Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / UnexpectedSuccessor

Go To

1%%%
2%%
3%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!
4%%
5%%%
6
7->'''Lee "Apollo" Adama:''' How far down?\
8'''Laura Roslin:''' 43rd in line of succession. I know all 42 ahead of me from the President down. Most of us served with him in the first administration. Some of them came with him from the Mayor's office. I was there with him on his first campaign. I never really liked politics; I kept telling myself I was getting out, but... he had this way about him. ''[the pilot appears with a piece of paper]'' Just couldn't say no to him. ''[he hands her the paper]'' Thank you. ''[she sits up and puts her jacket back on]'' We'll need a priest.
9-->-- ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'', "[[Recap/BattlestarGalactica2003S00E01MiniseriesPart1 Part I]]"
10
11A character is way down in the line of succession for some political office, to the point where it's reasonable to assume that they're never going to actually take it. Then everyone ahead of them dies or is otherwise disqualified.
12
13Usually this is either because
14# some giant disaster occurs,
15# the character in question is evil and killing everyone ahead of them,
16# a SuccessionCrisis throws the process into disarray,
17# The country has [[TerminallyExclusiveClub VERY strict succession rules.]]
18
19In a monarchy, this often means that some [[RoyalBlood distant or estranged relative]] of the previous monarch is ascending the throne, frequently leading to a great deal of FishOutOfWater humor, as the Unexpected Successor has not received the extensive preparation for power usually given to an heir apparent. Also note that, due to the generally predictable nature of royal succession, it's possible for someone to start their life rather far down the line of succession and still be expected to become monarch someday. For example, UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria was born fifth in line to the English throne, but everyone ahead of her was at least a generation older than she was and unlikely to have more children. So she grew up expecting to be queen and being groomed for the role, and thus would not be a RealLife example of this trope.
20
21Also contrast OfferedTheCrown, where the monarch is selected, and SuccessionCrisis, where there are problems due to ambiguity about who the rightful successor ''is''.
22
23This can happen in democracies as well, if the elected leader suddenly resigns or is incapacitated and someone has to take their place until new elections can be held. While most countries have established lines of succession to make this as orderly as possible, the person who rises to the top of the list can be surprising... such as an Agriculture Secretary who must go from teaching farmers how to grow peanuts to running a country as HilarityEnsues. In the United States, rules for succession beyond Vice President -> President are set by Congress, not the Constitution. The Speaker of the House and President ''pro tempore'' of the Senate are next, then Cabinet secretaries in order by age of office. In fiction, the Speaker of the House of Representatives is almost always a member of a different political party than their predecessor. Usually the Speaker resigns their seat in Congress (as required by the Presidential Succession Act of 1947), but for added turmoil, they won't.
24
25This trope can also happen in other organizations; such as military commands, corporations, criminal syndicates, and schools.
26
27See also TwentyFifthAmendment. {{Supertrope}} of SpareToTheThrone and HiddenBackupPrince. Compare DarkHorseVictory.
28----
29!!Sub-pages
30[[index]]
31* UnexpectedSuccessor/{{Literature}}
32** UnexpectedSuccessor/ASongOfIceAndFire
33[[/index]]
34----
35!!Examples:
36[[foldercontrol]]
37
38[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
39* In the ''VisualNovel/AceAttorneyInvestigationsMilesEdgeworth'' manga, Charles Toynbee is the second son of the president of Toy-be, but drops down to third after his half-brother Brodie appears and inherits the presidency after the death of their father. After Brodie's death, Tucker, who's between Brodie and Charles, and next in line for the presidency, [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere relinquishes the position, fearing a "curse"]]. [[spoiler:It turns out that Charles killed Brodie and was almost certainly counting on Tucker to get scared and run away]].
40* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'': Although [[TheEmperor Yhwach]] doesn't have a named successor, the Sternritter are convinced that [[TheDragon Haschwalth]] is his successor in all but name, until Yhwach randomly announces his successor's identity. To say the army's upset that it's not Haschwalth is an understatement. [[spoiler: Yhwach reveals Uryuu Ishida's existence and names him successor at the same time. It's done to sow dissent and confusion among his men, to [[KickedUpstairs isolate]] Uryuu from plotting betrayal, and to nurture Uryuu's secret (and potentially superior; even the nigh-omniscient Yhwach isn't sure how Uryuu managed to survive the Auswählen) power for mysterious ends.]]
41* ''Manga/CaseClosed'':
42** [[spoiler: Natsue Hatamoto]]. Sure, [[spoiler: her DisappearedDad was the eldest son of the Hatamoto family]], but it was expected that [[spoiler: the second son/Natsue's uncle Jouji]] or [[spoiler: her uncle Kitarou (as the eldest daughter/Natsue's aunt Mariko's husband)]] would get the family riches, or even [[spoiler: her older sister Akie]]...
43** Also, in the [[spoiler: Yabuchi]] family case, everyone was shocked to know that [[spoiler: Carlos, supposed to be a mere ScaryBlackMan working as a bodyguard, was taking the place of his dead father Yoshifusa among the inheritors. The dead patriarch Yoshichika ''did'' know, but he didn't tell anyone -- except for signaling it in the tape that was his last will. (Oh, and the old man whom everyone thought he was Yoshifusa? He was Yoshifusa's best friend Dickson Tanaka, who pulled a DeadPersonImpersonation [[PapaWolf to protect]] [[LikeASonToMe Carlos]].)]]
44* ''Anime/CodeGeass'':
45** [[spoiler:Lelouch, who was originally 17th in line for the throne, becomes emperor of Britannia after killing his father and using his Geass to force people to accept him as emperor.]]
46** And at the very end of the series, [[spoiler:his sister Nunnally becomes Empress of Britannia, and she was ''87th'' in line! Although, considering that Lelouch was the last emperor would change things around a bit. Nunnally would likely have become first in line simply because she was Lelouch's closest living relative. Both Schneizel and Cornelia (who both survived the end of the series and were originally ahead of Nunally) would have had a lower standing as they were only half-siblings.]]
47** A more bureaucratic version of this is averted when Guilford steps into command after the Black Knights kill Viceroy Calares in the first arc of R2, and everyone else in that line of succession down to a civil servant who would not have been able to govern in a situation like that.
48* In ''Manga/DemonSlayerKimetsuNoYaiba'', among Jigoro’s students there was a clear divide between the eldest disciple Kaigaku and the youngest Zenitsu; Kaigaku was a seen as the much stronger one, who was keen on being Jigoro’s successor, while Zenitsu had no expectations on being Jigoro’s chosen one at the time, as the boy seemed to lack talent and any drive to push forward. [[spoiler:However, throughout the series Zenitsu slowly but surely grows past his limitations, and Kaigaku turns out to be a nasty traitor who becomes a demon, who Zenitsu then kills. In the end Zenitsu, wears Jigoro’s haori, being his sole successor, and Zenitsu himself never thought he would be the one to succeed his master]].
49* ''Manga/FairyTail'': After Master Makarov and all of his potential successors (along with a good chunk of Fairy Tail's aces) were presumed dead after Acnologia [[PersonOfMassDestruction seemingly blew up Sirius Island]], minor Fairy Tail member Macao Conbolt ended up being sworn in as the guild's Fourth Master and led them over the seven year TimeSkip. While Macao ''is'' a veteran member, it's clear it was a position he never imagined he'd have nor one he ever ''wanted'', especially given the circumstances. To emphasize how far down the ladder Macao is, Makarov decides to let him keep the position for a laugh while he looks for a more suitable successor when they finally come back, which Macao himself is all for.
50* Kenshiro of ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar'' was a distant third to inherit the ''Hokuto Shin Ken'' style of martial arts from his teacher/adoptive father. But when leading candidate Toki was stricken with a fatal case of radiation poison that sapped his strength and Raoh left to form his post-apocalyptic army, the title of 64th master fell to a surprised Kenshiro.
51* Among the background events in ''Manga/HighschoolOfTheDead'', Presidents of the United States keep getting infected. Each time someone new ascends to the office, he asks himself, "Should we nuke China before our government totally collapses?" One of them decides he should.
52* ''Manga/JujutsuKaisen'': After [[OldMaster Naobito Zen'in]] dies during the Shibuya Incident, he names his son [[TheAce Naoya]] his successor as head of the Zen'in clan in his will. ''However'', said will also contains a special clause which dictates that, if for whatever reason anything should happen to [[WorldsBestWarrior Satoru Gojo]] that would incapacitate him ([[CrazyPrepared which is exactly what set off the Shibuya Incident in the first place]]), then [[WhiteSheep Megumi]] is to become head of the clan instead. [[ItsAllAboutMe Naoya]] does ''not'' take this well.
53* ''Manga/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaVivid'' reveals that the [[GodEmperor last Sankt Kaiser]], Olivie Sägebrecht, was this. When she was born, her constitution was deemed too weak to succeed as the next [[SheIsTheKing King]], so she was instead used as a political hostage for the kingdom of Shutra. However, her combat and magical prowess grew under the tutelage of [[BigBrotherMentor Wilfried Jeremiah]], until she gained a reputation as a [[WorldsBestWarrior warrior deemed second to none]]. Thus, when the time came, she was called back to her home country to become the next, and ultimately last, King of the Cradle.
54* ''Manga/OokuTheInnerChambers'':
55** Tokugawa Yoshimune was not only from a minor branch of the Tokugawa dynasty, but was the third daughter of said branch, so it was considered unlikely that she'd even become the head of her family, much less shogun. [[spoiler: Her older sisters were poisoned to remove them from the succession, and the sickly nature of the direct line meant that the last two members both had short reigns, so she took advantage of the SuccessionCrisis and proclaimed herself shogun.]] Which was in fact lampshaded by Ten'ei-in, the consort of a previous shogun:
56--->"Now here we sit in the sun, enjoying tea together, with one whom nobody e'er thought would become the supreme leader of this land, at the time of her birth."
57** The only time they met, the elderly Shogun Tsunayoshi noted to Yoshimune that she was herself an Unexpected Successor, being the third daughter of Iemitsu the Younger, and had only inherited the throne after her oldest half-sister Ietsuna died without issue. By primogeniture, her middle half-sister Tsunashige should have been the successor, but her mother Iemitsu preferred Tsunayoshi's father over Tsunashige's and seems to have favored his daughter in the order of succession.
58** Now the ultimate example: Harusada abdicates her claim to the throne in favor of her ''son'' Toyochiyo, making the now Shogun Ienari the first male shogun in generations.
59** With the male population slowly getting back to normal levels (due to an effective Redface Pox vaccine) and Ienari himself being succeeded by his son Ieyoshi, [[spoiler: it was a big surprise when Ienari declared Ieyoshi's ''daughter'' Iesada next in line. Ienari did so because Iesada was the only one of Ieyoshi's children to show anything resembling competence.]]
60* ''Literature/Overlord2012'': The kingdom puts together the biggest army they've ever had for its yearly skirmish against the Empire. Unfortunately, that year was also the one Ainz chose to ally with the Empire, and he plows through half their army without effort. As a result, the kingdom's nobility is decimated, leading to second or third sons (in some cases, spares to the SpareToTheThrone) finding themselves in positions of power they never trained for and certainly never expected to have.
61* ''Manga/Reborn2004''. After retiring to Japan, the first Vongola boss had a family there. In the present day, the oldest three of the current generation of Vongola heirs die separate bloody deaths, [[spoiler:while the youngest heir turns out to be illegitimate as he was adopted]]. The only descendant of a Vongola boss left is Tsunayoshi Sawada from the Japanese family, getting an ordinary Japanese kid into a Mafia family he didn't know he was related to. [[spoiler:Tsunayoshi's father Iemitsu could have also succeeded the Ninth, being a member of the bloodline, and was far more qualified than Tsunayoshi, being actual Mafia, but since he commanded the CEDEF, the Vongola's outside advisory group, it took him out of the line of succession as well, leaving his son as the next boss]].
62* Shi Ryuuki in ''Literature/TheStoryOfSaiunkoku'' unexpectedly became the imperial Crown Prince at age eleven, during a civil war in which four of his five older brothers killed each other trying to lay claim to the succession. In the process, Ryuuki moved from the bottom of his family's pecking order to his father's anointed successor. The only other surviving heir, Prince Seien, was already in exile when the civil war began because his mother's kin had made a power play too early. Ryuuki -- who isn't interested in being TheEmperor, believes himself to be incapable of ruling well, and wants nothing more than to see his favorite elder brother again -- stubbornly resists ruling and [[ObfuscatingStupidity plays dumb]] in hopes that his courtiers will give up and offer the throne to Seien. As Ryuuki's advisers eventually point out to him, recognizing his own shortcomings and trying to avoid making ''worse'' proves him smarter and more grounded than anybody else in his family and thus the ClosestThingWeGot to a decent heir.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Comic Books]]
66* In ''Comicbook/AmericanFlagg'', Flagg's friend Bill Windsor-Jones is the rightful King of England (most of the royal family having been killed by a German nuclear strike on London at some unspecified point in the past, and Britain subsequently becoming a communist puppet state of the Pan-African League.)
67* The miniseries ''Comicbook/GiveMeLiberty''. After the death or incapacitation of everyone higher up in the line of succession, the Secretary of Agriculture, Howard Nissen, assumes the presidency.
68* The whole premise of ''ComicBook/LargoWinch'': After the unexpected "[[NeverSuicide suicide]]" of Nerio Winch, leader of a large corporate empire, his underlings are fighting over his succession because the man was celibate and never had children. However, it turns out that Nerio secretly adopted Largo, a Yugoslav orphan raised by his uncle and aunt in modest conditions. Nerio also trained Largo to run his business in a remote island. Naturally, many of the underlings are unhappy about it and some even conspire against the young billionaire.
69* In ''ComicBook/TheUltimates'', in retaliation for a full-scale nuclear attack by the United States on his City (which he created overnight by expanding it over most of Europe, killing most of its inhabitants. Yeah it's complicated), Reed Richards launches an anti-matter attack on Washington D.C., killing almost the entire U.S. government. The Secretary of Energy survives because he was away reviewing windmills, so he becomes the new President. Justified in this case because U.S. Government policy is to always have one of the officials in line of succession out of the city in case of a massive attack that destroys the government.
70* In ''ComicBook/VForVendetta'', following massive social upheaval, the monarch of Great Britain is "Queen Zara." When the first issue was released, Zara Phillips (now Zara Tindall) -- the eldest granddaughter to Queen Elizabeth II via her daughter Anne, Princess Royal -- was a child of about seven and seventh in line for the throne[[note]]As of April 2021, she is nineteenth in the line of succession and likely to drop further as time goes on[[/note]].
71* Margaret Valentine in ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'' was the US Secretary of Agriculture. When [[{{Gendercide}} all the men suddenly died]], she was suddenly promoted all the way to President because everyone ahead of her in the succession was either male or died in the ensuing chaos.
72[[/folder]]
73
74[[folder:Comic Strips]]
75* An arc in ''ComicStrip/{{Doonesbury}}'' had the characters (during the Reagan administration) playing a computerized war game. Overreaction to a "Soviet provocation" results in nuclear war. In one of the last strips, the line of succession has resulted in Secretary of the Interior James Watt being President -- with nothing much left to preside over. Watt's perceived anti-environmentalism is referenced with the remark, "Guess he got rid of all those trees."
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Fan Works]]
79* In ''Fanfic/TheParselmouthOfGryffindor'', lowly clerk Percy Weasley becomes the Acting Minister after Cornelius Fudge disappears, because, after pondering it long and hard, [[ItMakesSenseInContext Hermione and Slughorn]] decide that no other person in the Ministry is both qualified and willing to take the job.
80* In ''Fanfic/BlackSky'', no one would have thought the Prince of Sabina able to father a son due to his obsessive mourning for his late wife. The Zabini are not happy with him when they discover that yes, he ''did'' have a bastard son but never acknowledged him, and now they have to find the kid.
81* Prince Vegeta in ''Fanfic/AGladDay'' plans to throw a wrench in political schemes and protect his lover Bulma by naming Romayn ([[FantasticCasteSystem a third-class child]]) his heir. [[spoiler: Ironically his half-breed son Trunks winds up holding the title of king until Vegeta turns out to not be dead.]]
82* The epilogue of ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/12441674/1/The-War-of-the-Worlds-Gravity-Falls-Edition The War of the Worlds: Gravity Falls Edition]]'' establishes that in the aftermath of the Martian invasion, a UN-backed provisional American government is set up in Honolulu, with the role of acting President falling to the Secretary of Veteran Affairs -- a footnote by the author makes a point of explaining just how far down the line of succession that position is (second to last, in fact).
83* ''Fanfic/OneDayAtATimeNyame'':
84** It's outright stated in the summary that Jason Todd was never supposed to be Batman. According to WordOfGod and the story itself, he only got the job after Dick Grayson's death due to Tim Drake (the presumed successor after Dick) outright refusing the mantle for his own reasons. Even then, it was supposed to be temporary -- Damian Wayne wanted it, but he was too young and inexperienced at the time to take it up properly. Then they both ended up dying a mere two years later, making Jason Batman permanently.
85** This also applies to Wayne Enterprises and the Wayne fortune in general. Jason was forced to succeed his younger brother Tim as CEO to the former after his death, and the death of Damian left Jason and their sister Cassandra Cain the only known heirs to the latter until their younger sister Helena Wayne showed up. As Jason was a StreetUrchin that only met and was adopted by Bruce due to chance, he's just about the last person anyone expected to be Bruce's ultimate successor in the end.
86* In ''Fanfic/SongsOfTheSpheres'', [[spoiler:no one had expected Toph to be the successor to Queen Luna of Lai.]]
87* ''Fanfic/GodSaveTheEsteem'' does this with the Lawndale High social structure. All of the popular girls go to war with each other, spreading vicious rumors until all of them have reputations as frigid sluts who have abortions and are riddled with [=STDs=]. By the time it's over the boys at school are too afraid to date any of them. Instead they start to gravitate toward [[https://dariawiki.org/wiki/Cindy_(backgrounder) Cindy]], an OCStandIn who was apparently the cutest/most popular girl who wasn't cute/popular ''enough'' to be a target of anyone's wrath.
88* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': Chapter 2 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'' reveals Thorax is this. He's the first normal drone to ascend to Royal status since the last of the original generation of Queens did so; Chrysalis had no Royal offspring to take her place, so there wasn't much of a choice.
89* In ''[[https://forums.spacebattles.com/threads/the-devil-on-the-throne.1088136/ The Devil on the Throne]]'', an airship accident kills the royal family of Albion, and the last lead the government can find to the next in line was the possibility that one prince who went on regular diplomatic missions to Berun may have fathered a child on a mistress there at some point. After some searching, they find the last surviving member of the royal line, an twelve-year-old orphan named Tanya Degurechaff. ''Major'' Tanya ''von'' Degurechaff, better known as the Devil of the Rhine, the most feared mage in Europe, commander of the deadliest unit of a military that Albion is at war with. For her own part, Tanya had been intellectually aware that her father might have been Albish due to the physical proximity of the orphanage she was raised in to the Albish embassy, but she had no clue that he had been anyone of actual importance.
90* ''Fanfic/ToForgeAnHeir'': After the death of Arnold Arryn, Rhaenyra finds herself heir to the Vale, as Jeyne Arryn's closest living relative after their aunt Amanda (who is very unlikely to outlive either of them). Since Rhaenyra is heir to the Iron Throne and can't succeed Jeyne as Lady of the Eyrie herself, the position is instead given to her second son by Laenor, Lucas.
91* ''Fanfic/TheWillOfTheEmpire'': The contingency that Darth Vader puts into place right before the Battle of Endor involves officially declaring himself the Emperor's heir, and secretly naming his son Luke as his heir in turn. When Admiral Piett and the other officers entrusted with this information make it public following the battle, ''everyone'' (especially Luke himself) is shocked to learn that the next official ruler of the Empire is one of the people leading the fight against it. Most of the conflict in the story comes from the various Imperial factions that are refusing to accept Luke's ascension to the throne.
92* ''Fanfic/{{Wikibending}}'': King Bumi was the [[RoyalBastard illegitimate son]] of the previous King of Omashu, and so was never expected to take the throne. However, Bumi became the heir when his legitimate half-brother was killed early into the Hundred Year War at the Delegation of Reckoning.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:Film — Live-Action]]
96* ''By Dawn's Early Light'', an adaptation of ''Trinity's Child'': As the result of a nuclear attack on the U.S., the Secretary of the Interior assumes the Presidency. Later, the President is found to still be alive, and a power struggle ensues.
97* ''Film/EagleEye''. [[spoiler:ARIIA, The Pentagon's supercomputer, attempts to assassinate the president, vice president, and the entire line of succession (except for the Secretary of Defense, to whom ARIIA plans to pass the presidency).]]
98* In ''Film/TheGodfather'', Don Vito Corleone always knew that his son Sonny would follow him into crime given his temperament, and he knew his son Fredo would fall in because there was nothing else he could do, but everybody expected Michael to be kept out of the business. Ultimately, it is Michael who succeeds Vito as Don of the family [[spoiler:after Sonny is murdered during the mob wars, and Fredo is passed over because no one believed he could do it.]]
99* ''Film/InTheNameOfTheKing: A VideoGame/DungeonSiege Tale'' has the Kingdom of Ehb ruled by the wise King Conreid, whose wife and only son were killed in a raid many years before during the kingdom's period of strife. The only heir is the King's nephew Duke Fallow, for whom royalty is just a way to enjoy himself. Fallow may be good with a sword and a bow but is terrible at ruling a nation or waging a war. He is even willing to ally himself with the BigBad in order to hasten Conreid's death. The BigBad poisons the King and, although the King's magus manages to remove the poison, Conreid's life is coming to an end. Meanwhile, Farmer is... well, a farmer, who was raised to value hard work and self-reliance. The King's magus brings the two together and reveals that Farmer is Conreid's lost son, saved from the raid by a stableboy and raised as his own. Just as Conreid dies (thanks to the poison and Fallow's arrow), Fallow laughs that he is now in charge and, even knowing about the treachery, the King's loyal general can't raise a hand against his lord. The magus then announces the existence of Conreid's son, and Fallow is arrested (or executed, in an alternate scene). Luckily for Ehb, Farmer, having grown up among the people instead of being pampered in the castle, shares his father's values.
100* In ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'':
101** Villain Pascal Sauvage gets the Queen to abdicate so that he, a descendant of William the Conqueror, is named her successor.
102** Also, Johnny English himself only gets promoted to field agent because every single other field agent gets killed. Because of him.
103* The main character in ''Film/KindHeartsAndCoronets'' becomes a duke after the deaths of the eight people ahead of him, all of whom are played by Alec Guinness. (He murders most of them, though a couple save him the trouble by dying on their own initiative, such as an elderly man who dies of shock when hearing he has been made duke.)
104* This is the entire plot of ''Film/KingRalph''. In this case, it involves the British Royal Family, and the person selected had no idea he was in line in the first place. (His father was the product of a brief affair between an American woman and a prince.)
105* ''Film/KullTheConqueror'' starts with the eponymous barbarian (played by Creator/KevinSorbo) being denied in joining the king's army, as all of them are noble-born. Then the king goes berserk and murders most of his successors before being mortally wounded by Kull. While the captain of the guard and a nobleman bicker over who should claim the crown, the king decides that all three should be punished and gives the crown to Kull before dying. The priesthood approves, and, suddenly, the captain of the guard must bow down before a barbarian he has just rejected from the army.
106* ''Film/MarsAttacks!''. After the death of all top U.S. officials, at the end of the movie the President's daughter is apparently in charge of the government.
107* This is the fuel that drives the plot of ''Film/MrDeeds'' (and by that virtue ''Film/MrDeedsGoesToTown''). Upon the untimely [[FamilyUnfriendlyDeath freezing-at-the-top-of-Everest]] of Preston Blake, the entirety of Blake Media and its [[ImpossiblyCoolWealth vast fortune]] now belongs to the only known relative of Blake, Longfellow Deeds (played by Creator/AdamSandler, or by Gary Cooper in the original film), a greeting card writer and pizza shop owner from a small town in New Hampshire. This is played twice, being that [[spoiler:in the climax of the film, when Deeds gives up and leaves town, he leaves the company up to his [[EvilLawyerJoke crapsack lawyer]], who tries to fire ''everyone'' (here meaning 50 thousand employees). Just before he takes control, Deed's girlfriend pops back up with Blake's diary and a worker's manifest, which points to... Blake's longtime butler, John Turturro, who may very well be his son!]]
108* Used as a one-off joke[=/=]TakeThat at the end of ''Film/MyFellowAmericans''. [[spoiler:Because they were corrupt and caught,]] The President and Vice President both resign. Former Presidents Kramer and Douglas (the protagonists) realize that that means the Speaker of the House is next in line, and Douglas remarks "Oh no, not '''him!'''". At the time of filming, the speaker was Newt Gingrich.
109* ''Film/PopeJoan'': When [[UsefulNotes/ThePope Pope]] Sergius II dies everyone expects a new Pope to be elected from among the powerful families running Rome, not the advisor and healer called Johannus Anglicus - who is a woman named Johanna that disguised herself as a man prior to coming to Rome. She and her lover Gerold are looking to get out of Rome in a hurry because whoever the next Pope was he would not likely be someone friendly to her given Johanna being a close advisor to Sergius. When Johanna and Sergius hear footsteps coming down the hall they fear they are too late and are about to be killed, but it's a deacon announcing that she had just been elected Pope.
110* ''Film/ShanghaiKnights'' had a noble who was way, way far down the line of succession hatch a conspiracy to kill everybody ahead of him so he could ascend to the throne.
111--> '''Roy O'Bannon''': Aren't you, like, the twentieth to the throne?\
112'''Lord Rathbone''': (''annoyed'') Tenth.
113* ''Film/ShinGodzilla'': Satomi is an obscure minister of wildlife and fisheries who doesn't even appear prior to the core cabinet being wiped out, and he only becomes the new prime minister due to to party loyalty making the government secretaries rush him into the role.
114* In ''Film/{{Stardust}}'', after the king dies, his sons kill each other so the remaining one can take the throne. They all end up dead, but Tristan's mother reveals that she is the king's only daughter, meaning that Tristan is the only surviving male heir and thus, the new king.
115* In ''Film/TheWolverine'', Shingen Yashida thought he would inherit his father Ichiro's corporation after the latter's impending death. Then Ichiro snubbed Shingen by naming Shingen's daughter Mariko as his sole heir in a new will. Mariko isn't happy about this either, since she never wanted that much power and authority in the first place. [[spoiler:Ichiro was plotting to cheat death all along by stealing Wolverine's HealingFactor. The reason he named Mariko his successor instead of Shingen was because Shingen would never be content to be a puppet with authority in name only.]]
116* No one expected a newly named Russian Cardinal to be elected Pope in ''Film/TheShoesOfTheFisherman'', least of all the newly named Russian Cardinal.
117* ''Film/XXxStateOfTheUnion'': The Secretary of Defense attempts a coup that will wipe out key members of the government during the President's State of the Union address, leaving him in charge.
118[[/folder]]
119
120[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
121* Laura Roslin from ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|2003}}'', who as the Secretary of Education was 43rd in line of succession. She became President after the Cylons' nuclear attack killed everyone higher-ranking than she.
122** She was actually asked to resign her position by the President a few days earlier, after going against his wishes when dealing with a teacher's strike. Her resignation would have been made official when she got back to Caprica from the ''Galactica''.
123* Brazilian mini-series ''O Brado Retumbante'' tells the story of an honest congressman who is elected Speaker of the House with the aid of a corrupt senator looking forward to use him as a puppet. He then suddenly becomes the leader of the nation when both the President and the Vice President suddenly die in a helicopter crash (as a rule, heads of state and their immediate successors don't take the same transport IRL when it can be avoided, specifically to avert things like this).
124* ''Series/{{Deputy}}'': Bill Hollister becomes acting sheriff as he was the longest serving member of the previous sheriff's mounted posse (interpreted as the LASD's mounted division).
125* ''Series/DesignatedSurvivor'' centers on this trope. After a bombing during the State of the Union address takes out all the higher-ranking members of government, Tom Kirkman, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, is the only one able to take on the presidency. Taking the office amongst the ashes of the United States Federal government is only the beginning of his problems -- amongst other issues, he had been asked to resign his cabinet post shortly before the bombing. In fact, he was named [[TitleDrop designated survivor]] precisely ''because'' President Richmond didn't want him at the address.
126** Kimble Hookstraten was one of the two members of Congress to survive due to being designated as the designated survivor for the Republican party.
127* ''Series/DoctorWho'': In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E4AliensOfLondon "Aliens of London"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E5WorldWarThree "World War Three"]], the villains' plan revolves around this. They make the Prime Minister [[DeadlyEuphemism "disappear"]] and arrange for the Cabinet to be stranded outside London, leaving the most senior government Member of Parliament in the city to take the role of acting PM during a crisis involving an alien spacecraft crashing in the city a man who has been [[KillAndReplace killed and impersonated]] by the villains' leader. When the crisis is over Harriet Jones, junior MP from Flydale North who is the only elected representative remaining in 10 Downing Street, ends up in the spotlight and is selected as the new PM.
128* In ''Series/TheFreshPrinceOfBelAir'', the episode "Nice Lady" sees Will acting as a guide for Lady Penelope Fowler, the daughter of butler Geoffrey's old employers; when Will states that Lady Penelope is "just a girl", Geoffrey responds with "''Just a girl? Master William, if all 895 members of the Royal Family suddenly died, she would be the next Queen of England''."
129* ''Series/GameOfThrones'':
130** Jon Snow, Ned Stark's [[HeroicBastard bastard son]], who had previously forsaken all rights to own land and wear crowns when he joined the Night's Watch, succeeds his half-brother Robb Stark [[spoiler:as the King in the North when the Northern lords proclaim Jon as their king. It's also revealed that he's the trueborn son of Rhaegar Targaryen and Ned's sister Lyanna Stark, meaning he's the rightful king of the Seven Kingdoms...''if'' that knowledge becomes public.]]
131** Egg (King Aegon V Targaryen) was not the eldest son and was not expected to become king. Maester Aemon was not the eldest son either. But the heir to the throne died, and Aemon refused the throne due to his vows as a maester (and not wanting to fight his own brother) and left to join the Night's Watch to remove himself from court. Thus the crown passed to Aegon V.
132* ''Series/Jericho2006''. Nuclear attacks leave the Secretary of Health and Human Services as the highest surviving official. [[DividedStatesOfAmerica Some people, such as a junior senator from Wyoming, do not agree...]]
133* On ''Series/TheLastShip'', former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Jeff Michener, normally number 12 on the Presidential line of succession (a fact he points out himself), is the only member of the line who happens to have a natural [[TheImmune immunity]] to the [[ThePlague Red Flu]], leaving him the highest-ranking surviving member of the US federal government and default President. At the end of Season 2, a judge formally swears him in, making it official.
134** Season 3 reveals that for his Vice-President, Michener chooses Howard Oliver, the Mayor of St. Louis... mostly just because that happens to be the city [[SuddenlySignificantCity chosen as the new capital]], and because Oliver did a fairly decent job managing the quarantine there. [[spoiler: Midway through the season, Michener is assassinated by TheConspiracy, and Oliver becomes President.]]
135* A sketch in one of Creator/SpikeMilligan's shows had a Britain devastated after a nuclear war where the national anthem was "God Bless Mrs Ethel Stokes".
136* ''Series/RedDwarf'' plays with this trope, albeit with the role of captain rather than political office. True to the trope, Rimmer was very far from being captain and then everyone between him and the position was killed (as in, he was outranked by everyone except one person and that was the only person not killed). Rimmer likes to think of himself as being in effective command of the ship as the most senior crewmember. However, no one other than Rimmer seems to consider Rimmer the commanding officer. An unusual case as technically the list of people killed [[VirtualGhost includes Rimmer]].
137* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'': In "[[Recap/SupernaturalS12E12StuckInTheMiddleWithYou Stuck In The Middle (With You)]]" it's revealed this is how Crowley became the King of Hell. Following the end of Season 5 [[spoiler:Azazel, Lilith, and Alistair]] are dead and [[spoiler:Lucifer is back in his cage]] leaving Hell without leadership. Crowley [[OfferedTheCrown offered the crown]] to Ramiel the Prince of Hell, and not only did Ramiel turn it down, he said the ''other'' Princes would all turn it down too. He suggests that Crowley take the crown before some other "young and hungry" demon does instead.
138* Joked about in the first episode of ''Series/{{Taskmaster}}''; during his introduction for Tim Key, one of the contestants and a performance poet, Greg Davies sarcastically notes that Key will one day be Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom "if there's some sort of massive poet disaster."
139* ''Series/TheWestWing'':
140** During a kidnapping crisis, the President temporally steps down, and since there is no Vice-President at that moment, he appoints the Speaker of The House as the new commander-in-chief. Bear in mind, in this scenario a Democrat is passing the power to a Republican. And the Republican who gets the job? Film/KingRalph, himself.
141** In another episode, the president meets with the Designated Survivor before a State of the Union and he advises him on what to do should the unthinkable happen (notably, in real life, the designated survivor is never briefed or advised on emergency procedures, presumably to prevent this second-rank secretary getting in the way of people who actually know what they are doing).
142--->'''President Bartlet''': First thing always is national security. Get your commanders together. Appoint joint chiefs. Appoint a chairman. Take us to Defcon 4. Have the governors send emergency delegates to Washington. The assistant attorney general is gonna be the acting A. G. If he tells you he wants to bring out the National Guard, do what he tells you. You got a best friend?\
143'''Roger Tribby, Secretary of Agriculture''': Yes, sir.\
144'''Bartlet''': Is he smarter than you?\
145'''Tribby''': Yes, sir.\
146'''Bartlet''': Would you trust him with your life?\
147'''Tribby''': Yes, sir.\
148'''Bartlet''': That's your chief of staff... Oh, in the [White House] residence, in the second floor, [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking the bathroom at the end of the hall. You have to jiggle the handle of the toilet door.]]
149[[/folder]]
150
151[[folder:Podcasts]]
152* A major plot-point in ''Podcast/EighteenSixtyFive''. Nobody, not even Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, expected Johnson to become president. Lincoln primarily took him on Vice President in hopes to keeping Border States from joining the Confederacy. Johnson becoming president at such a crucial times for America, and his opposition to many of Lincoln’s policies, forms the bulk of the plot and his conflict with Edwin Stanton.
153* ''Podcast/WelcomeToNightVale'': In the Night Vale mayoral election, neither of the two candidates, Hiram [=McDaniels=] and The Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives In Your Home, won, the office instead passing to [[spoiler:[[DarkHorseVictory Dana Cardinal]]]].
154[[/folder]]
155
156[[folder:Video Games]]
157* ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedRevelations'': The database entry for [[UsefulNotes/SuleimanTheMagnificent Prince Suleiman]] explicitly describes him as the last man anyone would've expected to become Sultan, what with his father Prince Selim being third in line for the throne. By the time Ezio meets him, Suleiman is but an unambitious, learned GentlemanAndAScholar who is fond of travelling and has a passion for the arts and culture. During the events of the game, [[TheUsurper his father is waging war against Sultan Bayezid II]], who ultimately names him Sultan in [[BigBad Ahmet's]] place; upon his return to Constantinople, [[PrincelingRivalry Selim murders his own brother]] by [[SinisterSuffocation strangling him]] and [[DisneyVillainDeath dropping him off a cliff to his death]], after which he reigns as Sultan for 3 measly years before dying to sickness and passing the throne to Suleiman, who goes on to become Sultan of the Ottoman Empire at the very young age of 26.
158* In ''VideoGame/BetrayalAtKrondor'', this is part of Gorath's backstory. He becomes chieftain at the age of ''twelve'' when his tribe very nearly gets massacred, including the former chieftain, his father. Oh, and a dark elf like him would otherwise be expected to spend at least a century or two getting prepped for the position and would need to have lots of accomplishments to his name before being considered even marginally eligible.
159* GDI Director Redmond Boyle in ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerTiberiumWars'' was originally the GDI Treasurer, and was the only ranking member of GDI government not on the ''Philadelphia'' when it was destroyed. However, it is revealed in the ExpansionPack that Kane purposely manipulated events so that Boyle would become Director.
160* Happens at times in ''VideoGame/CrusaderKings'' and its sequel. There's a couple of major reasons. Firstly, because this is the Middle Ages, essentially anyone in the line of succession may abruptly die of pneumonia/assassinations/hunting accidents at any time. Secondly, some of the succession laws can be kind of hard to predict, specifically Elective, since in the first game it's largely based on the number of provinces and so can swap at any time, while in the second game it depends on how the vassals feel at the precise moment the previous ruler dies. Lastly and most importantly, sometimes the minor distant relation with no real expectation of getting the throne is in the player's dynasty, and [[VideogameCrueltyPotential the player will stop at nothing to make this trope happen]].
161* ''Franchise/DragonAge'':
162** ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'': When King Cailan dies at Ostagar, the only member of the Theirin bloodline left is his half-brother Alistair, who is not only a [[HeroicBastard bastard]] but a supposedly politically neutral [[TheOrder Grey Warden]]. The only other viable candidate for the throne is Cailan's widow Anora, who is herself only second-generation nobility with no blood claim to the crown at all.
163** In ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'', meanwhile, the position of Viscount of [[WretchedHive Kirkwall]] is left vacant for years after the old Viscount and his son are killed, with [[ChurchMilitant Knight Commander Meredith]] seizing control and refusing to allow a new appointment to be made. After Meredith's downfall, the post can (briefly) be filled by [[TheHero Hawke]], who soon disappears and leaves leadership of the city to [[BeleagueredBureaucrat Seneschal Bran]] and [[DaChief Guard-Captain Aveline]]. Eventually, once the main plot of ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition'' has run its course, a new Viscount is finally named: Varric Tethras, an author and merchant who isn't even human.
164* Happens twice in the same country in ''VideoGame/DragonQuestVIII''. King Clavius of Argonia only became the king because his elder brother deserted the country. Then his useless son [[PrinceCharmless Prince Charmles]] is expected to be his heir, until [[spoiler:the RiteOfPassage ceremony, where he needs to get a jewel called an Argon Heart from an Argon Lizard. The heroes are sent to assist him, and get a decently-sized Heart after obtaining a bunch of small ones. Then he goes back to town and ''buys'' a larger one, which his father witnesses. In the GoodEnding, the Hero is revealed to be Clavius's long-lost brother's son, making him a potential heir. And care to guess which potential heir produced a legitimately-obtained Argon Heart?]]
165* In ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'', after TheEmperor [[Creator/PatrickStewart Uriel Septim]] was assassinated, along with all four of his sons, it turns out that he has an unknown illegitimate son -- Martin Septim -- who becomes Emperor after you deliver the RequisiteRoyalRegalia... and then [[EscortMission deliver Martin]]. Though [[spoiler: he has to make a HeroicSacrifice before he is formally declared Emperor by lighting the Dragonfires, leaving the throne empty.]]
166** In Skyrim, this is the outcome of several major guild/faction questlines, where the Player Character starts off as a new recruit and running a few errands for higher ups. Before long they are getting involved in some larger crisis the group is dealing with, which inevitably leads to the death of the current leader (or in the case of [[spoiler: the Thieves' Guild]] their exposure as a traitor). It falls to the player and some of their mentors in the guild/faction to resolve it, and at the end they are chosen as the new leader over several more senior members who have been around for years.
167* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'', after the succesive deaths of President Shinra and his son, new President Rufus, the various less competent Shinra executives enjoy a brief stint running the show.
168* A SuccessionCrisis in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTactics'' leaves nearly everyone with a semi-legitimate claim to the throne either dead or otherwise disposed of, paving the way for Delita, a once-poor [[FarmBoy stable boy]] who worked his way up through the military via masterful XanatosSpeedChess, to take the throne of Ivalice by marrying Ovelia, the only surviving claimant just before her coronation. Ovelia's ascension was just as unlikely and just as masterfully orchestrated, only by powers beyond her own control. She too was a commoner who was [[ChangelingFantasy switched at birth]] with the ''real'' Princess Ovelia, who had already died, and raised as the ailing king's younger sister.[[note]]Though there is some indication that she might have actually been the daughter of the previous king, whose dynasty had been deposed long before the start of the game.[[/note]] She was then used as a political pawn by Duke Goltana, who intended to place her on the throne, assume power as her regent, and then have her executed. Ultimately, Goltana is betrayed and murdered (by Delita), even though his faction wins the War of the Lions, so Ovelia ascends to the throne as a proper queen ... or would have, had Delita not married her and become king by default. [[spoiler:He then goes on to kill her, but that's just because she went crazy and tried to kill ''him'' first]].
169* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'' sees command of the [[TheEmpire Imperial]] army fall into the lap of Judge Zargabaath, the rarely seen low man on the Judge Magistrate totem pole simply because all the other Judges are either dead or have jumped ship.
170* Ashnard in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemPathOfRadiance'' killed his father and everyone who was ahead of him in order to get the throne of Daein, starting from fairly far down the line of succession. The sequel claims he killed everyone else off by [[spoiler:making his father sign a blood contract, then invoking it, and everyone but his father died randomly in what people thought was a plague]]. This is unpopular among the fanbase as it seems to have been thrown in there to demonstrate the power of the [[spoiler:blood contract]] (which was never mentioned in the first game), and takes away from Ashnard's personality of loving to kill people firsthand.
171** Also from ''Path of Radiance'' is Elincia, who was a [[HiddenBackupPrince Hidden Backup Princess]] that most of her country didn't know ''existed'' until word of her leading the Crimean army spread. The only reason she's next in line for the throne is that her father and uncle died. [[spoiler:Actually, her uncle survived and is BrainwashedAndCrazy, but same difference. And he lets her rule when he's cured in the sequel.]] This [[DeconstructedTrope has repercussions in the sequel]], where her first years as Queen are difficult due to many of the nobles disapproving of her.
172** And finally, [[spoiler: Micaiah]] in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemRadiantDawn'' becomes Queen of Daein, despite having no ties to its royal family at all, due to Pelleas [[spoiler:either dying, or being revealed to not be Ashnard's son. And Ashnard's ''real'' son isn't aware of his heritage and likely doesn't care]].
173** A more positive example is in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemGenealogyOfTheHolyWar''. Erinys was just an elite Pegasus Knight from Silesse, but is not of any nobility nor did she possess a Holy Blood, but after the disastrous Battle of Belhalla, the supposed successor/Prince, Lewyn (canonically her husband) was killed, and then his mother Queen Rahna was also killed defending her home, and since her more capable sister Annand has been long dead, Rahna entrusted Erinys as the next Queen of Silesse. Erinys went on to be a loving High Queen popular amongst the population and her children looked up to her.
174** In the same game's epilogue, Verdane will only has a successor ''period'' if Jamke married someone in the first generation, in which case one of his children will inherit it, regardless of who they are. Everyone else in its royal family died during Sigurd's invasion in the first generation, and the country has been lawless ever since. (And remains that way if Jamke wasn't paired)
175** [[spoiler:Hinoka]] in the ''Conquest'' route and [[spoiler: Leo]] in the ''Birthright'' route of ''VideoGame/FireEmblemFates'': neither of them expected to succeed to the throne cause they were third in line to their respective thrones, but [[spoiler: both Hinoka's brothers died before her and Leo's brother died and his sister abdicated.]] Technically speaking, [[spoiler:the Avatar becoming king/queen of Valla]] in ''Revelations'' also counts, first off because the country technically ''didn't exist'' [[spoiler:or rather had been cursed into being forgotten]], and second because [[spoiler:Azura]] was the rightful heir, but she willingly gives it up in [[spoiler:the Avatar's]] favor (unless they're married, in which case they're [[RulingCouple co-rulers]]).
176** In the ''Verdant Wind'' route of ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'', it's [[spoiler: Byleth, not Claude]] who ends up ruling the United Kingdom of Fodlan in the end, as [[spoiler: Claude would rather focus on reforming and ruling his former homeland of Almyra]]. [[spoiler: Byleth]] also becomes this on the ''Silver Snow'' route, as [[spoiler: the ruling parties of all Fodlan's major powers died or went missing in the war]]. The last one is particularly interesting, as [[spoiler:Byleth has two separate claims as both mother and grandchild to the previous ruler ([[ItMakesSenseInContext it's complicated]]), something Rhea was aware of. Byleth, however, just considered it a part of their MysteriousPast and never would have used this to legitimize a claim until the situation was dropped in their lap.]]
177* Subverted in ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic''. Canderous ''seems'' an unlikely pick to become leader and de facto patriarch of the Mandalorian people. But [[AllthereInTheManual the backstory and a few hints he drops in-game]] point to the fact he wasn't just a low-ranking {{Mook}} in Mandalore's forces; he'd merely fallen on hard times after his peoples' defeat. Revan sealed the deal by handing over his predecessor's mask and telling him that he's in charge now.
178* In the backstory of ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsOfColdSteel'', Emperor Dreichels the Lionheart was the illegitimate son of a common-born mistress, and such wasn't technically in the line of succession for the throne of Erebonia at all. But after a [[SuccessionCrisis five-way civil war]] left him the last man standing in the royal family, he was crowned anyway.
179* The Reaper invasion in ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'' leads to several of these happening:
180** General Adrien Victus finds himself promoted to Primarch of the turian race (essentially Commander-in-Chief of the entire military-structured Turian Hierarchy) in the opening days of the Reaper War. This comes as an extreme surprise to him: while he's a very competent military commander, the fact that he has a habit of ignoring standard military doctrine in favor of unorthodox tactics means that he's always been passed up for further promotion. The fact that ''he'' of all people has been promoted so high up is a sign of just how badly the war is going for the turians.
181** Later, it's possible for Shepard to tease Garrus about the possibility of becoming Primarch Vakarian, given his evident yet nebulous high position in the turian military (he has no official rank, but an impressive amount of resources were laid at his disposal a few months before the Reapers finally attacked). Garrus is unwilling to even discuss the possibility.
182** The Codex mentions in passing that Admiral Hackett, recently the commander of the Systems Alliance Fifth Fleet, is now the ''de facto'' leader of humanity as a whole, due to his rallying of surviving human forces after the initial Reaper assault, and his leveraging the surviving colonies to get support for [[spoiler: the Crucible]], while trying to delay the Reaper advance. By the end of the game, he is arguably the single most powerful organic being in the galaxy by right of his position leading [[spoiler: the combined military forces of the entire Milky Way galaxy]] in the climactic battle.
183** If you completed the "Bring Down the Sky" {{DLC}} in ''VideoGame/MassEffect1'', a sidequest reveals that Balak, the BigBad of that mission, is currently the highest-ranking military officer in the batarian forces. This is a sign of just how badly the batarians were decimated during the initial invasion -- Balak is a ''captain.''
184** ''VideoGame/MassEffectAndromeda'': Director Tann was eighth in line for leadership of the Andromeda Initiative (he was originally Head of Finances and Accounting), but an unexpected [[NegativeSpaceWedgie cosmic exploding spiderweb]] destroyed most of the ship and left the survivors ripe for lynching by rioting colonists, leaving the arrogant and hard-ass Tann in a position he was clearly never meant for.
185* In ''VideoGame/MaxPayne2'', the DirtyCoward Vinnie Gognitti, a fairly low-level middle management mobster from the first game, has managed to become the local leader of the mafia, most likely due to Max killing everyone higher on the totem pole than him in the first game.
186* According to [[http://web.archive.org/web/20040818123730/http://archive.gamespy.com/articles/september00/mech4mates4/ pre-release articles]], Ian Dresari from ''[[VideoGame/MechWarrior MechWarrior 4]]'', due to being third in line of succession for his family, ended up becoming a lazy, party-loving JerkAss, so he was disowned and went to the military. Then the rest of his family is killed, so he suddenly finds himself as the apparently only heir and a resistance leader. Meanwhile, his cousin is installed as a [[PuppetKing Puppet Duke]] by the enemy.
187* In the ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights'' module ''VideoGame/TheBastardOfKosigan'', your character is the illegitimate son of the present Count's younger brother; the present Count has two legitimate and one illegitimate son, and the elder legitimate son has a wife and son. Over the course of the game, all five people in line ahead of you (your father is already dead) get killed off by you/Alex/each other/French assassins, leaving your character with the best claim. The French plot initially involved killing you off as well, which would have left a French general with the title by virtue of being of a branch of the family that diverged several centuries ago.
188* King Airyglyph in ''VideoGame/StarOceanTillTheEndOfTime'', who was known as Airyglyph the Unlikely.
189* ''VideoGame/StarWarsTheOldRepublic: Knights of the Fallen Empire'': during the Eternal Empire Conquest of the galaxy, a rival Sith Empire has its ruling system decimated to the point that the highest official able to negotiate the treaty is the Minister of Logistics. In the aftermath, the only Sith of the ruling Dark Council not dead or in hiding is Darth Acina, an extremely minor character, who proclaims herself the new Empress.
190* ''VideoGame/TacticsOgre'' is in love with this trope. The previous monarch, King Dorgalua, was a commoner who managed to become the first king of Valeria by defeating his biggest rival, King Roderick, in the middle of a bloody ethnic civil war. Dorgalia has a legitimate son with a Bacrum noblewoman, but he dies at a young age and so does the Queen. This leaves Valeria in yet another civil war, which each one of the ethnic groups being led by a different pretender, all trying to become King. Ultimately it turns out that Catiua, the protagonist Denim's adopted sister, is the unknown bastard daughter of King Dorgalua, and thus the rightful Queen. Depending upon the ending, either she can be the UnexpectedSuccessor, or it can be Denim himself if she gets killed. Denim's military might is really the only thing that holds together either crowning. Literally every other rival is dead by then. [[spoiler:God only knows who will become King in the bad ending, where Denim gets assassinated on his coronation day. But Catiua becoming Queen seems to be the canon ending.]]
191* Peony in ''VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss''. He's the ''illegitimate'' son of the emperor, when his half brothers all die he ends up being shipped back to the capitol for CramSchool a la governing, instead of going down a cadet line, or some other noble house. In this case, "unexpected" only describes an outside perspective, though: because The Score (the prophecy that controls the world's fate) is a completely accurate prediction of the future, Peony's father had been told that he would eventually ascend to the throne. That was why Peony was sent away from the court intrigues to live incognito, where he ran off from his guards to play with commoner children.
192* This can happen to the player in the ''VideoGame/TotalWar'' series.
193** In ''VideoGame/ShogunTotalWar'', because of the way that births of heirs, aging, and succession are modelled, if you fail to manage your family properly, odd stuff can happen. Only the player's current character can die of old age or sire children, and the chance is random on any turn with penalties for age. For instance, the 90-year-old uncle of the current Daimyo, immune to age since he's not the head of the family, could be the only one left if the Daimyo's sons all die in battle or assassinations. He succeeds the throne when his 60-some-year-old nephew dies, and then himself dies the next turn on a random old-age roll buoyed up by 30 years of penalties, ending the game.
194** In later games in the ''Total War'' series, the game doesn't end, your country "merely" goes into civil war as any general with a drop of royal blood tries to claim the throne. The player is allowed to pick one of the claimants to make the ''de facto'' legitimate heir, and everyone else gets treated as a Rebel faction by the game. Players at risk of this have been known to marry a princess to their best general, which gives him a claim to the throne too. After all, if you're gonna have to fight your own guys, might as well do it with your best commander and biggest army. In in-game terms, this can result in a minor lord, knight, or even ''commoner'' being vaulted onto the throne. Which, considering how one of the three Great Unifiers of Japan was a peasant-born samurai, makes it a rather delicious bit of irony for a player.
195[[/folder]]
196
197[[folder:Visual Novels]]
198* [[spoiler: Eva Ushiromiya]] in ''VisualNovel/UminekoWhenTheyCry''. More exactly, in the third arc. [[spoiler:Although she's not actually ''that'' far down the chain, there was no reason to expect her brother Krauss to pass away, and after he does, the hope would be that Jessica's husband could succeed him.]] In addition, [[spoiler: Eva has the HeirClubForMen baggage to deal with.]]
199** Kinzo Ushiromiya himself is one of these too.
200* ''VisualNovel/GalaxyAngel'' opens up with the exiled Prince Eonia launching an OrbitalBombardment on planet Transbaal, [[RulingFamilyMassacre killing Emperor Gerald and every other member of the royal family]]. As a result, the only remaining member with a legitimate claim to the throne is Prince Shiva, who was at the White Moon at the time. Shiva was an ilegitimate child, not born of any of the Emperor's known wives [[spoiler:but from a one-night stand he had with Moon Goddess Shatoyarn]].
201[[/folder]]
202
203[[folder:Webcomics]]
204* Sil'lice Val'Sharen of ''Webcomic/{{Drowtales}}'' as a [[MiddleChildSyndrome middle child]] of the queen Diva'ratrika, never really received much attention from her mother, who outright thought Sil'lice did not display traits worthy of being her heir. Then the Nidraa'chal war started and three of Sil'lice's sisters betrayed their clan, killed off their mother and successfully broke the will of the last daughter of Divaratrika, taking full control of their clan at the same time. Sil'lice was the only one who remained true to their mother and is the last true Val'Sharen and now hides among the Val'Sarghress, taking every effort to destroy her sisters and keep the Val'Sharen clan true.[[spoiler:Diva, a former slave whose body now contains the soul of Diva'ratrika, is working alongside Sil'lice, well keeping the fact she is Diva'ratrika secret.]]
205* ''Webcomic/ItsWalky'': Walky's mother becomes Big Boss after the previous one is killed and everyone ahead of her on the SEMME hierarchy is too old, crazy, or dead to take over.
206* In ''Webcomic/LegostarGalactica'', [[BeleagueredBureaucrat Carl Weyland]] is introduced as the Minister of Restructuring, the man in charge of ensuring a smooth transition from one President to the next. Given that the Presidents and Vice Presidents he's serving under tend to be Sith Lords with the ChronicBackstabbingDisorder that comes with, he's got his work cut out for him. When the Sith are overthown wholesale, Weyland, suddenly without a new President to transition to, ends up stepping into the top spot himself. Fortunately for everyone, he's a far more ReasonableAuthorityFigure than his predecessors.
207* As his StartOfDarkness reveals, Redcloak from ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' was the newest acolyte in the hierarchy of the Dark One's priesthood, and became the High Priest because [[spoiler:the Sapphire Guard killed everyone else in the order except him.]]
208* ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' Book 15 ends up with [[spoiler: Breya, previously kicked upstairs to the uneviable position of "lobbyist manager",]] effectively leading the [[UnitedNationsIsASuperpower UNS]] due to a StagedPopulistUprising killing most everyone above her. [[spoiler: Ironically, the revolution was supposed to be kickstarted by her assassination, but the Toughs accidentally foiled that.]]
209* In ''Webcomic/{{SSDD}}'' Robert gets unexpectedly [[http://www.poisonedminds.com/d/20110822.html promoted]] to 1st Engineer on the ''Britannia'' after a KillerRobot attack kills all his co-workers. [[http://www.poisonedminds.com/d/20090814.html Largely]] because he was a cyborg without a pulse.
210* ''Webcomic/UnOrdinary'': Traditionally a school's Turf War king is the male student with the highest ranked power, and while Blyke was expected to inherit the position once Arlo graduated once [[spoiler:John]] is forced to stop hiding his abilities Blyke is the third strongest known male student, and ends up king before Arlo graduates because Arlo refuses to take back up the postition after [[spoiler:John]] defeats him and [[spoiler:John]] doesn't want it. The queen position is also in unusual hands, as Remi is queen even though Sera is the strongest female student (and overall student) since Sera quit the Turf War team.
211[[/folder]]
212
213[[folder:Web Original]]
214* [[Literature/FearLoathingAndGumboOnTheCampaignTrailSeventyTwo Fear, Loathing and Gumbo on the Campaign Trail '72]] is an alternate history story that kicks off with a Presidential succession crisis after a hung election. Through a series of complications, Spiro Agnew ends up as Acting President. He promptly restarts the Vietnam War, tanks the economy, and makes a lot of senior officials fear he'll kick off World War Three. Then his criminal history comes out and impeachment efforts start. Because he's technically still the Vice President, the Oval Office would fall into the hands of the Speaker of the House... who's a Democrat. Agnew assumes his own party won't hand the Executive over to the other side, regardless of what they think of his job performance, an assumption the Speaker shares. So the Congressional leadership exploits the loophole discussed at the top of this page: the Speaker of the House can be ''anyone''. The House membership appoints the Speaker, but it's only long-standing tradition that the Speaker is a member of the majority party. Legally, any American citizen can be made Speaker so long as the House membership elects them to the office. Thus, the non-partisian retired [[spoiler: Lieutenant General James "Jumpin' Jim" Gavin]] is appointed as Speaker, and Agnew is promptly kicked out of the White House.
215* ''Franchise/{{Noob}}'': The titular guild starts out with four members: [[TheLeader Arthéon]], [[TheLancer Omega Zell]], [[TheSmartGirl Gaea]] and a StupidGood ManChild Sparadrap. In Season 4, by which the guild has two newer recruits, Arthéon takes time off to pursue other activities and makes Omega Zell acting guild master. Power struggles and personal ambitions cause Gaea and Omega Zell to leave the guild. When the holder of the acting Guild Master leaves, the seniormost of the remaining guild members gets it; now eveyone left has Sparadrap as their leader. [[spoiler:And due to refounding the guild after Arthéon dissolved it in a fit of rage, his guild master office ends up permanent.]]
216* Featured in ''WebSite/TheOnion'' article "[[https://politics.theonion.com/secretary-of-interior-takes-presidential-oath-of-office-1819574916 Secretary Of Interior Takes Presidential Oath Of Office]]." According to now-President Sally Jewel, "I still can't believe the President, Vice President, Speaker of the House, President Pro Tem, Sec. of State, Sec. of the Treasury, Sec. of Defense, and Attorney General were all in that hot-air balloon."
217* This is how [[LovableCoward Donald Doyle]] became the General of the Federation of Chorus in ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue''. The civil war has been so brutal that the former secretary to the Brigadier is now the highest-raking person left. As such, he is the leader of the Federation, though he doesn't exhibit very good leadership skills, relying on the mercenary Locus to get things done.
218[[/folder]]
219
220[[folder:Western Animation]]
221* Used as a gag in the ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' episode set in Anvilania. Yakko arrives to take over the throne, and sings a very complicated song explaining where he fits in the line of succession (extremely low), which ends with him noting sadly that ''everyone'' named in the song is dead, leaving him King.
222-->''I'm the cousin to the sister of the son's niece's brother''
223-->''Of the [[ShapedLikeItself uncle's daughter's father]] of the nephew's sister's mother''
224-->''And my grandpa's only cousin was the king's daughter's sibling...''
225-->''But they're all gone, so that is why...I am now your king!''
226* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
227** Fire Lord Zuko, although he ''was'' technically Crown Prince for at least five years before gaining the throne. He'd been banished and then declared a traitor (twice), so he wasn't even in the running anymore. But when you and your friends oust the only two legitimate rulers with the support of a possible third, no one is going to say anything.
228** Zuko's father, [[BigBad Fire Lord Ozai]], fits even better. He was either second or third in line after elder brother Iroh, and possibly his nephew Lu Ten. Then Lu Ten died in battle and Iroh fell into a deep depression just as the then-current Fire Lord, Azulon, died. [[spoiler:Just before this, to punish Ozai for talking to Azulon about removing Iroh from the line of succession, Azulon ordered him to kill Zuko. Ursa found out and made a deal with Ozai: she would kill Azulon and leave the palace if Ozai doesn't kill Zuko. Ozai agreed]]. Ozai announced a very convenient deathbed wish by Azulon for Ozai to inherit, and Iroh, half a world away and still in mourning for his son, did not oppose him (and likely was unwilling to plunge the Fire Nation into civil war to wrest power away from his younger brother when he returned to the capitol).
229* ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'': Only Scrooge [=McDuck's=] true heir can find the Papyrus of Binding. In the end it's not his nephew Donald, his niece Della, or any of the triplets, Huey, Dewey, or Louie, but [[spoiler: ''Webby'' that is Scrooge's true heir. Not only does she embody all of Scrooge's best traits, and he considers her family, it's discovered in the GrandFinale she's his ''OppositeSexClone'', thus also a biological heir.]]
230[[/folder]]
231
232[[folder:Real Life]]
233* The English and British monarchies have been practically defined by this since the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, due to ChronicBackstabbingDisorder, low fertility, dissolution, and bad luck.
234** UsefulNotes/RichardIII was not only the youngest of four surviving sons of Richard, Duke of York, making succeeding to the throne rather unlikely (though not impossible, given the [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder turbulent nature]] of the [[UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses Wars of the Roses]]) to begin with, but the rather large gaggle of children his eldest brother, Edward IV, produced and the existence of a male heir of his ''other'' brother, George, Duke of Clarence (he of [[UndignifiedDeath malmsey butt fame]])[[labelnote:*]]Translation: Popular rumor is that after George was sentenced to death for treason against Edward IV, he was given a choice of how to be executed and chose drowning in a vat or barrel holding the equivalent of 151 U.S. gallons of malmsey wine.[[/labelnote]] made accession almost impossible. Then [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder George was attainted for treason]], removing his children from the line, and it was revealed that the rather promiscuous Edward had made a precontract of marriage with another woman before marrying his queen, thus making all ''his'' children illegitimate and suddenly catapulting Richard to kingship.
235*** Interestingly, some have postulated that the two events are not unrelated, since George had previously been pardoned for his rebellion in 1469-1471, meaning that he must have done something ''else'' to cause an execution (and one could be charged for high treason at that time for attempting to muck about with the succession) and furthermore, Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells, was at that time imprisoned in the Tower for "uttering seditious words," under which charge the crime of revealing the existence of the precontract to George would have neatly fallen. All this is not to mention the fact that the queen, who came from a minor noble family whose members had been suddenly catapulted to prominence, certainly had reason to fear a loss of her and her family's royal power and prestige.
236** At the time of his birth, Richard III's successor Henry Tudor was second in line for the throne as the half-nephew of King Henry VI, although his claim was through his mother and came via a lineage that had been both legitimised by law and barred from future ascension by Richard II[[note]]Richard II legitimising originally illegitimate offspring wasn't as much of a problem for Henry Tudor to overcome as the dubious legality of Richard II's decision to bar future issue from claims to the throne was for Henry Tudor's opponents to try and uphold[[/note]]. He became a much more unlikely successor when Edward Duke of York killed the King and the crown prince, and installed his two sons and two brothers in the order of succession. No one thought Henry Tudor could beat those odds, but he emerged from the civil war as Henry VII and made sure of the throne by marrying the most plausible other successor, Elizabeth of York who as the eldest daughter and child of Edward IV with no surviving brothers had a strong claim which she passed to her children.
237** When Henry VIII died in 1547, Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, was 4th in line for the English throne, after Henry's three healthy legitimate children. It was considered very unlikely the Stuarts would ever rule England, especially considering that Margaret Tudor (who her claim came through) had relinquished her claim to the throne, making Mary's claims rather tenuous, Scotland and England were enemies for much of Henry's reign, and she was a Catholic (despite the increasing Protestantism of her people, particularly in the Lowlands) while England became increasingly Protestant. However, Edward VI, Mary I, and Elizabeth I all assumed the throne and then died childless (Edward having died young before he could find a bride, Mary apparently having been infertile, and Elizabeth having refused to marry for political reasons). As Mary herself was also dead (executed after being caught in England after attempting to assassinate Elizabeth, no less) 56 years after Henry's death, Mary's son [[UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfStuart James VI]] of Scotland became James I of England, seen by Elizabeth and the English people as the best option as all others were either convicted for treason, too young, or Catholic (and James had been raised Protestant at the insistence of the powerful Lowland lords).
238** The successors to the Stuarts, the minor German princes of UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfHanover, were more or less handed the British throne out of nowhere. Under the Act of Settlement 1701, all Catholics were excluded from the succession, and Queen Anne's heir was the junior Stuart line of Electress Sophia of Hanover. This is why George I and George II (Sophia's son and grandson) spoke little to no English: they were 41 and 18, respectively, when the Act of Settlement made them second and third in line, and 54 and 31 when the throne passed to their house. This accelerated the trend of direct governance by ministers instead of the monarch, and by the end of George I's reign, the general system used in Britain today had been developed under the guidance of the (unofficial) prime minister Sir UsefulNotes/RobertWalpole. So, indirectly, we have this trope to thank for the modern system of parliamentary democracy -- used in some form by the vast majority of democratic states in existence today.
239** UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria was a subversion: she was fully expected to inherit the throne from the day she was born, but her ''existence'' only came about because Britain unexpectedly found itself without a likely heir. Princess Charlotte of Wales, the only legitimate grandchild of King George III, died shortly after delivering a stillborn son[[note]]Her symptoms -- apparently healthy, then delirious and vomiting, then dead -- suggest eclampsia, though we'll never know for sure[[/note]] even before her father, George, Prince of Wales (the future George IV), became king. George himself was unlikely to have another child, his wife was 49 and likely past childbearing age, and he hated her so much that nothing could entice him to attempt to father a child with her -- he kept trying to divorce her, in fact, though Parliament wouldn't let him -- and in any case, by the time Princess Charlotte passed, [[TheLoinsSleepTonight he probably couldn't father a child if he tried]]. This led to a mad dash among George's brothers[[note]]Except for his oldest younger brother Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany, who separated from his wife shortly after their marriage, and his second youngest brother, Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex, who contracted an unequal marriage.[[/note]] to produce an heir. Victoria became heir because at the end of this race, her father, Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, was the oldest son of George III to have surviving legitimate issue (i.e. her).[[note]]As mentioned, neither George IV nor the Duke of York were in the running because they hated their wives. The third son of George III, King William IV, actually had good relations with his wife, Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, but all five of his children with her were either stillborn or died before their first birthday. (William IV had ''ten'' surviving children with his long-term mistress -- from whom he had separated six years ''before'' the race started -- but since they were illegitimate they didn't figure into the succession.) The Duke of Kent was the next, being George III's fourth son.[[/note]]
240** [[UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfWindsor King George VI]] -- then Prince Albert, Duke of York -- was not expecting to become King, instead planning a naval career and a quiet life with his duchess and their two daughters. Then his older brother pitched a royal fit and abdicated. Cue a constitutional crisis, a world war, and a ''very'' uncomfortable King taking the throne of an empire he never expected to reign over. Which he did magnificently -- George VI is one of the best beloved monarchs of British history -- but at a terrible cost to his personal health. (Incidentally, his father, George V, had a similar trajectory, but since ''his'' older brother, Prince Albert Victor, died well before either of them would even get close to the throne, he had more time to adjust.)
241* In the early years, the United States Presidency took this trope to its LogicalExtreme: how succession ''itself'' worked wasn't made clear, and the precedent set was quite unexpected. Article II, Section 1, Clause 6 of the United States Constitution ''did'' allow for a scenario in which the President died [[labelnote: The actual text]]"In case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President, and the Congress may by law provide for the case of removal, death, resignation or inability, both of the President and Vice President, declaring what officer shall then act as President, and such officer shall act accordingly, until the disability be removed, or a President shall be elected.[[/labelnote]], but didn't explain if just the powers and duties of the Presidency or the office ''itself'' devolved on the Vice President should the sitting President expire before his term did. Likewise, the wording ''might'' be read in a way, that in the case of death or permanent inability of the elected President to serve, a new election should be held at earliest convenience (this is how virtually all other systems replace a deceased President) -- but that has never happened and likely never will.\
242\
243Then in 1841, President UsefulNotes/WilliamHenryHarrison did exactly that.\
244\
245UsefulNotes/JohnTyler's interpretation was that the office of President ''itself'' devolved onto the Vice President, not just its powers and duties.[[note]] Eventually, this practice was worked into the constitution by the 20th Amendment in 1933, which is probably better known for changing the start dates of presidential and Congressional terms (previously March 4th, now January 20th and 3rd respectively). Incidentally, the president when this amendment was ratified, UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt, would himself die in office and be replaced by UsefulNotes/HarrySTruman, who fits this trope and inverts it: FDR originally chose Truman as his running mate because he had had some health scares and was worried that he would die during his fourth term; as he did not feel confident that his then-VP, the left-winger Henry Wallace, would maintain his policies (in particular, he was worried Wallace would be too trusting of the Soviet Union), he decided to ditch Wallace and pick Truman to basically be his designated heir. The Democratic Party brass agreed, and they and FDR and pulled some serious shenanigans at the 1944 DNC to get the reluctant Truman to take his spot on the ticket. After all this, by early 1945 FDR felt he was getting better, and didn't bother training Truman for his role. As a result, when FDR really did die in May 1945, Truman took the Oval Office having been told absolutely zilch about what was going on.[[/note]] While it has rarely been invoked beyond Vice Presidents taking over for their late running mates, the US government has a defined [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_line_of_succession line of Presidential succession]] that lays out who would become President in the event that multiple members of the administration were rendered unable to serve. Because this line of succession also puts a hard limit on how far down the governmental food chain the Presidency can fall, the Secret Service makes certain that one person in the line is ''not'' in attendance at any "all hands" event like the State of the Union Address, but instead in a safe house far enough away that no single plausible catastrophe could wipe out the entire succession.
246** Pundits brought this up in the aftermath of the 1981 assassination attempt against Ronald Reagan, where Secretary of State Al Haig told the press, "Pending the arrival of the Vice-President, I'm in charge here at the White House." While he only meant that he was in charge of the administrative staff until VP George H.W. Bush could return from a speaking engagement in Texas, the pundits all ignored the context and treated it as if Haig was trying to stage a coup. Until Bush could be contacted, the acting President was actually Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill[[labelnote:†]] (a left-wing Democrat from Massachusetts with whom Reagan personally got along with but frequently sparred with politically)[[/labelnote]], though his only real responsibility was command over the US nuclear arsenal.
247** The "Designated Survivor" rule has been unofficially extended by Congress to include at least one Senator and one Representative, so that in the event of a decapitation strike there would also be successors to the roles of Senate President Pro Tempore and Speaker of the House. However, the designated successors are explicitly only "acting" and do not get added to the succession line for the presidency. So, for example, when Kevin [=McCarthy=] was removed as Speaker of the House in October 2023, his replacement Patrick [=McHenry=] became acting Speaker but did ''not'' become third in line to be president.
248** The aforementioned line of succession is not immediately obvious based on contemporary priorities -- in case of a decapitation terrorist strike, the Secretary of Homeland Security is ''last'' in line. Currently, if something happens to Biden, the office passes first to Vice-President Harris. It then passes to the Speaker of the House, currently Mike Johnson.[[note]]And just to add the potential for further mischief, the Speaker of the House does not necessarily need to be a member of Congress at all! The majority vote of the House membership could theoretically install ''any'' American citizen as Speaker, something which - during the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Speaker_of_the_United_States_House_of_Representatives_election contentious vote for Speaker in January 2023]]; Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, a member of the conservative Freedom Caucus opposed to having Kevin [=McCarthy=] become Speaker of the House, tried to take advantage of this by nominating former President UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump on a couple of ballots despite Trump having endorsed [=McCarthy=] for the job. The leader of the majority party being Speaker of the House is actually just tradition, not law.[[/note]] Next is Senate President ''pro tempore'' Patty Murray of Washington, who holds her position solely by virtue of being the longest continuously-serving member of the majority party who hasn't refused the job. Next in line is the Secretary of State (Tony Blinken as of 2023), and then the other Cabinet Secretaries in order by age of office. Homeland Security is the newest department, and thus the last in line.
249** Also, this only applies during a President's term, and not during [[UsefulNotes/AmericanPoliticalSystem an election]]. If the President-elect dies after the electoral college votes, then the Vice President-elect would become President on Inauguration Day. If, however, the presumed winner dies before the electoral college actually votes, no one's quite sure what would happen as the electors from several states could legally ignore the popular vote results or refuse to vote for a dead person, and throw the election to someone who wasn't even on the ballot or force the state caucuses in the House to vote instead.[[labelnote:Fun Fact!]] While there has thus far never been a case of a Presidential ''winner'' dying after the election but before the counting of electoral votes (about a two-month window), there ''has'' been at least one instance of the ''loser'' dying during that time -- Horace Greeley, defeated by incumbent Ulysses Grant in the 1872 election. In that case, the candidate's electors were released -– some voted for the failed Vice President, but most simply were scattered amongst various candidates. Unsurprisingly, this case happened during the 19th century.[[/labelnote]]
250** It was disputed whether the Vice President would be "Acting President" or "President"… until UsefulNotes/WilliamHenryHarrison died and UsefulNotes/JohnTyler refused to even acknowledge anyone who called his position "Acting". Anyone below the VP, however, would be "Acting President" until the next presidential election, under the Presidential Succession Act of 1947 [[http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/uscode/3/1/19 3 USC § 19.]]
251** This plus appointment being used for mid-term VP replacements[[note]] (the practice only became a thing after World War II; prior to that, whenever a VP died in office -– it happened more than once –- the President simply governed without a VP until the next election; same thing applied whenever a VP was elevated upon his boss's death)[[/note]] led to Michigan Representative UsefulNotes/GeraldFord becoming the only ''truly'' unelected President of the United States. All arguments about contested elections aside (and there are plenty), Ford was appointed to the Vice Presidency after Spiro Agnew resigned over accusations of bribery and tax fraud, became president after UsefulNotes/RichardNixon resigned over the Watergate scandal, then lost to UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter in his first national election. This was just ''after'' Speaker of the House Carl Albert had passed up the opportunity to ''make'' himself Nixon's UnexpectedSuccessor. As Speaker, Albert had the power to prevent Ford's nomination from coming to a vote, thus guaranteeing a VP vacancy after Nixon's by-then-inevitable impeachment or resignation. Albert declined to do so on the grounds that the American people had chosen to have a Republican as President and it would be something verging on a coup if he, a Democrat, arranged his own succession.
252** There is a school of thought that should someone very low in the order of succession find themselves elevated to the presidency such as in ''Series/DesignatedSurvivor'' or ''Series/TheLastShip'', their duty isn’t to assume the presidency and govern, it is instead to identify an individual who is actually more capable of governing, appoint him or her Vice President and then resign. The reason being that if they themselves were actually capable of governing the nation, they would have been appointed to a much more important cabinet role.
253** It should be pointed out that the rules of succession can skip lists based on the individual. The President of the United States must be a "natural born citizen"[[note]]The term is undefined, especially on the margins -- there were various edge cases with Presidential candidates born or allegedly born outside the continental U.S. or in territories (e.g. Barry Goldwater who was born in pre-statehood Arizona or John [=McCain=] who was born in the Canal Zone of Panama) but thus far the only people disqualified from the ballot for not meeting this condition have been people who were not US citizens from birth (Abdul Karim Hassan, a naturalized US citizen born a citizen of Guyana, tested this in a series of legal challenges in 2011-2013). And no one has tested before any court, whether [[InsaneTrollLogic being born with assistance from an epidural or C-section disqualifies someone from being “natural born”]][[/note]] (or those born before the adoption of the constitution[[note]]This may or may not have been intended to make it possible for Alexander Hamilton who had been born in the Caribbean to become President, but the point is now obviously moot. Though it's clear the primary reason was obviously no one can be a natural born citizen of a nation that didn't exist when they were born, meaning that at the time the Constitution was written, ''no one'' existed who was both a natural born citizen ''and'' at least 35 years old.[[/note]]) but that does not apply beyond the Vice-President in the succession line. It's entirely possible that a cabinet member or the Speaker could be a naturalized citizen, disqualifying them from becoming President, and thus their next in line is moved up in the line. These cases will never be the designated survivor, so it's very unlikely to be an issue beyond pundit speculation about who the designated survivor is prior to the State of the Union starting.
254*** The highest-ranked examples of this since the current rules were set have been Secretaries of State: Henry Kissinger was born in Germany to German parents and Madeleine Albright was born in Czechoslovakia to Czech parents. Both were not eligible to be President and were accordingly skipped in the line of succession.
255*** The other requirements for presidential eligibility are being at least 35 years old and having resided in the United States for at least 14 years. Since there are lower age and length of residency requirements for the House and Senate than for the President, and none at all for cabinet members, it would be possible for somebody to be excluded from the line of succession for that reason. In practice, this has never been important, because only twice in US history has anybody been appointed as a cabinet Secretary while under the age of 35. Alexander Hamilton was either 32 or 34 when he became Secretary of the Treasury in 1789, and Richard Rush was 34 when he became Attorney General in 1814, both of which being prior to cabinet members being part of the line of succession. Since cabinet members are usually appointed because of their expertise in the the specific field their department oversees, they tend to be significantly older than 35. And neither the Speaker of the House nor President Pro Tempore of the Senate has ever been under the age of 35.[[note]]The Speaker of the House has invariably been the caucus leader of the majority party in the House (since by House rules, the Speaker is the leader of the House, and a leader of the majority party who fails to be Speaker would cease to ''be'' the leader of the majority party), and by long-standing tradition the President Pro Tempore is the longest-serving member of the majority party in the Senate. Meaning that they're inevitably going to be older than the average member.[[/note]]
256* Possibly the greatest subversion of the trope was [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramiro_II_of_Aragon Ramiro II of Aragon]]. The fourth son of King Sancho, he wasn't expected to inherit or hold a political position at all and became a priest. However, all three of his elder brothers died without issue, two of them after having seized the crown. He was then literally taken from his abbey, given a Papal permission to abandon his vows so he could guarantee the survival of the dynasty, and crowned. He complied, married, had a daughter, abdicated to her, and had her married when she was ''1 year old''. With his duty accomplished in record time, he took the vows again and went back to his abbey.
257** Henry of Portugal started off in similar straits but wasn't able to follow through as magnificently -- no one expected him to succeed to the throne when his eldest surviving brother became King John III, but during John's reign, their three other brothers died without legitimate issue and both of the king's sons predeceased him. He was succeeded by his infant grandson Sebastian, who died unmarried at the age of 25, leaving his great uncle Henry, by then a 66-year-old Catholic cardinal, heir to the throne. Henry applied for papal dispensation to abandon his vow of chastity and father an heir. However, Philip II, the King of Spain, who was Henry's nephew through his older sister, stood a chance of inheriting Portugal were Henry to die without issue, and the Pope at the time, Gregory XIII (the one with the calendar) was (1) a good personal friend of Philip's from his time as Papal Legate to Spain and (2) needed Philip for several projects, including expansion of the Church in Asia and bringing England back into the Catholic fold (that's what the Spanish Armada was about). So the Pope refused to give dispensation, and when Henry died, still unmarried, two years later, there was a SuccessionCrisis from which Philip II emerged triumphant.
258* Invoked in the later two-thirds of the Qing dynasty of ImperialChina. The Yongzheng Emperor had his legitimacy consistently questioned due to the SuccessionCrisis in 1710-1720s (in which his father deposed the crown prince, then died without naming a replacement), and decided that while the monarch had the power to nominate any successor, no one should feel overly confident of their place in the order of succession. His new succession scheme was thus: every moment the emperor was alive, he was required to have secured somewhere in the palace a sealed will and testament which would only be opened in event of his death. As a result, no heir would be ''publicly'' named, and while the emperor's personal preference might be apparent, it would never create a binding order of succession.
259* The French monarchy's application of Salic Law, which not only absolutely forbade female succession but also excluded any claim through female lines, has resulted in several Unexpected Successors when the direct male line has to backtrack quite far into cadet branches:
260** The primacy of Salic Law was established with the succession of King Philip VI. When Philip IV ("the Fair") died, he left three surviving sons (Louis X, Philip V, and Charles IV) and a daughter (Isabella), so his brother's son Philip of Valois was not expected to ever ascend the throne. However, Louis X and Charles IV's wives had recently been condemned for adultery, casting doubt on the legitimacy of their surviving children, all daughters. Then Louis X and Philip V both died in their early 20s, Louis X's [[SomeoneToRememberHimBy posthumous son]] by his second wife died a few days after birth, and Charles IV died at age 34 in 1328. This left three candidates for the succession: Philip of Valois, Charles of Navarre (son of Jeanne, one of Louis X's daughters) and Edward III of England (son of Isabella). Ironically, the French nobility decided to settle the crisis based on [[HeirClubForMen direct male-line descent]] NOT primarily because of legal precedent from ancient Frankish custom (which was only {{RetCon}}ned into the story two generations later) but because there were strong political arguments against the two candidates with claims through female descent (the suspect legitimacy of Charles' mother and Edward's connections to hostile England -- to say nothing of preventing the English monarchs, who were already Dukes of Aquitaine and held other French lands as well, from strengthening their position in France and threatening the power of the other nobles).
261** King Charles VII was unexpected for reasons unrelated to Salic Law. When he was born in 1403, two of his four elder brothers were still alive. Then they both died, leaving Charles the new Dauphin, but the invading English King Henry V forced Charles VI to name Henry successor to the French throne and exclude the Dauphin on the grounds of alleged illegitimate birth. Then against all expectations the apparently invincible Henry died before Charles VI, with the surviving English claimant being the infant Henry VI, and UsefulNotes/JoanOfArc showed up to help Charles rout the formidable Anglo-Burgundian forces and make good his claim to the throne.
262** King Henry IV. When Henry II of France was killed in a jousting accident in 1559, his dynasty seemed secure as he was survived by no less than four sons. But Francois II died childless in 1560, Charles IX's died in 1574 with his only legitimate child a daughter, and childless Henry III was assassinated in 1589, by which time the youngest brother, Francois Duke of Anjou, had also died unmarried and childless. This left Henry of Navarre as Salic heir, as he could claim direct male-line descent from a younger son of the ''13th century'' King Louis IX. And this, dear reader, is how the House of Bourbon became one of the premier ruling houses of Europe.
263** While it was mostly a case of simply going down from father to son, the accession of Louis XV in 1715 was a case of an unexpectedly young successor. His predecessor UsefulNotes/LouisXIV had the longest reign of any French king and outlived his only legitimate son to survive to adulthood, the Dauphin Louis (died of smallpox in 1711), the latter's eldest son, Louis, Duke of Burgundy (died of measles in February 1712), and the Duke of Burgundy's oldest surviving son Louis, Duke of Brittany[[note]] His elder brother Louis, also titled Duke of Brittany, had died in 1705 before turning one year old.[[/note]] (died of measles in March 1712 aged 5). The deaths of three heirs apparent in less than a year led to Louis XIV being succeeded by his ''third great-grandson'' Louis, Duke of Anjou (younger brother of the Duke of Brittany), aged five years and a half.
264** The ''fear'' of an unexpected successor was a major concern for Louis XIV's House of Bourbon at several points:
265*** After the death of Louis XIII, Louis XIV and his younger brother Philippe, Duc d'Orléans, were the only agnatic Bourbons. Had they both died, the Salic heir to the throne was the [[ImpoverishedPatrician impoverished]] House of Courtenay, who had branched off the main Capetian line in the 12th century. For various reasons, nobody liked the Courtenays, least of all the Bourbons. This appears to have informed the terms of the 1662 Treaty of Montmartre in which Louis XIV named the House of Lorraine[[note]]Yes, the ones who married UsefulNotes/MariaTheresa and thus became inextricably linked to the House of Habsburg -- history is full of ironies[[/note]] as heirs to the French throne, even though they descended from the French monarchy only in the female line. It also appears to have influenced great fervor with which the Bourbons went about having offspring. In particular, it seems to have informed Philippe's decision to not only marry a woman, but marry again after his wife had died, and have seven children by his wives, even though he was [[CampGay flamingly gay]] and might have otherwise been sent to join the Church or otherwise not required to produce children.
266*** Philippe's substantial brood led to concern for Louis's line, as (after the Peace of Utrecht[[note]]The treaty ending the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheSpanishSuccession, by which Louis's grandson Philippe of Anjou (the second of the two sons of Louis's only surviving legitimate child Louis the Grand Dauphin) became King of Spain as Felipe V in exchange for the removal of this Spanish branch of the Bourbons from the line of succession to the French throne.[[/note]]) they were the next in line to the throne from the death of the Sun King clear through the 19th century. This was a problem, since the House of Orléans were notorious freethinkers and liberals who delighted in annoying the senior Bourbons. When UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution hit, Louis Philippe II, the Duke of Orléans at the time, sided with the Third Estate, leading to much talk on the Right that he had orchestrated the revolution to seize the throne for himself. Louis Philippe would later be executed himself, though his son Louis Philippe I would later become king after the main branch was exiled following the later July Revolution.
267* Alexander III of UsefulNotes/{{Russia}} is a particularly tragic example. His father, Alexander II, never thought that his son, Nicholas Alexandrovich, would have health problems until Nicholas died suddenly. The second son, Alexander, never was considered for the throne, so he never got the education of his brother and thus reversed many of his father's liberalizing reforms, pushing Russia down a more autocratic path.[[note]]Though Alexander II's liberalization attempts being responded to with repeated assassination attempts until one was finally successful might had something to do with Alexander III's arch-conservatism as well.[[/note]]
268** Speaking of Alexander II, his own father Nicholas I was the third son of Paul I, but succeeded to the throne after his oldest brother Alexander I died without an heir and his second oldest brother Constantine renounced his right to the throne.
269* Very similarly to the above, the noted reformer Muhammad Ali Pasha of UsefulNotes/{{Egypt}} made sure both of his sons got his reforming outlook. One died before his father, and the other a matter of months later, leaving the country in the hands of the incompetent grandson, Abbas, who proceeded to undo Egypt's modern tax system and set the country towards its eventual domination by the British.
270* The papal succession is elective, not dynastic, but there have been some unexpected successors to St. Peter, especially when the conclave deadlocked over the most obvious candidates and compromised by plucking someone from obscurity. The most notable such case probably occurred after the death of pope Nicolaus IV in 1292, when the conclave was deadlocked for two years. The 85-year-old Benedictine monk and hermit Pietro di Morrone sent them a letter telling them to get along with electing a new pope, and shortly after found himself elected to the post. He at first tried to refuse his new office. Eventually he gave in, took the name Celestine V, but the strain proved too much and so a few months later he became the first pope (and the only one before Benedict XVI) to voluntarily resign from office.
271** The propensity of the conclave to produce Popes that surprise observers is best summed up by the saying "Who goes into the conclave a pope comes out a cardinal". Perhaps the biggest exceptions to this in the last hundred years were Benedikt XVI and Pius XII, both already prominent figures in the Curia during the time of the prior pontiff.
272** [[UsefulNotes/NotablePopes John XXIII]] was aware that he was ''papaible'' but still arrived at the 1958 conclave with a return train ticket to Venice, expecting his age (76 years) to work against him being elected.
273** Albino Luciani had not really been considered ''papaible'' going in to the first 1978 conclave but emerged as Pope John Paul I.
274** The election of Karol Józef Wojtyła as John Paul II was unexpected by the world at large and even by John Paul himself. John Paul II was only elected because none of the front runners could not obtain the required clear majority of votes in the conclave and the Italian compromise candidate made it clear he would not accept election once he started getting votes. Additionally, for over 450 years only Italians had been elected to the papacy so it was widely expected that another Italian would be elected Pope. Thus, it came as a complete surprise to the outside world that someone from Poland had been elected.
275** Like John XXIII, Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio went into the 2013 conclave thinking he had no chance of being elected even though he had received a fair number of votes in 2005, and had already booked his return flight to Argentina prior to the start of the conclave.
276* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodluck_Jonathan Goodluck Jonathan]], President of UsefulNotes/{{Nigeria}} 2010-2015, was elected to the largely meaningless post of Vice President under a fellow named [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umaru_Musa_Yar%27Adua Umaru Yar'Adua]]. When Yar'Adua died early in his term, Jonathan took over, and to everyone's surprise ran for election in his own right in 2011 –- the Nigerian political parties had an informal agreement that Muslims and Christians were to take turns as president, but Jonathan, a Christian from southern Nigeria, had been filling the term of a Muslim from the north (Yar'Adua). The fact that Jonathan not only won, but won without serious objection from the predominantly Muslim north, was taken at the time as evidence that Nigeria's long sectarian struggle had, if not ended, then certainly died down. (It helped that Jonathan was acceptably competent as President--highly corrupt, yes, but given Nigerian politics that was a small price to pay for his competence.)
277* While there wasn't much left to take charge of by the time he came to power in May 1945, ''[[GratuitousGerman Großadmiral]]'' Karl Dönitz would in 1939 have been a million-to-one-against bet for "leader of Germany when the current hostilities end". For most of Nazi Germany's existence, the assumption was that Hermann Göring, Chief of the Luftwaffe, would be next in the line of succession in the event that Hitler was incapacitated, an understandable observation given his political experience and loyalty to the Nazi cause. But come April 1945, Göring tries to invoke the succession plans upon hearing of Hitler's suicide intentions, and Hitler expels him and calls for his execution out of a sense of betrayal. It is typically believed that Dönitz's subsequent appointment was primarily just to get in one last insult towards Göring, owing to the Nazis' infamous affinity for exploiting {{Interservice Rivalr|y}}ies.
278* Read the summation above of how Jim Hacker actually got to be Prime Minister in ''Series/YesPrimeMinister'', in both the TV show and the novel. Then fast-forward to real-life events in Great Britain in 1990, when the Conservative Party needed a new leader following UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher's loss of support and decision to withdraw her candidacy. Several strong candidates emerged, each with the potential to split the party into factions. Then a compromise candidate, the grey and relatively un-known John Major, emerged, a man hardly anybody either liked or hated, though he had recently become Chancellor of the Exchequer, often considered the de facto most powerful position after Prime Minister, though was considered quite young at the time for a PM, being only 47. The result was a completely surprising new PM, one tasked with stabilising the nation after the Thatcher years... Surprisingly enough, John Major won the next election, though at the following one lost by a landslide.
279* King William III of [[UsefulNotes/TheNetherlands the Netherlands]] (1849-90) was also Grand Duke of the small independent [[UsefulNotes/{{Luxembourg}} Grand Duchy of Luxembourg]]. Both the Netherlands and Luxembourg had semi-salic succession (meaning that women could inherit the throne only if there was absolutely no male-line heirs left), however, in the Netherlands only descendents of William's grandfather, the first king of the House of Nassau, counted as heirs. Therefore, when all William III's sons died before him, he was succeeded in the Netherlands by his daughter Princess Wilhelmina, and in Luxembourg by his closest male-line relative, Duke Adolph of Nassau-Weilburg -- his ''17th cousin'' once removed in the male line.[[note]]though they were more closely related though a female line, being third cousins. He also happened to be William III's second wife's maternal half-uncle[[/note]] Their last common male-line ancestor was Henry the Rich, Count of Nassau, who had lived over six hundred years earlier (he died in 1250). Duke Adolph is generally considered the most distant "distant relative" to ever inherit a European throne. This also had the interesting side-effect about 60 years later of ''adding'' a holding to the House of Bourbon during the 20th century (as, through the same semi-Salic rule, the crown passed to one of Adolphe's granddaughters, who married a Bourbon and had male issue).
280* It was not in the cards that Prince Christian of Glücksburg would inherit the [[UsefulNotes/{{Denmark}} Danish]] throne as King Christian IX (1863-1906) when he was born in 1818 as the fourth son in an obscure German sideline of the Danish Royal family. However, when it became clear in the 1850s that the main line of the Royal House would end with the death of King Frederik VII (1848-63), not only was Christian the only candidate to have spent extensive time in Denmark, he had also married King Frederik's closest female relative, which, due to some ancient and very complicated succession rules, gave him an edge over both his elder brothers, and the competing sideline, the Dukes of Augustenborg.
281** The current monarch of Denmark, Christian IX's great-great granddaughter Margrethe II (1972-), was not expected to succeed her father King Frederik IX (1947-72) at the time of her birth in 1940. However, when Frederik did not have any sons, the constitution was changed in 1953 to allow male-preference primogeniture. This, by the way, was not so much a question of equal rights as politics: The political establishment in Denmark had wanted a new constitution for a long time, however this required a very large level of public approval.[[note]]45% of the ''entire electorate'' had to vote yes in the referendum.[[/note]] By promising the people the popular Princess Margrethe as future Queen it was just possible to get the votes required for the new constitution.
282* The last emperors of the [[UsefulNotes/PersiansWithPistols Achaemenid Empire]] were unexpected successors to the throne. The eleventh emperor, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artaxerxes_III Artaxerxes III]], came to power after one of his brothers was executed, another committed suicide and another was murdered. Artaxerxes III was then poisoned by the [[EunuchsAreEvil eunuch]] [[EvilChancellor vizier]] [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagoas Bagoas]] (or died by natural causes) and replaced by his son [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arses_of_Persia Arses]], who was the youngest son of Arthaxerxes III and his wife Atossa. Arses -- Artaxerxes IV -- was then killed two years later (along with his family) by Bagoas. Arses was then succeeded by [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darius_III Darius III]]. And ''his'' successor could be the most unexpected of all -- 'Artaxerxes V', in fact just a Bactrian satrap (province governor) known by the name of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bessus Bessus]] who killed Darius and attempted to usurp the throne (satraps of Bactria ''were'' considered next in line of succession to the royal dynasty though). It was not to be due to UsefulNotes/AlexanderTheGreat (whose military victory over Darius III enabled the whole Bessus' attempted coup in the first place), and the entire Persian empire abruptly came to an end.
283* Pretty much the entire Julio-Claudian dynasty after UsefulNotes/{{Augustus}} were very low on their predecessor's list of preferred heirs, but wound up emperor after everyone ahead of them fell victim to freak accidents or familial scheming. Of particular note is Claudius, who was expressly forbidden from holding public office by both Augustus (his step-grandfather) and Tiberius (his uncle), only to be installed as emperor after the PraetorianGuard got sick of his nephew UsefulNotes/{{Caligula}}.
284* The German Parliamentary system rarely has the need for the Vice-chancellor to step up. In fact, many people do not even know such an office exists. It is usually given to the most important minister of the minor coalition partner (After the Adenauer era all German governments have been coalitions of two parties - until the Scholz government inaugurated in 2021, that is, which is a three-party coalition[[note]] And accordingly has a "second vice chancellor" representing the third partner in the coalition[[/note]]) who is usually (but not always) also foreign minister, which is helpful for reasons of protocol. Usually a chancellor can only be removed from office by the Bundestag if it elects a successor with majority in the same vote. This ObviousRulePatch was insituted after the UsefulNotes/WeimarRepublic produced shaky governments which were brought down by parties that didn't agree on more than kicking the current government out voting together to do just that and then being unable (and often unwilling) to form a new government. However, if the chancellor dies in office (never happened in post-war Germany) or resigns and, crucially ''refuses to continue as acting chancellor'', the Vice chancellor becomes ''acting'' chancellor until a new permanent chancellor has been elected. In all but one case electorally defeated or resigned chancellors were either immediately replaced with a new chancellor or stayed on as ''acting'' chancellor until their successor could be elected[[note]] Merkel's old government had to stay on for several months after the 2017 election because government formation turned out unexpectedly difficult... She was ultimately succeeded by.. ''herself''[[/note]]. When Willy Brandt however chose to resign over an espionage scandal and the feeling that he had lost the confidence of his own party (and also, it seems, a general feeling of tiredness) he declined to stay on even for a few days as acting chancellor so foreign minister and FDP leader Walter Scheel became acting chancellor for all of nine days before the SPD sorted their own mess out and elected Helmut Schmidt as Brandt's sucessor. Ironically Scheel would be elected to the (largely ceremonial) presidency of Germany a few weeks later.
285** The Presidency meanwhile does not have a Vice Presidency and in the case of (temporary or permanent) inability to execute the office or resignation (which triggers a new election to fill the position within 30 days) or death in office (never occured in postwar Germany) the President of the ''Bundesrat'' (roughly the German equivalent of the U.S. Senate although it works more like the 19th century U.S. senate with delegates named by the state governments, not elected popularly) who, by convention, is the prime minister of one of UsefulNotes/TheSixteenLandsOfDeutschland on a rotational schedule assumes the ''powers and duties'' but not the ''office'' of the President. To date this has happened twice, within two years both times caused by Presidential resignation. In 2010 Jens Böhrnsen, Mayor of Bremen, filled the role after Horst Köhler resigned and in 2012 Horst Seehofer, Prime Minister of Bavaria, filled that role after the resignation of Christian Wulf (Köhler's successor).
286* In the case of Wilhelm II it was not unexpected that he would become Kaiser one day (he was the oldest son of the oldest son of the Emperor) but it did take many by surprise how ''fast'' it happened. In 1888 the old Kaiser, Wilhelm I, who had been born in 1797, died and his son who took the regnal name Friedrich III for Prussian dynastic reasons took over. A lot of liberally inclined Germans hoped for a liberalizing regime of the Anglophile new emperor who was 56 at the time... Unfortunately he was suffering from terminal throat cancer which had been largely kept secret from the public at large. He was dead only 99 days later and his 29 year old son would take over. The [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarI consequences]] are well known. He also would have been made King of the United Kingdom and the Emperor of India if Victoria only had daughters who survived her.
287* In 1947, Earl Snell, the governor of Oregon, was killed in a plane crash. Under state law at the time, the President of the State Senate would have succeeded as governor, as Oregon is one of the few states that doesn't have a Lieutenant Governor. However, the then President, Marshall E. Cornett, was killed in the same crash, as was Oregon Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell Jr. As a result, the governorship fell to the second in line, John Hubert Hall, the Speaker of the State House of Representatives.
288* The state of Arizona, lacking a Lieutenant Governor, has the Secretary of State as first in the line of succession to the state's Governor. However, there's an unusually strict rule here in that the Secretary of State must have been elected to the position to be eligible to move up in case of a gubernatorial vacancy[[note]]Article V, Section 6 of the Arizona state constitution reads: "In the event of the death of the governor, or his resignation, removal from office, or permanent disability to discharge the duties of the office, the secretary of state, if holding by election, shall succeed to the office of governor until his successor shall be elected and shall qualify. If the secretary of state be holding otherwise than by election, or shall fail to qualify as governor, the attorney general, the state treasurer, or the superintendent of public instruction, if holding by election, shall, in the order named, succeed to the office of governor. The taking of the oath of office as governor by any person specified in this section shall constitute resignation from the office by virtue of the holding of which he qualifies as governor. Any successor to the office shall become governor in fact and entitled to all of the emoluments, powers and duties of governor upon taking the oath of office. In the event of the impeachment of the governor, his absence from the state, or other temporary disability to discharge the duties of the office, the powers and duties of the office of governor shall devolve upon the same person as in case of vacancy, but only until the disability ceases."[[/note]]. In October 1977; longtime Secretary of State Wesley Bolin ascended to the Governorship after Governor Raul Hector Castro resigned after being appointed by UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter as Ambassador to UsefulNotes/{{Argentina}}, only for Bolin to die in office on March 4, 1978. As Bolin's successor as Secretary of State, Rose Mofford, had been appointed to finish the most recent term Bolin had been elected to as Secretary of State; she was thus ineligible due to not being elected, with Attorney General Bruce Babbitt ascending to the Governorship, eventually winning two terms in his own right as well. As for Mofford, she would be elected to three terms as Secretary of State before ascending to the Governorship in 1988 after Babbitt's successor, Evan Mecham, was impeached and removed from office of misuse of government funds and obstruction of justice charges[[note]]Mecham would be acquitted in the subsequent criminal trial[[/note]]
289* In October 2023, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representives Kevin [=McCarthy=] was ousted by a coalition of [[EnemyMine embittered Republicans and Democrats]], the first time in American history a Speaker of the House was ousted. The Republicans, who held a razor-thin majority in the House, then went through weeks of chaos trying to elect a new Speaker. The two initially obvious successors, Steve Scalise and Jim Jordan, failed to receive enough votes. A number of lesser knowns also tried and failed. Ultimately, the Republicans managed to elect Mike Johnson, the Vice Chair of the House Republican Conference. To be fair, this wasn't entirely "unexpected", as Johnson had been proposed as a compromise candidate for Speaker when the Republicans won the House in the 2022 midterms, but Johnson had initially said he wasn't going to run for Speaker after [=McCarthy's=] ouster.
290* The race for Speaker of the House after the 1998 midterm elections created another one caused by fallout of the attempted impeachment of UsefulNotes/BillClinton. It began when - shortly after the midterms left the Republicans with a narrow majority in the House of Representatives - incumbent Speaker Creator/NewtGingrich announced he was resigning both as Speaker and from Congress due to the combination of internal feuding within the House Republicans[[note]]with Ohio Congressman and future Speaker John Boehner attempting to topple Gingrich in 1997[[/note]] and the revelation of Gingrich's own extramarital affair with staffer Callista Bisek; who Gingrich eventually married after his marriage to second wife Marianne ended in divorce; with Bob Livingston, a Louisiana Congressman who chaired the House Appropriations Committee and who had led the charge for Clinton's impeachment with regards to the Monica Lewinsky scandal, announced his candidacy for the position after Majority Leader Dick Armey and Majority Whip Tom [=DeLay=] declined to seek the position. However; just weeks before the vote to make Livingston Speaker was to be held, Livingston learned that ''Hustler'' publisher Larry Flynt had dug up dirt and found a woman that Livingston had had his own affair with; resulting in Livingston - after calling for Clinton to resign during the final day of House impeachment hearings - announcing that he would not only stand down as a candidate for Speaker but resign himself within six months of the new Congress (ultimately resigning in March 1999). Ultimately, the position of Speaker ended up going to Illinois Congressman and Chief Majority Deputy Whip Dennis Hastert - which proved HarsherInHindsight when in 2016, Hastert was exposed as having [[PaedoHunt molested several young boys]] during his time as a wrestling coach[[note]]in Livingston's 2018 memoir "''The Windmill Chaser''"; he described the choice of Hastert as candidate for Speaker as "a disaster"[[/note]].
291[[/folder]]

Top