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Two weeks after the 2008 election, George W. Bush's family
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gave Barack Obama's family a tour of their new home, the White House.
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It was part of a long American tradition,
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of the outgoing president's family meeting with the incoming family,
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just as the Clintons had done for the Bushes eight years before,
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and the Bushes had done for the Clintons eight years before that.
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It's a symbolic start to the beginning of the presidential transition,
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where the current president meets with the president-elect,
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and, importantly, helps the new administration into their new positions,
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ensuring a smooth transfer of power.
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"President Trump refuses to concede."
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"Refusing to begin the transition process."
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"Blocking President-elect Joe Biden from receiving critical Covid-19 data."
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The presidential transition usually starts right after Election Day, in November,
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and it ends when the new president is inaugurated, in late January.
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But this year, President Trump didn't allow it to start until three weeks after the election.
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So... does that actually matter?
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And why does America take so long to switch presidents?
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Trump is not the first outgoing president to be uncooperative.
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In 1932, President Herbert Hoover lost to Franklin Delano Roosevelt in a landslide.
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It was the middle of the Great Depression,
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and Roosevelt had campaigned on his "New Deal" ideas.
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But Hoover didn't like those ideas.
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And he used the transition period to keep FDR from getting started on them.
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At the time, this gap was even longer.
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The Constitution, written in the 1700s, had set it at around four months.
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After FDR's election, it was shortened, to the current two and a half months.
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That's still pretty long. But the modern US, with its expansive federal government,
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has found that time period useful.
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The federal government is kind of like this huge, massive, big ship,
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that takes a lot of direction to steer.
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When the US changes presidents, thousands of federal jobs have to be changed, too.
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And that changeover takes time.
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Those new hires need offices, government emails,
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and they need to get fully briefed on the ins and outs of how these departments run.
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And, most importantly, the president needs to get caught up on national security and intelligence.
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On January 20th at noon, one administration is going to take over,
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and the threats that America faces are not necessarily going to respect that gap.
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In 2000, the election between George W. Bush and Al Gore was so close
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that the winner wasn't actually decided until mid-December.
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Which meant Bush's transition had to happen pretty rapidly.
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Later, after the September 11th attacks, a government report said,
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“this loss of time hampered the new administration”
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in its readiness to deal with national security threats.
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They suggested that in the future, the transition should start as soon as possible.
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But, unlike in 2000, the delay in transition in 2020
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wasn't because we didn't know who won the election.
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"NBC News now projects..."
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"CBS News projects..."
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"CNN projects Joseph R. Biden Jr. is elected."
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When the media declares a winner on election night, it feels like a big moment.
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But it doesn't actually carry any formal weight. It's a projection.
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The election isn't officially over until each state certifies their results,
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and the Electoral College votes, in mid-December.
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But usually, by that point both presidential candidates
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have already acknowledged what the outcome will be.
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The loser usually concedes, and that sets off this presidential transition process
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where the outgoing administration helps to usher in the incoming administration.
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In 2020, we found out what happens when the outcome is widely agreed upon,
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but the loser doesn't concede.
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Before the transition can start, an office of the federal government
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has to give the go-ahead.
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The problem is, that relies on everyone agreeing who the president-elect is.
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Eventually, after several key states certified their results,
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Trump didn't concede, but he did allow the transition to begin.
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Without actually referring to Biden as the president-elect.
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"Nearly three weeks after the election...
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"The Trump administration backed down."
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"President-elect Biden getting daily intelligence briefings..."
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"...on everything from vaccine distribution, testing, and PPE supply chains."
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This gap between presidents feels long.
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But it's necessary to keep America's government running.
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And for the incoming Biden administration, it's going to be a lot shorter.
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And it shows that our tradition of a smooth transfer of power is just that — a tradition.
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Not a rule.