Dictionary Definition
incumbency
Noun
1 the term during which some position is held
[syn: tenure, term of
office]
2 a duty that is incumbent upon you
3 the office of an incumbent
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The state of being incumbent.
Extensive Definition
The incumbent, in politics, is the current holder
of a political
office. This term is usually used in reference to elections, in which races can
often be defined as being between an incumbent and non-incumbent.
For example, in the
2004 United States presidential election, George W.
Bush was the incumbent, because he was the president in the
current term while the election sought to determine the president
for the following term.
Etymology
The word "incumbent" is derived from the Latin verb incumbere, literally meaning "to lean or lie upon," with the present participle stem incumbent-, "leaning or lying upon."In politics
In general, incumbents have structural advantages over challengers during elections. The timing of elections may be determined by the incumbent instead of a set schedule. For most political offices, the incumbent often has greater name recognition due to their previous work in the office. Incumbents also have easier access to campaign finance, as well as government resources (such as the franking privilege) that can be indirectly used to boost a campaign. An election (especially for a legislature) in which no incumbent is running is often called an open seat; because of the lack of incumbency advantage, these are often amongst the most hotly-contested races in any election.In the United
States, incumbents traditionally win their party's nomination
to run for office. Unseating an incumbent president, senator or
other figure during a primary
election is very difficult. In particular, barring major
scandal or controversy, about 95% of congressional
incumbents win re-election to their seats. However, shifts in
congressional districts due to reapportionment
or other longer-term factors may make it more or less likely for an
incumbent to win re-election over time. For example, a
Democratic incumbent in historically conservative
Texas would
have less chance of winning than a Democratic incumbent in liberal New
York City, because Texas has shifted away from the Democratic
party in terms of voting (see also
Congressional stagnation in the United States).
However, there exist scenarios in which the
incumbency factor itself leads to the downfall of the incumbent.
Popularly known as the anti-incumbency
factor, situations of this kind occur when the incumbent has
proven himself not worthy of office during his tenure and the
challenger demonstrates this fact to the voters. An anti-incumbency
factor can also be responsible for bringing down incumbents who
have been in office for many successive terms in spite of
performance indicators, simply because the voters are convinced by
the challenger of a need for change.
When newcomers vie to fill an open office, voters
tend to compare and contrast the candidates' qualifications, issues
positions and personal characteristics in a relatively
straightforward way. Elections featuring an incumbent, on the other
hand, are as Guy Molyneux
puts it, "fundamentally a referendum on the incumbent." Voters will
first grapple with the record of the incumbent. Only if they decide
to "fire" the incumbent do they begin to evaluate whether the
challenger is an acceptable alternative.
Voters typically know incumbents well and have
strong opinions about their performance. Challengers are less
familiar and invariably fall short on straightforward comparisons
of experience and (in the presidential arena) command of foreign
policy. Some voters find themselves conflicted -- dissatisfied with
the incumbent yet also wary of the challenger -- and may carry that
uncertainty through the final days of the campaign and sometimes
right into the voting booth. Among the perpetually conflicted, the
attitudes about the incumbent are usually more predictive of these
conflicted voters' final decision than their lingering doubts about
the challenger. Thus, in the campaign's last hours, we generally
tend to see "undecided" voters "break" for the challenger. See
Incumbent Races: Closer Than They Appear http://www.pollingreport.com/incumbent.htm
by Nick Panagakis, 1989. (There are some major exceptions, such as
in the
2004 Canadian federal election where many undecided voters went
to the incumbent due to an alleged fear factor of the
unknown.)
In business
In business the term Incumbent is used for the largest company in a certain industry, for instance the traditional phone company in telecommunications. In a sales process, such as public tender, incumbent may also refer to the vendor that has the largest existing commercial relationship with the issuer of the tender.In large corporations it is the incumbent who is
the holder of an office, or one that occupies a particular
position.
In media or telecommunications
In media or telecommunications, the term incumbent is used to describe existing companies often first established as regulated monopolies. These include television or radio stations who have benefited from government granted broadcast licenses and telecommunications companies who first existed at regulated utilities with exclusive rights to serve an area. Incumbents in this context typically have extensive market power for ten years.References
incumbency in Welsh: Deiliad
incumbency in German: Amtsinhaber
incumbency in Dhivehi: އަދިވެސް މަޤާމުގައި
incumbency in Igbo: Incumbent
incumbency in Italian: Incumbent
incumbency in Simple English:
Incumbent
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accountability, accountableness,
advowson, amenability, answerability, answerableness, appointment, bale, benefice, berth, billet, burden, burdening, burthen, care of souls, cargo, charge, charging, cumber, cumbrance, curacy, cure, deadweight, dedication to
duty, devotion to duty, drag, duteousness, dutifulness, employment, encumbrance, engagement, freight, gig, glebe, handicap, incubus, job, lading, liability, living, load, loading, millstone, moonlighting, office, opening, oppression, overload, overtaxing, overweighting, place, position, post, prelacy, pressure, rectory, responsibility, responsibleness,
saddling, second job,
sense of duty, sense of obligation, service, situation, station, superincumbency,
surcharge, taxing, tenure, vacancy, vicarage