's run for the Presidency.[15]
A key issue of the election became the possible settlement of a new, habitable planet discovered by accident as a Raptor hit the wrong jump coordinates. Baltar leapt on the issue, prompted at the urging of Number Six, to push for colonization of the planet as a wedge issue to win the election. President Roslin continued to push for the search for Earth as a final settlement. As most of the people wished for land under their feet and a roof over their heads that wasn't the deck of a starship, Baltar gained considerably in the polls.[16]
[edit] Election
Vice-President Baltar and his political advisor Tom Zarek were able to successfully capitalize on the colonization issue, and public opinion swung in favor of settling the planet, christened New Caprica, and electing Baltar. During the night of the election, vote totals remained very close until approximately 5 hours after polls had closed, at which point Baltar was leading Roslin by roughly 5000 votes, with 3 ships yet to have their votes tallied. At that point, Roslin's campaign manager secretly called on Colonel Saul Tigh, who was among the military officers supervising vote-counting aboard Galactica. Tigh then signaled Petty-Officer Anastasia Dualla, who left the room and commandeered an incoming ballot box, replacing it with one apparently prepared ahead of time and containing forged votes which favored President Roslin. When these votes were tallied, President Roslin was announced as having won re-election. Tom Zarek was suspicious of the results, but Baltar personally assured him that Roslin would not engage in electoral fraud.[16]
The small conspiracy quickly unraveled, however, when Lieutenant Felix Gaeta noticed that the forged ballots had Vice-President Baltar's first name spelled correctly (Gaeta knew that the ship in question had a set of misprinted ballots). He brought this to the attention of Tigh, who insisted that he would handle the situation, after which Gaeta grew suspicious and personally alerted Admiral Adama. Adama, in turn, privately informed Roslin, who then herself confessed to authorizing her campaign manager's subterfuge. Adama eventually convinced Roslin that, despite the likelihood that a Baltar presidency would be "disastrous," they should announce that there had been a "tabulation error" and allow Baltar to take office rather than betraying their principles.[16]
[edit] On New Caprica
After leaving office, Roslin settled on New Caprica as did much of the fleet's civilian population. She resumed her old occupation as a school teacher and aided in the care of Sharon Agathon's half-Cylon, half-human baby, Hera/Isis, and her aide, Tory.[16]
During this period, the relationship between Roslin and Adama undergoes a drastic change. During Adama's sole visit to the colony, he spends the bulk of his time with Roslin. During this visit, Roslin shares her dream of building a cabin in the mountains of New Caprica with Adama, and the two are shown spending the night talking about what is to become of the fleet. In future episodes where flasbacks to life on New Caprica are shown, Adama and Roslin are shown as growing much closer.
But after a year on New Caprica, the Cylons discover the colony, which under Baltar's leadership immediately surrenders. While Roslin does not actively participate in the underground resistance movement spearheaded by Saul Tigh, Roslin and her aide Tory make a detailed list of the colonists who collaborate with the Cylons for use against them, if and when the Cylons are ever driven off the planet.
When Tigh controversially orders the use of suicide bombers, Roslin is arrested on suspicion of aiding in Tigh's decision. Roslin, however, is freed by Baltar, who knowing that Roslin would never approve of such tactics, attempts unsuccessfully to get her to join him in jointly denouncing Tigh's actions. Days later, Roslin is re-arrested and nearly executed alongside a large group of suspected resistance members, but is saved by the combination of Tom Zarek (who moves Roslin to the back of the crowd, saving her from being shot) and the resistors, led by Galen Tyrol, who destroy the Centurion firing squad.[17]
[edit] After New Caprica
After the fleet was reunited after the escape from New Caprica, Tom Zarek (who had been imprisoned when he refused to work with the Cylons ala Baltar) became President in light of Baltar's actions on New Caprica. In a private meeting with Roslin, Zarek revealed that Adama had threatened to boycott the existence of the civilian government in the fleet so long as he was in power. Rather than fight a lengthy and ultimately futile battle with Adama, Zarek offered a deal: he would name Laura Roslin as his new Vice President and then resign so as to allow Roslin to then assume power. In exchange for his forfeiting of power, Roslin would in turn appoint him Vice President and use her influence over Adama to force him to allow Zarek a seat at the proverbial table that was the civilian government of the fleet. Roslin agreed, though the revelation that Zarek was the mastermind behind "The Circle", a group that judged the worst of the worst of the New Caprica-Cylon Collaboraters and carried out summary executions of the guilty, caused their new friendship to splinter apart. Roslin wanted fair, public trials for the accused but Zarek believed that allowing public trials of those who collaborated with the Cylons could take years and tear the fleet apart. Furthermore, the Circle was Zarek's twistedly honorable solution to the issue at hand; since Zarek was the person who organized the Circle, Roslin's hands were effectively clean, especially in light of the fact that Zarek had told those involved in the Circle (including Saul Tigh), that they had until Roslin took office to do their business, in order to ensure Roslin would be guiltless in their actions.
As such, Roslin reluctantly agreed to Zarek's plans and her first official act as President, once she had been sworn back into the office, was to grant general pardons to everyone in the fleet and set up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to deal with any future problems regarding what happened on New Caprica.[18]
The Colonial Fleet had been forced to a planet simply known as the "Algae planet" due to contamination of Galactica's food storage and processing system. They had to navigate through a dense belt of dangerous stellar radiation and dust,[19] but wound up losing 18 people and at least two ships crossing the expanse. Civilians and military personnel from the fleet spent nearly two weeks on the surface harvesting the raw plant matter that would be used to process new foodstuffs for the repaired processing systems on Galactica.[20]
It was then discovered that the central star around which the Algae Planet orbited was unstable - indeed, on the very brink of going nova. And then there was the discovery that the "Temple of Five," documented in the ancient texts of the Colonial religion was also located on one of the planet's continents. (This discovery was made by Chief Tyrol toward the end of the harvest mission.) Finally, four Cylon Basestars appeared on Galactica's DRADIS before Galactica's personnel could return home.[20]
However, Gaius Baltar, aboard one of the Basestars since the Second Exodus (from New Caprica), hailed Galactica and successfully arranged a meeting between the Cylons (represented by himself, the lead number 3 model, and the lead Cavil) and Roslin, Admiral Adama, and Colonel Tigh. Boomer was also to be included in this meeting, but was stopped outside the meeting room by Sharon Agathon (a.k.a. "Athena") who identified Boomer, who was, of course, responsible for the assassination attempt on Adama two years earlier. Roslin could not stomach being in the same room as Baltar and left Adama to deal with the situation. Adama made it clear that any Cylon attempt to land troops on the surface would be met with Galactica's full nuclear arsenal being detonated on the Temple's site and any secrets it held about the location of Earth would be lost along with it.[20]
Meanwhile, outside the meeting room, Boomer confronted Sharon Agathon about her allegedly dead baby. Boomer, now bearing an embittered attitude towards humanity following the events on New Caprica, tried to convince her fellow 'number 8' that humanity didn't deserve her loyalty by telling her about Roslin's conspiracy to steal her baby, Hera, and fake the infant's death for her benefit. These details included information the Cylons had gathered about Hera being sighted at Roslin's school on New Caprica before the Second Exodus. When Adama confronts Roslin about Boomer's story she admits her deception, causing Adama to leave, angry at the fact that he was left in the dark. After telling the Agathons the truth, Helo, Sharon's husband, kills her so she could be resurrected by the Cylons, giving her an opportunity to "rescue" Hera from the Cylons. Helo then blamed Roslin for the situation, and Adama was not happy with her either.[20]
In the end, the Cylons are able to partially call Adama's bluff and land a single ship carrying Gaius Baltar and the Cylon known only as D'Anna Biers[21] (other Cylon vessels were turned back because Galactica readied its nukes). But shortly after the Cylons force their way into the Temple, the central star goes nova and both the Cylon and Colonial fleets are forced to make a hasty jump away. Roslin's religious insights prove useful afterward when it comes time to determining both what parts of the Temple's inscriptions relate to Earth, and perhaps what parts relate to the Cylons. She starts to see that there may be more than a single purpose for the Temple, and that its role in Colonial religious doctrine might not be the only one - perhaps it had messages for both the cylons and humanity.[22]
During the withdrawal from the Algae Planet, Baltar is captured while Colonial forces try to retake the Temple from the Cylons (successfully, although within an hour of the nova's shock wave reaching the planet's surface in any event).[21] Also captured is the Cylon known as 'Caprica-Six', the blonde female Cylon responsible for the conspiracy to circumvent the Colonial defense mainframe just prior to the Cylon attack that destroyed the Colonies (although she's captured only by virtue of aiding the escape of Sharon Agathon & Hera).[21]
Following his capture, Baltar is subjected to a radical form of hallucinogen-based interrogation and then offered the possibility of escaping execution in exchange for cooperation, as Adama, Tigh and Roslin seek to learn any clues to Earth's location that the Cylons may have obtained from the temple. When both of these stratagems fail, Baltar asks for a fair trial. Roslin rejects Adama's suggestion that Baltar be made to "simply disappear" and orders him to be given a fair trial for his crimes, even after a warning from Tom Zarek that doing so will provoke dangerous unrest among the fleet's civilian and military populations alike. In the course of his interrogation, Baltar admits his complicity in the original Cylon attack on the Colonies, thereby making a successful defense all the more difficult. However, all that Baltar can actually plead guilty to in a later court proceeding is leaking defense secrets to a defense contractor: something for which several years of imprisonment might be called for, but hardly death.
[edit] Returning Health Troubles
During Baltar's trial, it is revealed that Roslin's cancer has appeared again and that she is once again taking chamalla, the medicine used earlier in the series to help her cope with her cancer when Lee Adama questions her. Lee believed this to make her an illegitimate witness in Baltar's trial because of chamalla's hallucinogenic effects. Though it becomes apparent that Roslin did not want knowledge of her cancer revealed during Baltar's trial, she urged Lee to ask her why she was taking the drug, allowing her to confirm under oath she had cancer. [23]
Baltar was ultimately acquitted of his crimes by a 3-2 vote, leaving Roslin with nothing but her secret illness exposed, further badgering from the press and the very notion that Lee had betrayed her to support his own beliefs. She later discovers that Adama voted in favor of Baltar's acquittal. Adama tells Laura that they must look to the future and not pursue the vendettas of the past, though Roslin remains deeply agitated regarding Baltar's victory and Adama's decisive vote. She is last seen in "Crossroads Part II" feeling slightly light-headed as the fleet's power is shut down and a Cylon fleet ambushes them. In the same episode, Roslin experiences visions, in sync with Caprica Six and Sharon 'Athena' Agathon. These visions (of the inside of the ornate Kobol Opera House) also involve the human-cylon hybrid child, Hera. Baltar is present in the vision as well, but his role remains undefined.
[edit] The Route of the Gods is Challenged
In the opening fourth season premiere He That Believeth In Me, the return of Kara Thrace, presumed dead by the fleet for two months, alarms and angers Roslin, as she is convinced that Thrace's ressurection verifies her as a Cylon. Thrace's own conviction that she has visited Earth leads to conflict when Kara insists that the route given to the fleet by the Eye of Jupiter is false, and that they are pulling away from Earth's correct route, causing her great pain. Panicking, she attempts to force Roslin to turn back by infiltrating her quarters and aiming a gun at her head. She is apprehended, but not before Kara gives Roslin the chance to shoot her. Roslin fires the gun, but misses at close range. Adama later chastises the President, accusing her of not trusting Kara because she fears she will lose the people to a new "visionary" and die alone, powerless.
[edit] Illegitimacy of her Presidency
Despite acting as President for two terms, Roslin has never been democratically elected President by popular accord. Before the Cylon attack she was far down the line of succession. As the sole representative of Colonial Government left alive she gained the position by default.
She showed no interest in holding further elections until Lee Adama pointed out that, legally, she was serving out the remainder of President Adar's term so an election would need to be called. Further, she appears only to agree to this to secure the services of his ship in mining ice.
The general election in Season 2 resulted in Baltar being elected President, despite Roslin's administration attempting to rig the votes without her knowledge. In Season 3 President Tom Zarek (the democratically-elected Vice-President) made her Vice-President only to turn over the Presidency to her.
[edit] Conduct as President
As an erstwhile primary school teacher, Roslin seems to still view herself as a teacher, listening to others as a teacher would to her students. However, popular opinion has never weighed against what Roslin believed was best for the safety and survival of the fleet, often leading Roslin to make decsions perceived to be cold. At key moments in her Presidency she has overruled others' opinions in various ways. Some examples of this include:
- Giving Leoben her word that he will not be harmed, and then having him thrown out of an airlock immediately after getting the information she wanted, much to Kara Thrace's distaste.
- In Season 1, Roslin convinces Baltar to be her vice-president despite his complete lack of political experience. In Season 2, Roslin's cancer takes a greater toll on her health, and as a result see "flashes" of her life on Caprica the day before the attack. Remembering that she saw Baltar with Number Six during that day, Roslin ultimately declared Baltar "dangerous" and demanded his resignation.
- When the head of the Workers on the Tylium processing ship in Season 3 arrives to discuss the inhumane conditions, threatening a strike that would cripple the fleet and quoting Baltar's new book, Roslin has him arrested.
[edit] Treatment of "Athena" Agathon
Throughout the three seasons Roslin's relationship towards the Number 8 named Sharon "Athena" Agathon has been marked by constant distrust and numerable instances of behavior that, were it applied to another human being, would be considered inhumane.
By comparison, Athena has been the very picture of loyalty. Though Athena did not warn the Caprica rescue party about the copy of Reverend Cavil being a Cylon agent, she did lead them to safety and, considering the vast amount of mistreatment she had suffered, it is unsurprising that she would await to see what Cavil did before taking action. Whilst Athena at one point told Helo that she believed Adama killed her baby and that she no longer cared what happened to him, it is hardly surprising that she would feel this way about a murderer. It is only unsurprising that she did not attempt to kill Adama in return, as human mothers would.
Roslin's feelings towards Athena are of course far from unique, however in the role of President one may imagine Roslin would need to hold to a higher standard of behaviour. Some examples of Roslin's behaviour include:
- Ordering Athena thrown out of the airlock when she arrives on Astral Queen, despite Athena having saved Helo's life repeatedly
- Imprisoning Athena
- Trying to have Athena's child (Hera) forcibly terminated
- Having no issue with Baltar using Hera's blood to cure herself of cancer
- Yet subsequent to this, stealing Hera from her parents
- Giving Hera away to another colonist, none but her, Doctor Cottle and Tori knowing the identity of this woman- the woman in question never being told of the true origin of the child or her significance
- Not providing adequate security to ensure the safety of Hera
- Opposing the rescue mission of Hera by her mother
- Imprisoning Helo for violating the orders that would have prevented the rescue of Hera. By comparison, when Adama defied Roslin and kept his fleet looking for Starbuck long after Starbuck was considered dead (which caused far more issues for the fleet than Helo defying orders by killing Athena) Roslin ordered an end to the search at the 11th hour, severly berating Lee and his father - no further action was taken.
- Upon Helo pointing out that Hera would never have been in Cylon arms if it were not for her decisions, Roslin would only say that she bore "some responsibility."
With the reappearance of her cancer, it is unknown (as of the end of Season 3) whether Roslin still expects that either Helo or Athena will allow her to once again use their child's blood.
[edit] References
- ^ a b c "Epiphanies". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b "Miniseries, Parts 1 and 2". Battlestar Galactica (TV miniseries).
- ^ "Water". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b "Colonial Day". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b "Flesh and Bone". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Bastille Day". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b "Kobol's Last Gleaming". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Resistance". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "The Farm". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Home". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Flight of the Phoenix". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Pegasus". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Resurrection Ship". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b "Black Market". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b "The Captain's Hand". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b c d "Lay Down Your Burdens". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Exodus". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Collaborators". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "The Passage". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b c d "The Eye of Jupiter". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ a b c "Rapture". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Taking a Break From All Your Worries". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
- ^ "Crossroads". Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
[edit] External links
- Laura Roslin on Battlestar Wiki
- Laura Roslin article at SCIFIpedia
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