ballotpedia.org

Governor of Massachusetts

Massachusetts Governor

Seal of Massachusetts.png
General information
Office Type:  Partisan
Office website:  Official Link
Compensation:  $222,185
2025 FY Budget:  $6,673,602
Term limits:  None
Structure
Length of term:   4 years
Authority:  Massachusetts Constitution, Chapter 2, Section I, Article I
Selection Method:  Elected
Current Officeholder

Governor of Massachusetts Maura Healey
Democratic Party
Assumed office: January 5, 2023

Elections
Next election:  2026
Last election:  2022
Other Massachusetts Executive Offices
GovernorLieutenant GovernorSecretary of StateAttorney GeneralTreasurerAuditorSecretary of EducationAgriculture CommissionerInsurance CommissionerSecretary of Energy and Environmental AffairsSecretary of Labor and Workforce DevelopmentPublic Utilities Commission

The Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is an elected constitutional officer, the head of the executive branch and the highest state office in Massachusetts. The governor is popularly elected every four years by a plurality and is not subject to term limits.[1]


Like most other state officers, senators, and representatives, the governor was originally elected annually. In 1918 this was changed to a two-year term, and since 1966 the office of governor has carried a four-year term.

Massachusetts has a Democratic trifecta. The Democratic Party controls the office of governor and both chambers of the state legislature.

Massachusetts has a Democratic triplex. The Democratic Party controls the offices of governor, secretary of state, and attorney general.

See also: Massachusetts State Legislature, Massachusetts House of Representatives, Massachusetts State Senate

Current officeholder

The current Governor of Massachusetts is Maura Healey (D). Healey assumed office in 2023.

The state Constitution addresses the office of the governor in Chapter 2, the Executive Department.

Under Chapter 2, Section I, Article I:

There shall be a supreme executive magistrate, who shall be styled, The Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts; and whose title shall be -- His Excellency.[1]

Qualifications

State Executives

StateExecLogo.png

Current Governors
Gubernatorial Elections
202520242023202220212020201920182017201620152014
Current Lt. Governors
Lt. Governor Elections
202520242023202220212020201920182017201620152014

A candidate for the governorship must be a registered elector in the state and have been a resident for at least seven years before taking office.[1]

Elections

Massachusetts state government organizational chart

Massachusetts elects governors in the midterm elections, that is, even years that are not presidential election years. For Massachusetts, 2018, 2022, 2026, 2030, and 2034 are all gubernatorial election years. Legally, the first day of the political year is always the first Wednesday in the January following an election and the gubernatorial inauguration occurs at noon the first Thursday in January.

Under Article VII of the Amendments to the Constitution, once the Governor has taken the oath of office, no further oath or affirmation shall be required before he executes any his duties.[1]

2022

See also: Massachusetts gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial election, 2022

General election

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Democratic primary election

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Republican primary election

2018

See also: Massachusetts gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial election, 2018

General election

Democratic primary election

Republican primary election

2014

See also: Massachusetts gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial election, 2014
Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngCharles D. Baker/Karyn Polito 48.4% 1,044,573
     Democratic Martha Coakley/Steve Kerrigan 46.5% 1,004,408
     United Independent Evan Falchuk/Angus Jennings 3.3% 71,814
     Independent Scott Lively/Shelly Saunders 0.9% 19,378
     Independent Jeffrey McCormick/Tracy Post 0.8% 16,295
     Nonpartisan Write-in votes 0.1% 1,858
Total Votes 2,158,326
Election results via Massachusetts Secretary of State

Term limits

See also: States with gubernatorial term limits

Massachusetts governors do not face any term limits.

Partisan composition

The chart below shows the partisan breakdown of Massachusetts governors from 1992 to 2013.

Governor of Massachusetts Partisanship.PNG

Vacancies

See also: How gubernatorial vacancies are filled

Details of vacancy appointments are addressed under Article LV of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution. When it was passed, Article LV annulled and replaced Article VI of Section III of Chapter II.

The established line of succession for any gubernatorial vacancy is:

When the lieutenant governor takes over, his or her official title is 'Lieutenant Governor, Acting Governor'. Regardless of the officer who takes over as acting governor, that individual shall have all the powers and rights of the elected governor, if not the title.

If a governor-elect dies without taking office, the individual elected on the same ballot as the lieutenant governor shall take office and serve as the governor.

Any time a sitting Governor communicates in writing to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of House of Representatives that he or she is unable to discharge the office, that action shall be taken to consider the office of the governor vacant. At any time, the Chief Justice and a majority of the Associate Justices of the Massachusetts Supreme Court may deliver an opinion to the Senate and House that they have found the governor unfit to discharge the office; in such an instance, the governorship shall also be considered to be vacant.

Whether a governor declared himself or herself temporarily unfit or the courts found him or her unfit, the governor may deliver, to the legislature, a written statement that he or she is fit to return to office. Unless the Supreme Court contests that declaration, the governor shall return to office within four days. If the Supreme Court does challenge the governor's return to office, Article XCI of the Amendments to the Constitution lays out a process for hearing and a final decision.

Regardless of who initiated the decision about the governor's disability, if that disability continues for six months and if more than five months remain until the next biennial election, a special election shall be held for the remainder of the governor's term.

Duties

Massachusetts

As one of America's oldest constitutions, many of the original duties assigned to the governor have been annulled or superseded by over two centuries of amendments. Under the organization of the Massachusetts Constitution, all amendments are listed separately in Articles of Amendment, Massachusetts Constitution, which itself runs to 120 discrete items.

Massachusetts' governor is the commander-in-chief of the state's militia, which he or she may assemble for training and parade as well as for actual military functions. Within legal parameters, the governor may also give periodic advice on the organization and regulation of the militia.

Regarding vetoes, if the governor communicates an objection to a bill and the legislature adjourns before he or she is able to deliver his objections, that bill shall not take effect or have any force of law. The governor may not veto a law passed by the voters, through the General Court may amend or repeal such a law.

Other duties and privileges of the office include:

  • Making appointments, including notaries public and judicial officers. Additionally, if the legislature is in recess when an office they appoint becomes vacant, the governor may make a vacancy appointment. With consent of the legislature, the governor may also remove previously appointed notaries and judicial officers. Also, the governor may retire appointees for reasons of mental or physical health
  • Decennially, working with legislators, reapportioning the number of Senators and Representatives each district shall have
  • Granting all military commissions made by the state of Massachusetts
  • Making recommendations concerning the general appropriations bills, supplementary budgets, and details and terms of loans taken on by the state to the legislature. The governor also has a line-item veto on the appropriations bill.
  • Convening special sessions of the legislature
  • Granting pardons, except in cases of impeachment where the individual has been tried in the House and convicted in the Senate
  • Requiring legal opinions on important judicial matters from members of the Massachusetts Supreme Court
  • Preparing and presenting, to the legislature, plans to reorganize the executive branch, including establishing and abolishing departments and offices
  • Presenting a budget to the legislature each year, and compelling any board, commission, or office to provide information deemed necessary in preparing a budget

Divisions

Note: Ballotpedia's state executive officials project researches state official websites for information that describes the divisions (if any exist) of a state executive office. That information for the Governor of Massachusetts has not yet been added. After extensive research we were unable to identify any relevant information on state official websites. If you have any additional information about this office for inclusion on this section and/or page, please email us.

State budget

Role in state budget

See also: Massachusetts state budget and finances

The state operates on an annual budget cycle. The sequence of key events in the budget process is as follows:[2]

  1. Budget instructions are sent to state agencies in mid-November of the year preceding the start of the new fiscal year.
  2. The governor submits his or her proposed budget to the state legislature on the fourth Wednesday in January.
  3. The legislature typically adopts a budget in June. A simple majority is required to pass a budget. The fiscal year begins July 1.

Massachusetts is one of 44 states in which the governor has line item veto authority.[2][3]

The governor is legally required to submit a balanced budget proposal. Likewise, the legislature is legally required to pass a balanced budget.[2]

Governor's office budget

The budget for the offices of governor, lieutenant governor, and the governor's council for the 2025 fiscal year was $6,673,602.[4]

Compensation

See also: Comparison of gubernatorial salaries and Compensation of state executive officers

The Massachusetts Constitution states that the governor should have a fixed and permanent salary, decided upon by the State Legislature, which would be revisited if the salary was deemed insufficient.[1] However in 1998, the Massachusetts State Legislators Compensation Amendment was passed, prohibiting state legislators from altering the base pay of the governor, and other state public officials. Since January 2001, compensation for public officials instead is adjusted (increased or decreased) every two years corresponding with changes in median household income for Massachusetts’s residents.[5]

In 2014, a seven-member Special Advisory Commission was created by Section 239 of the Articles of Amendment to the Constitution to review and compare the compensation of Massachusetts’s public officials to other states.[6] [7]

2023

In 2023, the officer's salary was $222,185, according to the Council of State Governments.[8]

2022

In 2022, the officer's salary was $185,000, according to the Council of State Governments.[9]

2021

In 2021, the governor received a salary of $185,000, according to the Council of State Governments.[10]

2020

In 2020, the governor received a salary was $185,000, according to the Council of State Governments.[11]

2019

In 2019, the governor received a salary was $185,000, according to the Council of State Governments.[12]

2018

In 2018, the governor received a salary was $151,800, according to the Council of State Governments.[13]

2017

In 2017, the governor received a salary was $151,800, according to the Council of State Governments.[14]

2016

In 2016, the governor received a salary was $151,800, according to the Council of State Governments.[15]

2015

In 2015, the governor received a salary was $151,800, according to the Council of State Governments.[16]

2014

In 2014, the governor earned a salary of $151,800, according to the Council of State Governments.[17]

2013

In 2013, the governor's salary was $139,832.[18]

2010

In 2010, the governor was paid $140,535 a year, the 16th highest gubernatorial salary in America at the time.[19]

Historical officeholders

There have been 68 Governors of Massachusetts since 1789. Of the 68 officeholders, 33 were Republican, 16 were Democrat, six were Democratic-Republican, five were Federalists, five were Whig, two were Republican/Whig, one was American/Know-Nothing, one was Democrat/National, and one was Adams Republican.[20]

List of officeholders from 1789-present
# Name Tenure Party
7 John Hancock 1789 - 1793 Federalist
8 Samuel Adams 1793 - 1797 Democratic-Republican
9 Increase Sumner 1797 - 1799 Federalist
10 Caleb Strong 1800 - 1807 Federalist
11 James Sullivan 1807 - 1808 Democratic-Republican
12 Levi Lincoln 1808 - 1809 Democratic-Republican
13 Christopher Gore 1809 - 1810 Federalist
14 Elbridge Gerry 1810 - 1812 Democratic-Republican
10 Caleb Strong 1812 - 1816 Federalist
15 John Brooks 1816 - 1823 Federalist
16 William Eustis 1823 - 1825 Democratic-Republican
17 Marcus Morton 1825 - 1825 Democratic-Republican
18 Levi Lincoln 1825 - 1833 Adams Republican
19 John Davis 1834 - 1835 Ends.png Republican, Whig
20 Samuel Turell Armstrong 1835 - 1836 Whig
21 Edward Everett 1836 - 1840 Whig
17 Marcus Morton 1840 - 1841 Democratic-Republican
19 John Davis 1841 - 1843 Ends.png Republican, Whig
17 Marcus Morton 1843 - 1844 Democratic-Republican
22 George Nixon Briggs 1844 - 1851 Whig
23 George Sewall Boutwell 1851 - 1853 Electiondot.png Democratic
24 John Henry Clifford 1853 - 1854 Whig
25 Emory Washburn 1854 - 1855 Whig
26 Henry Joseph Gardner 1855 - 1858 American /Know-Nothing
27 Nathaniel Prentice Banks 1858 - 1861 Ends.png Republican
28 John Albion Andrew 1861 - 1866 Ends.png Republican
29 Alexander Hamilton Bullock 1866 - 1869 Ends.png Republican
30 William Claflin 1869 - 1872 Ends.png Republican
31 William Barrett Washburn 1872 - 1874 Ends.png Republican
32 Thomas Talbot 1874 - 1875 Ends.png Republican
33 William Gaston 1875 - 1876 Electiondot.png Democratic
34 Alexander Hamilton Rice 1876 - 1879 Ends.png Republican
32 Thomas Talbot 1879 - 1880 Ends.png Republican
35 John Davis Long 1880 - 1883 Ends.png Republican
36 Benjamin Franklin Butler 1883 - 1884 Electiondot.png Democratic, National
37 George Dexter Robinson 1884 - 1887 Ends.png Republican
38 Oliver Ames 1887 - 1890 Ends.png Republican
39 John Quincy Adams Brackett 1890 - 1891 Ends.png Republican
40 William Eustis Russell 1891 - 1894 Electiondot.png Democratic
41 Frederic Thomas Greenhalge 1894 - 1896 Ends.png Republican
42 Roger Wolcott 1896 - 1900 Ends.png Republican
43 Winthrop Murray Crane 1900 - 1903 Ends.png Republican
44 John Lewis Bates 1903 - 1905 Ends.png Republican
45 William Lewis Douglas 1905 - 1906 Electiondot.png Democratic
46 Curtis Guild 1906 - 1909 Ends.png Republican
47 Ebenezer Sumner Draper 1909 - 1911 Ends.png Republican
48 Eugene Noble Foss 1911 - 1914 Electiondot.png Democratic
49 David Ignatius Walsh 1914 - 1916 Electiondot.png Democratic
50 Samuel Walker McCall 1916 - 1919 Ends.png Republican
51 John Calvin Coolidge 1919 - 1921 Ends.png Republican
52 Channing Harris Cox 1921 - 1925 Ends.png Republican
53 Alvan Tufts Fuller 1925 - 1929 Ends.png Republican
54 Frank G. Allen 1929 - 1931 Ends.png Republican
55 Joseph Buell Ely 1931 - 1935 Electiondot.png Democratic
56 James Michael Curley 1935 - 1937 Electiondot.png Democratic
57 Charles Francis Hurley 1937 - 1939 Electiondot.png Democratic
58 Leverett Saltonstall 1939 - 1945 Ends.png Republican
59 Maurice Tobin 1945 - 1947 Electiondot.png Democratic
58 Robert Fiske Bradford 1947 - 1949 Ends.png Republican
59 Paul Andrew Dever 1949 - 1953 Electiondot.png Democratic
60 Christian Archibald Herter 1953 - 1957 Ends.png Republican
61 Foster John Furcolo 1957 - 1961 Electiondot.png Democratic
62 John Anthony Volpe 1961 - 1963 Ends.png Republican
63 Endicott Peabody 1963 - 1965 Electiondot.png Democratic
62 John Anthony Volpe 1965 - 1969 Ends.png Republican
64 Francis Williams Sargent 1969 - 1975 Ends.png Republican
65 Michael Stanley Dukakis 1975 - 1979 Electiondot.png Democratic
66 Edward Joseph King 1979 - 1983 Electiondot.png Democratic
65 Michael Stanley Dukakis 1983 - 1991 Electiondot.png Democratic
67 William Weld 1991 - 1997 Ends.png Republican
68 Argeo Paul Cellucci 1997 - 2001 Ends.png Republican
69 Jane Maria Swift 2001 - 2003 Ends.png Republican
70 Mitt Romney 2003 - 2007 Ends.png Republican
71 Deval Patrick 2007-2015 Electiondot.png Democratic
72 Charles D. Baker 2015-2023 Ends.png Republican
73 Maura Healey 2023-present Electiondot.png Democratic

History

Partisan balance 1992-2013

Who Runs the States Project

See also: Ballotpedia:Who Runs the States and Ballotpedia:Who Runs the States, Massachusetts

Partisan breakdown of the Massachusetts governorship from 1992-2013

From 1992-2013, in Massachusetts there were Democratic governors in office for the last seven years while there were Republican governors in office for the first 15 years. During the last seven years of the study Massachusetts was under Democratic trifectas.

Across the country, there were 493 years of Democratic governors (44.82%) and 586 years of Republican governors (53.27%) from 1992 to 2013.

Over the course of the 22-year study, state governments became increasingly more partisan. At the outset of the study period (1992), 18 of the 49 states with partisan legislatures had single-party trifectas and 31 states had divided governments. In 2013, only 13 states had divided governments, while single-party trifectas held sway in 36 states, the most in the 22 years studied.

The chart below shows the partisan composition of the Office of the Governor of Massachusetts, the Massachusetts State Senate and the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1992 to 2013.

Partisan composition of Massachusetts state government(1992-2013).PNG

SQLI and partisanship

The chart below depicts the partisanship of the Massachusetts state government and the state's SQLI ranking for the years studied. For the SQLI, the states were ranked from 1-50, with 1 being the best and 50 the worst. Massachusetts had a period of divided government between 1992 and 2006 before electing a Democratic trifecta in 2007. Between the years 1992 and 2004, Massachusetts remained in the top-10 in the SQLI ranking, hitting its highest spot (3rd) in 2000 under divided government. The state had its lowest ranking (24th) in 2006, also under divided government. During the years 2005 and 2006, Massachusetts fell eleven spots in the SQLI ranking under divided government, which was its largest drop in the ranking during the period of the study. The state has never had a Republican trifecta.

  • SQLI average with Democratic trifecta: 14.17
  • SQLI average with Republican trifecta: N/A
  • SQLI average with divided government: 7.20

Chart displaying the partisanship of Massachusetts government from 1992-2013 and the State Quality of Life Index (SQLI).

State profile

Demographic data for Massachusetts
 MassachusettsU.S.
Total population:6,784,240316,515,021
Land area (sq mi):7,8003,531,905
Race and ethnicity**
White:79.6%73.6%
Black/African American:7.1%12.6%
Asian:6%5.1%
Native American:0.2%0.8%
Pacific Islander:0%0.2%
Two or more:2.9%3%
Hispanic/Latino:10.6%17.1%
Education
High school graduation rate:89.8%86.7%
College graduation rate:40.5%29.8%
Income
Median household income:$68,563$53,889
Persons below poverty level:13.1%11.3%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2010-2015)
Click here for more information on the 2020 census and here for more on its impact on the redistricting process in Massachusetts.
**Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

Presidential voting pattern

See also: Presidential voting trends in Massachusetts

Massachusetts voted for the Democratic candidate in all seven presidential elections between 2000 and 2024.

More Massachusetts coverage on Ballotpedia

Contact information

Governor Maura Healey's Office of Constituent Services
Massachusetts State House
24 Beacon St., Office of the Governor, Room 280
Boston, MA 02133
Phone: (617) 725-4005

Western Massachusetts Office
State Office Building
436 Dwight St., Suite 300
Springfield, MA 01103
Phone: (413) 784-1200

Washington, DC Office
Office of the Governor
444 N. Capitol St., Suite 208
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: (202) 624-3616

Phone (toll-free in Massachusetts): (888) 870-7770
Phone (TTY): (617) 727-3666

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Massachusetts Legislature, "Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts," accessed January 18, 2021
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 National Association of State Budget Officers, "Budget Processes in the States, Spring 2021," accessed January 24, 2023
  3. National Conference of State Legislatures, "Separation of Powers: Executive Veto Powers," accessed January 26, 2024
  4. Commonwealth of Massachusetts, "FY 2025 Enacted," accessed January 21, 2025
  5. Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth "Setting Compensation of State Legislatures," accessed January 18, 2021
  6. Outside Section 239, "Special Advisory Commission: Compensation of MA Public Officials," accessed January 18, 2021
  7. University of Massachusetts Boston, "Special advisory commission on elected officials compensation," accessed January 18, 2021
  8. Council of State Governments, "Book of the States 2023 Table 4.11: Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries," accessed January 15, 2025
  9. Council of State Governments, "Book of the States 2022 Table 4.11: Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries," provided to Ballotpedia by CSG personnel
  10. Issuu, "The Book of the States 2021," accessed September 22, 2022
  11. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries, 2020," accessed January 18, 2021
  12. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries, 2019," accessed January 18, 2021
  13. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries, 2018," accessed January 18, 2021
  14. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries, 2017," accessed January 18, 2021
  15. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries, 2016," accessed January 18, 2021
  16. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries, 2015," accessed January 18, 2021
  17. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries," accessed January 18, 2021
  18. Council of State Governments, "CSG Releases 2013 Governor Salaries," January 18, 2021
  19. Council of State Governments, "Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries," accessed January 18, 2021
  20. National Governors Association, "Former Massachusetts Governors," accessed January 18, 2021

v  e

Governors
Current Governors

GovernorsLogo.jpg

Elections

2025202420232022202120202019201820172016201520142013201220112010

Features

v  e

State executive offices
OfficesStateExecLogo transparent.png
States
Elections

2025202420232022202120202019201820172016201520142013201220112010

Features

v  e

Ballotpedia
About
Editorial Content

Geoff Pallay, Director of Editorial Content and Editor-in-ChiefKen Carbullido, Vice President of Election Product and Technology StrategyNorm Leahy, Senior EditorDaniel Anderson, Managing EditorRyan Byrne, Managing EditorCory Eucalitto, Managing EditorMandy Gillip, Managing EditorDoug Kronaizl, Local Elections Project ManagerJaclyn BeranMarielle BrickerJoseph BrusgardEmma BurlingameKelly CoyleThomas EllisFrank FestaNicole FisherBrianna HoseaJoseph GreaneyThomas GrobbenJaime Healy-PlotkinTyler KingGlorie MartinezNathan MaxwellEllie MikusJackie MitchellEllen MorrisseyMackenzie MurphyKaley PlatekSamantha PostAdam PowellEthan RiceSpencer RichardsonVictoria RoseBriana RyanMyj SaintylMaddy SaluckaMaddie Sinclair JohnsonAbbey SmithJanie ValentineJoel WilliamsSamuel WonacottTrenton WoodcoxMercedes Yanora

Flag of Massachusetts

v  e

State of Massachusetts
Boston (capital)
Elections

What's on my ballot? | Elections in 2025 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures

Government

Who represents me? | U.S. President | U.S. Congress | Federal courts | State executives | State legislature | State and local courts | Counties | Cities | School districts | Public policy