Deval Patrick | |
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Governor Patrick at the Corner Office in the Statehouse. | |
71st Governor of Massachusetts | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office January 4, 2007 |
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Lieutenant | Tim Murray |
Preceded by | Mitt Romney |
Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division of the United States | |
In office 1994–1997 |
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President | Bill Clinton |
Preceded by | John Dunne |
Succeeded by | Bill Lann Lee |
Personal details | |
Born | July 31, 1956 Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Political party | Democratic Party |
Spouse(s) | Diane Patrick |
Children | Sarah Katherine |
Residence | Milton, Massachusetts |
Alma mater | Harvard College Harvard Law School |
Profession | Lawyer |
Religion | Methodist |
Signature | |
Website | Official website |
Deval Laurdine Patrick (born July 31, 1956) is the 71st and current Governor of Massachusetts. A member of the Democratic Party, Patrick served as an Assistant United States Attorney General under President Bill Clinton. He is the state's first African American governor and the second African American to be elected governor of any US state.
Born and raised by a single mother on the South Side of Chicago, Patrick won a scholarship to Milton Academy in Massachusetts in the eighth grade. He went on to attend Harvard College and Harvard Law School, where he was President of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau. After graduating he practiced law with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. He later joined a Boston law firm, where he was named a partner at the age of 34. In 1994, President Bill Clinton appointed Patrick Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, where he worked on issues including racial profiling and police misconduct. Patrick returned to Boston in 1997 to work in private law. In the following years he worked as general counsel for Texaco in New York City and Coca-Cola in Atlanta, which were both facing large racial discrimination settlements.
When he announced his candidacy for the 2006 gubernatorial election in Massachusetts, Patrick was initially seen as a dark horse candidate, but ultimately won the Democratic primary against veteran politicians Thomas Reilly and Chris Gabrielli. He went on to defeat Republican Lieutanent Governor Kerry Healey in the general election, and was inaugurated in January 2007. In his first term, Patrick oversaw the implementation of the state's 2006 health care reform program, increased funding to education and life sciences, won a federal Race to the Top education grant, passed an overhaul of state transportation industries to create the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, worked with the legislature to defend the legality of same-sex marriage, and increased the state sales tax from 5% to 6.25%. Under Patrick, Massachusetts joined the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions[1] and greatly expanded services to veterans.[2] His two legislative battles to implement casino gambling failed: he could not win the approval of the House of Representatives in March 2008, and he vetoed a bill passed by the legislature in August 2010 for going too far.
Patrick was re-elected in the 2010 gubernatorial election against Republican Charlie Baker and Independent Tim Cahill. His second term began on January 6, 2011 and in an interview with the Boston Globe, Patrick declared he will not seek re-election in 2014.
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Patrick was born on the South Side of Chicago, where his family resided in a two-bedroom apartment in Robert Taylor Homes housing projects. In 1959, his father Laurdine "Pat" Patrick, a member of jazz musician Sun Ra's band, left his wife Mae (née Wintersmith),[3] Deval, and their daughter, Rhonda (who is one year Deval's senior) in order to play music in New York City[4] and because he had fathered a daughter by another woman.[5] Deval reportedly had a strained relationship with his father, who opposed his choice of high school, but they eventually reconciled.[5] Patrick was raised by his mother, Mae, who traces her roots to American slaves in the American South, in the state of Kentucky.[3] The family spent many months living on welfare[6]
While Patrick was in middle school, one of his teachers referred him to A Better Chance, a national non-profit organization for identifying, recruiting and developing leaders among academically gifted minority students, which enabled him to attend Milton Academy.[7] Patrick graduated from Milton Academy in 1974. After high school, Patrick became the first person in his family to attend college.[8] He graduated from Harvard College with an A.B. cum laude[8] in English and American literature in 1978. He then spent a year working with the United Nations in Africa. In 1979, Patrick returned to the United States and enrolled at Harvard Law School. While in law school, Patrick was elected president of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, where he first worked defending poor families in Middlesex County, Massachusetts.
Patrick graduated from Harvard Law School with a J.D. cum laude[8] in 1982. He proceeded to fail the State Bar of California exam twice but ended up passing the California bar on his third try.[9] Patrick then served as a law clerk to Judge Stephen Reinhardt on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit for one year. In 1983, he joined the staff of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund (LDF), where he worked on death penalty and voting rights cases.[7] While at LDF, he met Bill Clinton, then the governor of Arkansas, when he sued Clinton in a voting case.[10] In 1986, he joined the Boston law firm of Hill & Barlow and was named partner in 1990, at the age of 34.[7] While at Hill & Barlow he managed high-profile engagements such as acting as Desiree Washington's attorney in her civil lawsuit against Mike Tyson.[11]
He and his wife, Diane Patrick (born 1951), a lawyer specializing in labor and employment law, married in 1984. They have lived in Milton, Massachusetts since 1989 and have two daughters, Sarah and Katherine. In July 2008, Katherine publicly announced that she is a lesbian, and mentioned that her father did not know this while he was fighting against a proposed amendment to the state constitution that would have banned same-sex marriage. In a joint interview Patrick expressed support for his daughter and said he was proud of her.[12] In addition to his Milton home, Patrick and his family own a home in the Berkshire County town of Richmond, Massachusetts.[13]
In 1994, Clinton nominated Patrick Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division, subsequently confirmed by the United States Senate. As the head of the Civil Rights Division, Patrick worked on issues including racial profiling, police misconduct, fair lending enforcement, human trafficking, prosecution of hate crime, abortion clinic violence, discrimination based on gender and disability, and enforcing the Americans with Disabilities Act. He led what was (before the September 11, 2001 attacks) the largest federal criminal investigation in history as co-chair of the Task Force investigating the arsons of synagogues and Black churches in the South in the mid-1990s. He had a key role as an adviser to post-apartheid South Africa during this time and helped draft that country's civil rights laws.
His tenure was not without controversy. Federal affirmative action policy was under judicial and political review, and Patrick defended Clinton's policy. Patrick also enforced federal laws concerning treatment of incarcerated criminals, to the extent that one warden called him a "zealot."[14] He has also been criticized for his role in the Third Circuit Court of Appeals case Piscataway v. Taxman, wherein, due to budget constraints, a white woman named Sharon Taxman was laid off rather than a black woman of allegedly "identical" qualifications, because the school wanted diversity on its teaching staff. Taxman sued and prevailed in US District Court, but Patrick encouraged the Justice Department, which had supported Taxman in the Bush administration, to withdraw from the case. Taxman was subsequently rehired and eventually settled her suit.
In 1997, Patrick returned to Boston to join the firm Day, Berry & Howard, and was appointed by the federal district court to serve as Chairman of Texaco's Equality and Fairness Task Force to oversee implementation of the terms of a race discrimination settlement at Texaco. Working with employees at all levels, Patrick and his Task Force examined and reformed Texaco's complex corporate employment culture, and created a model for fostering an equitable workplace.[15] After serving for nearly two years, he was appointed Vice President and General Counsel for the company in New York City, leading the company’s global legal affairs. From 2000 to 2004, Patrick worked as Executive Vice President, General Counsel, and Corporate Secretary of the Coca-Cola Company in Atlanta. He resigned in 2004, ending nearly 6 years of weekly commuting between Massachusetts and jobs out of state.
Some gay rights activists have criticized him for his tenure on the United Airlines (UAL) board. During this time, the company originally fought an ordinance requiring that it offer domestic partnership benefits but Patrick successfully encouraged UAL to offer such benefits to all employees, making it the first airline to do so.[16]
From 2004 to 2006, he served on the board of directors of ACC Capital Holdings, the parent company of Ameriquest and Argent Mortgage. He joined the board at the request of Ameriquest's founder Roland Arnall.[17] Deval Patrick was one of five board members of ACC Capital Holdings until he resigned in 2006. During his tenure on the board, Ameriquest and Argent originated over $80 billion dollars in subprime mortgages.[18] He also served on the boards of Reebok, Coca Cola, and the Ford Foundation.[19]
In 2005, Patrick announced his candidacy for Governor of Massachusetts. He was at first seen as a dark horse candidate, facing veteran Massachusetts campaigners Thomas "Tom" Reilly and Chris Gabrielli in the Democratic primary.
Patrick secured the nomination in the September 2006 primary, winning 49% of the vote in a three-way race and carrying every county in the state.In the general election, he faced Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor Kerry Healey, a Republican, Christy Mihos, running as an Independent, and Grace Ross, of the Green-Rainbow Party.
On April 2, 2009, Patrick confirmed that alongside Lt. Governor Timothy Murray, he would run for re-election as Governor of Massachusetts.[20] On June 5, 2010, he was renominated by the Democrats and ran against Republican Charlie Baker, Independent Tim Cahill, and Green/Rainbow Jill Stein. A Rasmussen Reports poll released on September 28 showed Patrick leading Baker 47%-42%.[21] Patrick won the general election by winning 48% of the votes to 42% for Baker on November 2, 2010.
Before taking office, Patrick named a transition team headed by lawyer Michael Angelini, bank executive Ronald Homer, and Weld administration economic affairs secretary Gloria Cordes Larson.[22] In his first meetings with the legislative leadership, he proposed his first action would be to hire 1000 new police officers and to expand full-day kindergarten statewide.[23] He has since scaled back his original proposal and will hire only 250 officers due to the effects of the economic recession on the state's budget.[24] As part of the transition, Patrick created a series of working groups who held public meetings to advise him on various policy areas.[25] The groups included a few names prominent in the election: Harvard Pilgrim CEO Charles D. Baker, Jr. on Budget & Finance, a Weld administration finance advisor who is now the GOP candidate for governor; Center of Women and Enterprise founder and candidate in the Lieutenant Governor's primary Andrea Silbert on Economic Development; and gubernatorial primary candidate Chris Gabrieli on PreK-12 Education.
Breaking with the tradition of being inaugurated in the House Chamber of the Massachusetts State House, Deval Patrick and Tim Murray took the oath of office, and Patrick delivered his inaugural address,[26] outdoors on the West Portico of the State House facing Boston Common. This allowed a larger part of the public to witness and take part first hand in the event, and was intended to signal more open, transparent, and accessible government.[27] The governor-elect was facing the Robert Gould Shaw Memorial, just across Beacon Street, a memorial to the first black regiment in the U.S. Civil War. He took his oath of office on the Mendi Bible, which was given to then-Congressman John Quincy Adams by the freed American slaves from the ship La Amistad in honor of his heritage.[28]
A series of regional inaugural balls, seven in all, were held to bring the inauguration to the citizens of the Commonwealth. These celebrations took place on Cape Cod, in Worcester, Dartmouth, Pittsfield, Springfield, and Boston.[29]
On September 24, 2009, Patrick appointed Paul G. Kirk as the interim U.S. senator in the wake of Ted Kennedy's death.[30]
When he announced his candidacy for the 2006 gubernatorial election in Massachusetts, Patrick was initially seen as a dark horse candidate, but ultimately won the Democratic primary against veteran politicians Thomas Reilly and Chris Gabrielli. He went on to defeat Republican Lieutanent Governor Kerry Healey in the general election, and was inaugurated in January 2007. In his first term, Patrick oversaw the implementation of the state's 2006 health care reform program, increased funding to education and life sciences, won a federal Race to the Top education grant, passed an overhaul of state transportation industries to create the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, worked with the legislature to defend the legality of same-sex marriage, and increased the state sales tax from 5% to 6.25%. Under Patrick, Massachusetts joined the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions[1] and greatly expanded services to veterans.[2] His two legislative battles to implement casino gambling failed: he could not win the approval of the House of Representatives in March 2008, and he vetoed a bill passed by the legislature in August 2010 for going too far.
During the 2006 Gubernatorial Election Patrick faced criticism[31] for having once written letters to the parole board describing correspondence from Benjamin LaGuer, a man convicted of a brutal eight-hour rape, as "thoughtful, insightful, eloquent, [and] humane".[32] Patrick contributed $5,000 towards the DNA testing which linked LaGuer to the crime. Once the DNA test proved LaGuer's guilt, Patrick withdrew his support for the inmate's release.[33]
In the early months of Patrick's administration, a series of decisions the governor later conceded as missteps brought substantial unfavorable press. These included spending almost $11,000 on drapery for the governor's state house suite, changing the state's customary car lease from a Ford Crown Victoria to a Cadillac, and hiring a staff assistant (who had previously helped chair his election campaign) for the Commonwealth's first lady at an annual salary of almost $75,000. Emerging from a weekend of working on the state's budget and calling for cuts in services to taxpayers, Patrick responded in a February 20, 2007 press conference that "I realize I cannot in good conscience ask the agencies to make those choices without being willing to make them myself"[34]
Patrick subsequently reimbursed the Commonwealth for the cost of the drapery and furniture purchased for the state house, and the additional monthly difference in his car lease.[34] First Lady Diane Patrick's staff assistant, Amy Gorin, resigned.[35]
Later in the same month Patrick again came under fire, this time for contacting Citigroup Executive Committee chair, and former Clinton Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin on behalf of the financially beleaguered mortgage company Ameriquest, a subsidiary of ACC Capital Holdings, that had been accused of predatory lending practices and of which Patrick is a former board member. Both Citigroup and ACC Capital Holdings have substantial holdings in Massachusetts.[36] Patrick attempted to deflect criticism claiming he was calling not as governor but as a private citizen. Later Patrick backed down, stating "I appreciate that I should not have made the call. I regret the mistake."[36]
In December 2008, Patrick faced criticism from Massachusetts Republicans for the hiring of attorney and real estate consultant Dana Harrell to the newly created position of state Director of Real Estate Services.[37] Harrell is a neighbor of Deval Patrick in Milton, and he and his wife have contributed to the governor's election campaign and to the Democratic State Committee.[38] The appointment to the $120,000-per-year position came at a time when the state faced a $1.4 billion revenue shortfall which may cause Patrick to layoff 1,000 state workers and cut state aid to towns and cities.[37][39]
Patrick came to the defense of Presidential candidate Barack Obama during the Democratic primary when it was reported that a few key phrases from one of Obama's stump speech were very similar to words used during Patrick's own 2006 Massachusetts Gubernatorial run. The charges of plagiarism were largely dismissed after Patrick explained that he had encouraged Obama to use the same quotes.[40]
In August 2011, Patrick declared state of emergency in Massachustts as the state was facing the arrival of Hurricane Irene.[41]
The Patrick Cabinet | ||
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Office | Name | Term |
Governor | Deval Patrick | 2007 – present |
Lieutenant Governor | Tim Murray | 2007 – present |
Secretaries of Executive Departments | ||
Health and Human Services | JudyAnn Bigby | 2007 – present |
Energy and Environmental Affairs | Ian Bowles | 2007 – 2011 |
Rick Sullivan | 2011 – present | |
Public Safety | Kevin M. Burke | 2007 – 2010 |
Mary Elizabeth Heffernan | 2010 – present | |
Labor and Workforce Development | Suzanne Bump | 2007 – 2010 |
Joanne F. Goldstein | 2010 – present | |
Transportation and Public Works (until 2009) | Bernard Cohen | 2007 – 2009 |
Jim Aloisi | 2009 | |
Department of Transportation (from 2009) | Jeffrey B. Mullan | 2009 – 2011 |
Richard A. Davey | 2011 – present | |
Administration and Finance | Leslie Kirwan | 2007 – 2009 |
Jay Gonzalez | 2009 – present | |
Education (created in 2008) | Paul Reville | 2008 – present |
Housing and Economic Development | Dan O'Connell | 2007 – 2009 |
Greg Bialecki | 2009 – present | |
Elder Affairs | Jennifer Davis Carey | 2007 |
Michael E. Festa | 2007 – 2009 | |
Ann L. Hartstein | 2009 – present | |
Veterans' Services | Thomas G. Kelley | 2007 – 2011 |
Coleman Nee | 2011 – Present | |
Special Advisors | ||
Education | Dana Mohler-Faria | 2007 – 2008 |
Throughout his term in office, Patrick has made achieving “world-class public education” a main priority of his administration.[42] Patrick also committed a historic amount of public funds to Massachusetts schools, introducing legislation to tackle a persistent education gap among minority students, and winning the national Race to the Top competition.[43] Patrick now supports a doubling of the number of charter schools in Massachusetts.[44] In his first year in office, Patrick proposed making community college free to all Massachusetts high school graduates.[45]
Patrick favored the legalizing of same-sex marriage because of the fundamental principle that "citizens come before their government as equals".[46][47] He worked with the state legislature to prevent a ballot measure eliminating same-sex marriage in Massachusetts, which protected the state's first-in-the-nation same-sex marriage allowance.[48]
Patrick opposes the death penalty, saying that "the death penalty does not work. It hasn't worked in actually deterring crime, and it won't work for Massachusetts."[46][49] This position had put him at odds with ex-Lt. Governor Kerry Healey, who wanted to "reinstate the death penalty for felons convicted of killing a law enforcement officer, judge, prosecutor or corrections officer".[50]
Patrick was an early supporter of the Cape Wind energy project, at a time when prominent Massachusetts politicians from Mitt Romney to Ted Kennedy were working against it. Patrick proposed a bill that would streamline Massachusetts's permit appeals process for wind-energy projects. The Wind Energy Sitting Reform bill would reduce the permitting process from the current litigation limbo to nine to 19 months.[51]
In 2010 Governor Deval Patrick pushed for legislation to limit the purchase of firearms, citing a series of gun violence incidents and violent crime in Boston.[52] Gun Owners' Action League, the official National Rifle Association state chapter, has given Governor Patrick an "F" on gun rights.[53]
Patrick has made implementing the state's 2006 health care reform law a signature achievement. Currently, over 98% of Massachusetts residents have health care insurance, more than any other state.[54]
Patrick has made bringing down health care costs a priority in his second term and has proposed a number of reforms, including moving to a global payment system.[55] In 2010, he successfully prodded health care insurance companies to negotiate with the state before introducing increases in premiums.[56]
Patrick is a proponent of stem cell research and was critical of former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney for vetoing a stem cell bill. He proposes creating a bonding bill similar to California's recent path, and using it to invest in stem cell research at the University of Massachusetts, creating a simultaneous boost to the commonwealth's institutions of public higher education.[57] Patrick passed the Life Sciences Initiative, a $10 billion, multi-year initiative to invest in Massachusetts' life sciences industry. He was honored as Governor of the Year in 2008 by BIO, a biotech industry group.[58]
Patrick has called immigration a federal issue and has supported the McCain-Kennedy plan to tighten border control and create "pathway[s] to citizenship" for immigrants who have established lives in America.[59][60]
Patrick submitted a bill that would allow the construction and operation of three resort-style casinos in the state. He argued that these casinos would generate $2 billion for the state economy and add $400 million in annual casino revenue and $200 million in fees per license to the state coffers as well as add $50 million to $80 million in sales, meal, and hotel taxes. He also touted that the casinos would create 30,000 construction jobs and 20,000 permanent jobs.[61][62]
Patrick proposed that the revenue generated would be spent to beef up local law enforcement, create a state gambling regulatory agency, repair roads and bridges ($200 million), gambling addiction treatment ($50 million) and the remainder would go towards property tax relief.[63][64]
Patrick's plan faced strong opposition from Salvatore DiMasi, the Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives. DiMasi questioned the governor's projections of new jobs, revenues to be generated and was an opposed to what he referred to as a casino culture saying: "Do we want to usher in a casino culture– with rampant bankruptcies, crime and social ills– or do we want to create a better Massachusetts for all sectors of the society?"[65][66] Casino gaming lobbying in Massachusetts has also received scrutiny for associations with the Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal and efforts by the Mashpee Wampanoag people to secure rights to a casino outside of the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. In 2009 Governor Deval Patrick was among the top campaign contribution recipients from casino lobbying interests,[67] and from financiers backing the Wampanoag casino interests. [68]
On March 20, 2008 the Massachusetts House of Representatives rejected Patrick's casino bill by a vote of 108 to 46.[69] Despite the overwhelming vote, questions were raised by critics of DiMasi as to the tactics he used to win. These included allegations that he promised a subsequent vote on a bill that would allow slot machines at the state's four racetracks and the pre-vote promotions of six lawmakers who had been thought to support the bill, but either abstained or voted against the bill. DiMasi denied that any promise had been made on the race track bill and denied that the promotions were connected to the casino bill vote.[70][71][72]
Patrick's conduct was also criticized and his commitment to the bill questioned when it was revealed that he was not in the state on the day the bill was voted on in the legislature. As the bill was being voted down, Patrick was in New York City on personal business, finalizing a $1.35 million dollar deal with Broadway Books, an imprint of Random House, to publish his autobiography.[73][74][75]
By mid-2010, the house and senate passed a bill with plans for three resort-style casinos and two slot parlors. However, Patrick vetoed it as he previously stated that he would only accept one slot parlor.[76] With a 2011 casino legislation plan pending, a Boston Globe investigative report revealed the governor violated his self-imposed policy of not accepting money from or meeting with lobbyists for the gambling industry by accepting more than $6,000 in campaign contributions and meeting with and attending fundraisers hosted by gaming lobbyists.[77]
The legislatively chartered Transportation Finance Commission (TFC) reported in 2007 that over the next 20 years there would be $15–$19 billion gap between revenues and necessary expenditures, just to maintain existing transportation system in Massachusetts. The Commission identified several reforms and revenue options to close the gap.[78] The Patrick Administration lobbied for and passed a major transportation reform bill,[79] which incorporated many of the TFC-recommended reforms, and which created the Massachusetts Department of Transportation by merging smaller transportation agencies.
Patrick proposed raising the state gas tax by 19¢ per gallon to forestall Massachusetts Turnpike toll and MBTA fare increases, fully fund Regional Transit Authority and Turnpike operations, and address part of the capital shortfall identified by the TFC,[80] but this was defeated in the state legislature. Instead, a sales tax increase of 1.25% was passed, with part of that dedicated to transportation. This was enough to prevent the short-term toll and fare increases, but did not address the long-term funding gap.
Patrick has been a supporter[81] of the South Coast Rail Link project, which his administration advanced from planning to early construction.
Democratic gubernatorial primary 2006[82] | |||||
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
Democratic | Deval Patrick | 452,229 | 49.57% | ||
Democratic | Chris Gabrieli | 248,301 | 27.22% | ||
Democratic | Tom Reilly | 211,031 | 23.13% | ||
Democratic | Write-in | 787 | 0.08% | ||
Democratic | Blanks | 14,054 | |||
Majority | 203,928 | 22.35% | |||
Turnout | 926,402 |
Massachusetts Gubernatorial Election 2006 | |||||
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
Democratic | Deval Patrick | 1,234,984 | 55.6 | ||
Republican | Kerry Healey | 784,342 | 35.3 | ||
Independent | Christy Mihos | 154,628 | 6.9 | ||
Green-Rainbow | Grace Ross | 43,193 | 1.9 |
Massachusetts Gubernatorial Election 2010[83] | |||||
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
Democratic | Deval Patrick / Tim Murray | 1,112,283 | 48.42 | –7.21 | |
Republican | Charlie Baker / Richard R. Tisei | 964,866 | 42.00 | +6.67 | |
Independent | Tim Cahill / Paul Loscocco | 184,395 | 8.03 | +1.06 | |
Green-Rainbow | Jill Stein / Richard P. Purcell | 32,895 | 1.43 | –0.51 | |
Write-in | All others | 2,600 | 0.11 | –0.01 | |
Total votes | 2,297,039 | % | |||
Blank | 22,924 | ||||
Turnout | 2,319,963 | ||||
Majority | 147,417 | 6.41 | |||
Democratic hold | Swing | –13.88 |
Party political offices | ||
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Preceded by Shannon O'Brien |
Democratic nominee for Governor of Massachusetts 2006, 2010 |
Most recent |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by Mitt Romney |
Governor of Massachusetts 2007–present |
Incumbent |
United States order of precedence | ||
Preceded by Joe Biden as Vice President |
Order of Precedence of the United States Within Massachusetts |
Succeeded by Mayor of city in which event is held |
Succeeded by Otherwise John Boehner as Speaker of the House of Representatives |
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Preceded by Dan Malloy as Governor of Connecticut |
Order of Precedence of the United States Outside Massachusetts |
Succeeded by Martin O'Malley as Governor of Maryland |
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