Overview:
Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey has officially launched her reelection campaign, with Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll on board once again. Healey's campaign focuses on lowering costs, improving the lives of Massachusetts families and standing up to the harms caused by the Trump administration. She highlights her administration's efforts to lower energy bills, make community college free, build more housing, and control health care deductibles and co-pays.
BOSTON โ Exactly four years after voters elected her to lead Massachusetts, Gov. Maura Healey officially launched her reelection campaign Tuesday morning, asking voters to keep her in the corner office for another four years.
The 54-year-old Arlington Democratโs pursuit of a second term, with Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll on board once again, comes โwith a commitment to improve the lives of all Massachusetts families, lower costs and stand up to the Trump Administrationโs harms,โ her campaign said. Aย two-minute videoย that Healey launched with an updatedย campaign websiteย casts President Donald Trump as a foil to the incumbent governor and someone who is โmaking everything worse.โ
โI ran for governor to show up for people who need someone in their corner, to lower costs and increase opportunities. And weโre getting things done,โ Healey says in the video. She touts her administrationโs in-progress efforts toย lower energy bills, having madeย community college free, taking steps towardย building more housing and enacting reforms to stateย veterans services.
The Healey campaign also highlighted her work toย control health careย deductibles and co-pays, andย protect Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefitsย from federal cuts, as well as legislation she signed toย restrict renter-paid brokerโs feesย and enact aย series of tax cuts.
โBut thereโs more for us to do, a lot more, and thatโs why Iโm running for reelection: to lower costs, make life better and stand up to Donald Trump. Heโs raising costs, taking away our health care and tearing families apart. We see the damage heโs doing to our state and our country, but weโll never back down,โ Healey says in the video.
The themes of Healeyโs reelection launch are likely to be front and center again later this week when Healey delivers her State of the Commonwealth address to a joint session of the Legislature and Bay Staters tuning in from all corners of the state, many of whom are just starting to pay attention to the governorโs race taking shape. Thursday eveningโs speech is expected to focus on affordability and energy costs, and the governor is likely to highlightย the values she believes are important to retain here while Trump works to move the country in a different direction.
A field of three Republicans has already formed to challenge Healey: former Housing and Economic Development Secretary Mike Kennealy of Lexington, former MBTA Chief Administrator Brian Shortsleeve of Barnstable, and GOP booster and former medical device businessman Michael Minogue of Hamilton.
โGiven the terrible record of Gov. Maura Healey, our party has a solid path to victory in November of 2026. This field of candidates โ Mike Minogue, Brian Shortsleeve and Mike Kennealy โ offers real strength. Any one of them would better govern our state,โ MassGOP Chair Amy Carnevale said in a December statement.
The Republican candidates have each pointed to the stateโs high costs as a pivotal issue, and that topic is shaping up as a top pressure point for this yearโs campaigns. Republicans plan to hold their nominating convention on April 25 and Democrats on May 30. Both conventions will be at the DCU Center in Worcester.
โMaura Healey does not deserve reelection by any measure. Massachusetts is now one of the top states for outmigration, we rank 47th in affordability and our families pay the third-highest energy bills in the entire country โ these are direct results of policies enacted and pushed by Maura Healey,โ Kennealy said in a 5:45 a.m. response to Healeyโs early-morning announcement. โThese arenโt abstract statistics โ theyโre the real-world consequences of a governor who has mismanaged the basics and refuses to take responsibility for the decline happening on her watch.โ
In the 2022 election, Healey defeated Republican Geoff Diehl, receiving more than 1.58 million votes compared to about 860,000 for Diehl (64% to 35%). She secured 1.28 million votes in 2014, her first general election race for attorney general, and surpassed 1.87 million votes when she was reelected attorney general in 2018, according to state election records.
Healey launched her first campaign for governorย four years ago, Jan. 20, 2022, by greeting voters outside the T station in East Bostonโs Maverick Square. On that day, she pledged to make the stateโs economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic โjob oneโ and pointed to the cost of living in Massachusetts as one of the biggest issues that needed to be addressed, including the price of housing, child care, health care and gasoline.
Unlike four years ago, Healey this time around must actively run the state while asking voters to keep her on the job. Her official campaign launch and annual address to the state both come before she must file her annual budget plan, due by Jan. 28. One administration official said last week that the spending plan is going to land in โvery tough fiscal timesโ and will feature โsome really tough changes across the board everywhere.โ

