Massachusetts' Republican governor, Baker, will not seek third term

Reuters

Published Dec 01, 2021 11:11AM ET

By Tim McLaughlin

BOSTON (Reuters) - Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker, a popular Republican leader in a Democratic stronghold, said on Wednesday he will not seek a third term in 2022.

Baker, a former healthcare executive known for his skill at managing budgets and who sometimes clashed with former President Donald Trump, has maintained high approval ratings throughout a tenure marked by a surging Massachusetts economy and high vaccination rates during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Among the accomplishments he cited in a statement released on Wednesday were criminal justice and law enforcement reforms, cutting the state income tax to 5% and boosting the state's reserve fund.

Baker, 65, became governor after narrowly defeating Democratic nominee Martha Coakley, a popular state attorney general, by less than 2 percentage points. He easily won re-election in 2018, defeating his Democratic opponent, Jay Gonzalez, by a 2-to-1 margin.

A Harvard graduate, Baker fit the mold of previous Republican governors in Massachusetts by being fiscally conservative with a social agenda that squared with the state's liberal base.

Baker maintained his distance from the policies of Trump, a fellow Republican whom he did not support in two elections. Baker has said he kept his ballot blank in 2016 and 2020 rather than cast a vote for Trump.

Baker did not back Trump's unsupported contention that he lost the White House to Democrat Joe Biden because the election results were rigged.