*** Welcome to piglix ***

Charlie Baker

Charlie Baker
Charlie Baker official portrait.jpg
72nd Governor of Massachusetts
Assumed office
January 8, 2015
Lieutenant Karyn Polito
Preceded by Deval Patrick
Secretary of Administration and Finance
In office
November 1994 – September 1998
Governor Bill Weld
Paul Cellucci
Preceded by Mark Robinson
Succeeded by Frederick Laskey
Secretary of Health and Human Services
In office
October 1992 – November 1994
Governor Bill Weld
Preceded by David Forsberg
Succeeded by Gerald Whitburn
Personal details
Born Charles Duane Baker Jr.
(1956-11-13) November 13, 1956 (age 60)
Elmira, New York, U.S.
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Lauren Schadt
Children 3
Education Harvard University (BA)
Northwestern University (MBA)
Website Government website

Charles Duane "Charlie" Baker Jr. (born November 13, 1956), is an American businessman and the 72nd and current Governor of Massachusetts, having been sworn into office on January 8, 2015. He was a cabinet official under two Massachusetts governors, spent ten years as CEO of Harvard Pilgrim Health Care and was also the Republican nominee for governor of Massachusetts in an unsuccessful 2010 bid.

Raised in Needham, Massachusetts, Baker is the son of a Republican executive official who worked under Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. He graduated from Harvard College and obtained an MBA from Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management. In 1991, he became Massachusetts undersecretary of health and human services under Governor William Weld. In 1992, he was appointed secretary of health and human services of Massachusetts. He later served as secretary of administration and finance under Weld and his successor, Paul Cellucci.

After working in government for eight years, Baker left to become CEO of Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates and later Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, a non-profit health benefits company. During this time he served three years as a selectman of Swampscott, Massachusetts, and considered a run for governor in 2006. He stepped down in July 2009 to run for governor on a platform of fiscal conservatism and social liberalism. He was unopposed in the Republican primary, but lost in the general election to the Democratic incumbent, Deval Patrick. Running for governor again, on November 4, 2014, he won the general election against Democrat Martha Coakley.


...
Wikipedia

...