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Incumbent

An incumbent is a person currently holding an office or position. In political contexts, it refers to the sitting officeholder who may seek re-election. The term can apply to executives, legislators, or heads of government and state.

Incumbents often enjoy advantages in elections, collectively known as incumbency advantage. These include greater name recognition,

Outside politics, "incumbent" describes the current holder of any position, such as an incumbent CEO, director,

Etymology: derived from Latin incumbere, meaning to lie upon or to undertake, the term has long described

established
campaign
networks,
easier
access
to
funding
and
media,
and
a
record
of
service
that
supporters
can
cite.
The
advantage
varies
by
country,
office,
and
electoral
system,
and
strong
challengers
or
scandals
can
overcome
it.
Term
limits
can
limit
incumbency
by
restricting
how
long
a
person
may
hold
office.
or
judge.
The
term
is
used
to
distinguish
the
current
officeholder
from
challengers
or
new
appointees.
someone
currently
in
office.