Due to the recent reveal of B613's existence, Olivia meets with Lonnie Mencken, who says he will make sure they get a proper Senate hearing if Mellie makes gun control her first priority. After Olivia agrees, he shoots himself to ensure the hearing takes place, leaving David in charge. At the senate hearing Olivia admits to ordering Rashad's assassination, Mellie and Fitz admit they knew of B613, Tom confesses to killing Frankie Vargas under Cyrus' orders, and Hollis admits to being a part of election fraud. Everyone starts to deal with their impending imprisonment while helping get Quinn to Charlie so they can get married. After failing to kill David, Jake tells Cyrus he is not going to take his orders anymore. On his quest to have Mellie impeached, Cyrus poisons David and smothers him. The ruling is postponed due to a new witness coming forward: Rowan; he admits to being command. Jake is imprisoned for his actions in B613. An alcoholic Cyrus resigns as vice president. Mellie approves of the bill on gun control to law. Two young girls visit the national portrait gallery where there is a portrait of Olivia.
In the United States, the episode received a 1.3/5 percent share among adults between the ages of 18 and 49, meaning that it was seen by 1.3 percent of all households, and 5 percent of all of those watching television at the time of the broadcast. It was watched by 5.46 million Americans.
Reviews
Joshua Alston of Vulture gave the episode a 4 out of 5 stars rating, stating that it is "pretty darn successful, moving briskly and offering a satisfying mix of resolutions, comeuppances, surprises, and pure fan service." USA Today Anika Reed praised the series in its entirety, not just the final episode, commenting the show "put a black woman as the lead of a primetime drama for the first time since 1974, with Washington as D.C. fixer Olivia Pope. The show arguably changed the makeup of the television landscape and created a space for shows with complicated black lead actors." Brian Lowry, writing a positive review for CNN, stated that the episode "felt both ridiculous and wholly appropriate. Admittedly, this appraisal doesn't come from a 'gladiator,' an allusion to the show's die-hard loyalists, but rather somebody who thought it was bad in the early going, and tolerable once it adapted and embraced the crazy." He also commented on the series as a whole, affirming that Scandal "was less about politics than the corrupting influence of power, using Washington's corridors as the glamorous backdrop for a primetime soap, mixing its steamy relationships with wild deep-state conspiracies."