2014 Massachusetts gubernatorial election


The 2014 Massachusetts gubernatorial election took place on November 4, 2014, to elect the Governor of Massachusetts, concurrently with the election of Massachusetts' Class II U.S. Senate seat, and other elections to the United States Senate in other states and elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections.
Incumbent Democratic Governor Deval Patrick was eligible to seek a third term but stated in January 2011 that he would not run for re-election. The office of lieutenant governor had been vacant since the resignation of Tim Murray in June 2013.
Primary elections for governor and lieutenant governor were conducted separately on September 9, 2014: the Democrats nominated Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley and former CEO of the Democratic National Convention Steve Kerrigan, and the Republicans nominated former state cabinet secretary and 2010 gubernatorial nominee Charlie Baker and former state representative Karyn Polito.
Baker defeated Coakley and three other candidates in the general election.

Democratic primary

Governor

Candidates

Declared

Debates/forums


Hypothetical polling
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;With Capuano and Coakley

Results

Bold denotes candidate met the minimum threshold of fifteen percent to appear on the primary ballot.

Lieutenant governor

Candidates

Declared

Results

Bold denotes candidate met the minimum threshold of 15 percent to appear on the primary ballot

Republican primary

Governor

Candidates

Declared
  • Charlie Baker, former state cabinet secretary and nominee for governor in 2010
  • Mark Fisher, businessman and Tea Party activist
    Declined
  • Scott Brown, former U.S. Senator
  • Gabriel E. Gomez, nominee for the U.S. Senate in 2013
  • Karyn Polito, former state representative and nominee for state treasurer in 2010
  • Richard Tisei, former State Senate Minority Leader, nominee for lieutenant governor in 2010 and nominee for MA-06 in 2012
  • William Weld, former governor
  • Daniel Winslow, former state representative and candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2013

    Campaign

At the Republican State Convention on March 22, 2014, Baker received 2,095 votes, businessman and Tea Party activist Mark Fisher received 374 votes and there were 64 blank votes. The threshold for making the ballot is 15% and the Party announced that Baker had thus received the nomination without the need for a primary election. However, Fisher argued that according to the Convention Rules, blank votes are not counted for the purposes of determining the winner and that he thus received 15.148%, enough to make the ballot. He sued the Massachusetts Republican State Committee and his case was due to be heard in Suffolk Superior Court between May 2 and June 18.
The committee's lawyer, Louis M. Ciavarra, said that in negotiations with the committee, Fisher declined their offer of being placed on the ballot, and instead asked for $1 million in return for dropping the suit. Ciavarra said that after it was pointed out to Fisher and his representatives that this would be illegal, they allegedly lowered their request to $650,000. Fisher's lawyer, Thomas M. Harvey, has confirmed that Fisher had asked for $1 million, which he called a "starting point", saying that Fisher should be "compensated" for his efforts, in addition to receiving a place on the ballot. He later said that the request for $650,000 was "still negotiable" and added that "you don't ask for what you expect". Fisher himself has denied asking for a "payoff", instead saying that party officials had offered him a "bribe" in December 2013 in return for dropping out. He refused to say who made the offer, claiming to have been under a gag order, though no such order existed. He said that he only asked for $1 million during the negotiations because he had been asked for a figure and it was the sum that he claimed the party had offered to him. He further denied the claim that he had offered to withdraw in exchange for the money, saying that he wanted a place on the ballot, for the State Committee to release the "tally sheets" which he claims show that he rightfully won a place on the ballot, and to be reimbursed $100,000 in damages: for the cost of legal fees and of collecting signatures to make the ballot by petition.
On May 9, 2014, a week into the case, Judge Douglas Wilkins accepted the State Committee's offer to certify Fisher on the primary ballot and put off the expedited June 16 trial date. The State Committee had not at that point turned over the "tally sheets" and the judge did not order them to do so, instead inviting Fisher's attorneys to submit an amended complaint. The State Committee also asked that the trial, discovery and deliberation over damages be postponed until after the election. The judge did not rule on that request, but he did rule that the other portions of Fisher's complaint would proceed at a later date, with no need for an expedited trial before the primary.
A debate was held between Baker and Fisher on August 21. They clashed on jobs, gun control and higher education. Baker called for "constructive friction" in electing him governor to counterbalance the Democratic-controlled General Court and said that he would "clean up the regulatory morass, control spending reduce taxes." Fisher criticised the rise in food stamps, rising cost of entitlement programmes and illegal immigration. In the primary election on September 9, Baker defeated Fisher 116,004 votes to 40,240. In February 2015, Fisher settled with the State Party for $240,000. Executive Director Brian Wynne said that despite the settlement, the Party denied his accusations and said that the settlement was forced on them because of mounting legal costs.

Polling

Results

Lieutenant governor

Candidates

Declared
  • Karyn Polito, former state representative and nominee for Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts in 2010

    Independents and third parties

Candidates

Declared

Debates

  • , October 7, 2014 - C-SPAN
  • , October 21, 2014 - C-SPAN
  • , October 27, 2014 - C-SPAN

    Predictions

Polling


Hypothetical polling
-------

;With Avellone

Results

Results by Congressional district

Baker won 6 of the 9 congressional districts.
DistrictBakerCoakleyRepresentative
45%46%Richard Neal
51%43%Jim McGovern
52%43%Niki Tsongas
52%43%Joe Kennedy III
43%53%Katherine Clark
55%41%John Tierney
55%41%Seth Moulton
25%71%Mike Cuapano
52%44%Stephen Lynch
53%42%Bill Keating

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