History receiving a concession phone call from
Walter Mondale after the
1984 United States presidential election. The first time in the
United States that a candidate lost a presidential election and privately conceded was
Federalist John Adams to
Democratic-Republican Thomas Jefferson in 1800. The first "concession
telegram" occurred when
William Jennings Bryan sent
William McKinley a message two days after the
1896 US presidential election. Prior to that election, results took many days to be processed and made public, and thus candidates maintained an air of detachment from the process. The telegram was rather brief and read as follows: Over time, concession speeches were introduced aimed at the electorate, especially one's own supporters. These were first broadcast on the radio by
Al Smith in
1928, on a
newsreel by
Wendell Willkie in
1940, and on
live television by
Adlai Stevenson II in
1952. In the period between the 1896 and 2016 presidential elections, there had been 32 concessions speeches by major party candidates over the course of 120 years. second, the losing candidate makes a televised public speech, known as a
concession speech, to their supporters, on an (improvised)
podium surrounded by the candidate for the vice presidency, their spouses or other important relatives and friends. The speech could be ultrashort or last for minutes, and there is variation in how lighthearted they present their loss, and how warmly they congratulate the winner; it depends on whatever the defeated candidate prefers. Republican
Richard Nixon's
1962 California gubernatorial concession speech is notorious for not being reconciliatory, but begrudging toward his winning rival, Democrat
Pat Brown. This is why John McCain was commended for calming down his supporters who booed when he first mentioned the name of his opponent
Barack Obama in his concession speech, and managed to have them applaud for their opponent later in his speech. After losing the
1944 election, Republican
Thomas E. Dewey conceded publicly in a radio address the following morning, but declined to personally call or send a telegram to President
Franklin D. Roosevelt. This irritated Roosevelt, who sent Dewey a telegram reading, "I thank you for your statement, which I heard over the air a few minutes ago." In the
1960 election, Republican
Richard M. Nixon considered refusing to concede to his Democratic opponent
John F. Kennedy and challenging the results in
Illinois and
Texas because of allegations of voter fraud in those states. However, he found that the United States had no legal framework for a losing candidate to challenge an election and decided that a lengthy
constitutional crisis would destabilize the country and weaken its international standing, as well as damage Nixon's own political reputation. This was the longest refusal to concede of any modern presidential candidate until the 2020 election. On the night of the
2004 election, Democratic
John Kerry also considered waiting to concede to Bush pending a challenge of the
results in Ohio, but ultimately decided against a potential repeat of the contentious events of 2000.
Donald Trump has been an exception to the tradition of concession in American presidential politics, refusing to concede defeat and declaring victory for himself despite having lost both the popular vote and electoral college in the
2020 presidential election. He has alleged that there has been
electoral fraud or miscounts in close races which negatively impacted him, despite there being no evidence of this according to election officials and media outlets. A candidate has the right to mount legal challenges against the electoral process if they have evidence that it was conducted improperly, and potentially they could thus subvert the outcome. If these legal challenges to the electoral processes fail and the losing candidate still refuses to concede, the winning candidate nevertheless starts their presidential term on January 20 (and if the losing candidate is the incumbent president, their term will end on the same day), in accordance with the
Twentieth Amendment. On January 7, 2021, in what some news outlets have regarded as a concession despite lacking any admission of defeat, Trump condemned the
attack on the
United States Capitol and proceeded to say that his focus is to ensure a smooth transition of power to the
Biden administration (without mentioning Biden's name). If the incumbent president refuses to concede the election, the
General Services Administration (GSA) may delay the transition process, as it did following both the
2000 election and
2020 election. The GSA has to "ascertain" the election in order to release funds, office space, briefings, and other government resources needed for a transition.
Gubernatorial elections Republican
Jim Ross Lightfoot did not concede his loss in the
1998 Iowa gubernatorial election, won by Democrat
Tom Vilsack. In the
2018 Georgia gubernatorial election, Democrat
Stacey Abrams did not concede to Republican
Brian Kemp, despite acknowledging him as governor-elect. Her refusal to concede has drawn comparisons to Trump's refusal to concede his loss in Georgia, though Abrams rejected such comparisons. In the
2022 Arizona gubernatorial election, Republican
Kari Lake did not concede to Democrat
Katie Hobbs and had filed lawsuits against the state's largest county
Maricopa, citing voting irregularities.
Senate elections After losing the
2017 United States Senate special election in Alabama, Republican
Roy Moore refused to concede defeat to Democrat
Doug Jones. On December 27, 2017, Moore filed a lawsuit to block Jones from being certified as the winner of the race. However, the lawsuit was rejected by the
Alabama Supreme Court, who declared Jones the winner. ==Other countries==