In the early 1970s, "Here Comes the Sun" was adopted by
George McGovern in his campaign for the US presidency. The initial success of the campaign, according to author
Nicholas Schaffner, was a "triumph for the counterculture's attempt to wield power via conventional electoral politics". In 1977, astronomer and science populariser
Carl Sagan attempted to have "Here Comes the Sun" included on a disc of music accompanying the
Voyager space mission. Titled the
Voyager Golden Record, copies of the disc were put on board both spacecraft in the
Voyager program in order to provide any entity that recovered them with a representative sample of human civilization. Writing in his book
Murmurs of Earth, Sagan recalls that the Beatles favoured the idea, but "[they] did not own the copyright, and the legal status of the piece seemed too murky to risk." Due to EMI's intervention, when the probes were launched in 1977, the song was not included. In 1979, Harrison released "
Here Comes the Moon" as a lyrical successor to the song. Some critics disapproved of his apparent reworking of such a popular Beatles song. Harrison said he expected this scrutiny but other songwriters had had "ten years to write 'Here Comes the Moon' after 'Here Comes the Sun', but nobody else wrote it, [so] I might as well do it meself". While expressing regret at having underestimated Harrison as a songwriter, George Martin later described "Here Comes the Sun" as being "in some ways one of the best songs ever written". On the day after Harrison's death in November 2001, fans sang "Here Comes the Sun" at a gathering in
Strawberry Fields in New York's
Central Park. In 2004,
Mike Love of the Beach Boys wrote "Pisces Brothers" as a tribute to Harrison and their shared experiences in India, and referenced the song in his closing line "Little darlin', here comes the sun". Love released "Pisces Brothers" in February 2014, to commemorate what would have been Harrison's 71st birthday, before including the track on his 2017 album
Unleash the Love. In August 2012, the Beatles' recording was played as part of the closing ceremony of the
London Olympic Games. The performance was accompanied by sixteen
dhol drummers and, in sociologist Rodanthi Tzanelli's description, given the struggles that inspired Harrison to write the song, it suitably conveyed the leisure and labour themes of Olympic competition. In July 2016, "Here Comes the Sun" was played as the entrance music for
Ivanka Trump at the
Republican National Convention. The George Harrison estate complained about the song being used to support
Donald Trump's presidential campaign, saying it was "offensive" and contrary to their wishes. The Harrison family later tweeted: "If it had been
Beware of Darkness, then we MAY have approved it! #TrumpYourself." That same year, British novelist
David Mitchell quoted the lyrics to "Here Comes the Sun" in
From Me Flows What You Call Time, a
novella that will remain unpublished until 2114. Mitchell said he included the lyrics because the song is expected to be out of copyright by that time. Writing for
Esquire in August 2021,
Alan Light cited the track's continued standing as the Beatles' most-streamed song on Spotify, along with the reverence afforded Harrison's 1970 solo album
All Things Must Pass, as evidence that Harrison "has emerged as
Gen Z's favorite Beatle". ==Cover versions==