From Ballotpedia Massachusetts 2016 elections Presidential • U.S. House • State Senate • State House • State ballot measures • Recalls • Candidate ballot access |
| 2016 Massachusetts House Elections | |
|---|---|
| Primary | September 8, 2016 |
| General | November 8, 2016 |
| 2016 Election Results | |
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| 2016 Elections | |
|---|---|
| Choose a chamber below: | |
All 160 seats in the Massachusetts House of Representatives were up for election in 2016. Republicans gained one seat in the November 2016 general election.
Elections for the Massachusetts House of Representatives took place in 2016. The primary election took place on September 8, 2016, and the general election was held on November 8, 2016. The candidate filing deadline was June 7, 2016.
Heading into the election, the Democratic Party held the majority in the Massachusetts House of Representatives:
| Massachusetts House of Representatives | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Party | As of November 7, 2016 | After November 8, 2016 | |
| Democratic Party | 125 | 125 | |
| Republican Party | 34 | 35 | |
| Vacancy | 1 | 0 | |
| Total | 160 | 160 | |
Nine incumbents did not run for re-election in 2016. Those incumbents were:
| Name | Party | Current Office |
|---|---|---|
| Brian Mannal | Second Barnstable District | |
| Timothy Madden | Barnstable, Dukes and Nantucket District | |
| Benjamin Swan, Sr. | Eleventh Hampden District | |
| Ellen Story | Third Hampshire District | |
| Tom Sannicandro | Seventh Middlesex District | |
| Walter Timilty | Seventh Norfolk District | |
| Gloria Fox | Seventh Suffolk District | |
| Dennis Rosa | Fourth Worcester District | |
| John Fernandes | Tenth Worcester District |
Note: While Garrett Bradley filed for re-election, he resigned his seat on July 31, 2016.
Massachusetts saw a decrease in general election competition.
Ballotpedia conducts a yearly study of electoral competitiveness in state legislative elections. Details on how well Massachusetts performed in the study are provided in the image below. Click here for the full 2016 Competitiveness Analysis »

Ballotpedia identified seven notable Massachusetts state legislative races in 2016, three of which were state House contests.
Click here to read more about Ballotpedia's coverage of notable Massachusetts races »
Second Barnstable House District
Seventh Middlesex House District
Eighteenth Middlesex House District
| 2016 Massachusetts House candidates | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| District | Other | ||
| First Barnstable | No candidate | Timothy Whelan (I) |
|
| Second Barnstable | Aaron S. Kanzer: 9,799 | William L. Crocker, Jr.: 11,879 |
|
| Third Barnstable | Matthew C. Patrick: 11,317 | David Vieira: 12,739 (I) |
|
| Fourth Barnstable | Sarah Peake (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Barnstable | No candidate | Randy Hunt (I) |
|
| Barnstable, Dukes, Nantucket | Dylan A. Fernandes: 13,030 |
No candidate | Jacob Ferry: 2,566 (Ind.) Tobias Glidden: 9,601 (Ind.) |
| First Berkshire | Gailanne Cariddi (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Berkshire | Paul Mark (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Berkshire | Tricia Farley-Bouvier: 11,827 (I) |
No candidate | Christopher Connell: 5,986 (Ind.) |
| Fourth Berkshire | William Pignatelli (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Bristol | Michael E. Toole: 8,361 | F. Jay Barrows: 12,561 (I) |
|
| Second Bristol | Paul Heroux (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Bristol | Estele Borges: 7,417 | Shaunna O'Connell: 10,520 (I) |
|
| Fourth Bristol | Paul W. Jacques: 8,030 | Steven Howitt: 13,253 (I) |
|
| Fifth Bristol | Patricia Haddad (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Bristol | Carole Fiola (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Bristol | Alan Silvia (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Bristol | Paul Schmid III (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Bristol | Christopher Markey (I) |
No candidate | |
| Tenth Bristol | William Straus (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Bristol | Robert Koczera (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Bristol | No candidate | Keiko Orrall (I) |
|
| Thirteenth Bristol | Antonio Cabral (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Bristol | No candidate | Elizabeth Poirier: 13,865 (I) |
Scott Dubuc: 5,805 (Conservative Independent) |
| First Essex | Brianna Sullivan: 11,280 | James Kelcourse: 13,272 (I) |
|
| Second Essex | No candidate | Leonard Mirra (I) |
|
| Third Essex | Brian Dempsey (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Essex | No candidate | Bradford Hill (I) |
|
| Fifth Essex | Ann-Margaret Ferrante (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Essex | Jerry Parisella: 15,012 (I) |
No candidate | Daniel Fishman: 5,045 (United Independent Party) |
| Seventh Essex | Paul Tucker (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Essex | Lori Ehrlich (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Essex | Jen Migliore: 10,513 | Donald Wong: 12,816 (I) |
|
| Tenth Essex | Dan Cahill (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Essex | Brendan Crighton (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Essex | Thomas Walsh (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirteenth Essex | Theodore Speliotis (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Essex | Diana DiZoglio (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Essex | Linda Dean Campbell: 12,904 (I) |
No candidate | Nicholas Torresi: 7,421 (Ind.) |
| Sixteenth Essex | Juana B. Matias |
No candidate | |
| Seventeenth Essex | Frank Moran (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighteenth Essex | Oscar Camargo: 9,615 | James Lyons, Jr.: 14,218 (I) |
|
| First Franklin | Stephen Kulik (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Franklin | No candidate | Susannah Whipps Lee (I) |
|
| First Hampden | No candidate | Todd Smola (I) |
|
| Second Hampden | Brian Ashe (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Hampden | Rosemary Sandlin: 8,089 | Nicholas Boldyga: 12,136 (I) |
|
| Fourth Hampden | John Velis (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Hampden | Aaron Vega (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Hampden | Michael Finn (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Hampden | Thomas Petrolati (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Hampden | Joseph Wagner (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Hampden | Jose Tosado: 12,020 (I) |
No candidate | Robert Underwood: 2,885 (Unenrolled) |
| Tenth Hampden | Carlos Gonzalez (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Hampden | Bud L. Williams |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Hampden | Angelo Puppolo, Jr. (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Hampshire | Peter Kocot (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Hampshire | John Scibak (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Hampshire | Solomon Israel Goldstein-Rose |
No candidate | |
| First Middlesex | Matthew T. Meneghini: 8,003 | Sheila Harrington: 14,984 (I) |
|
| Second Middlesex | James Arciero (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Middlesex | Kate Hogan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Middlesex | Danielle Gregoire: 11,531 (I) |
Paul R. Ferro: 7,801 | |
| Fifth Middlesex | David Linsky (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Middlesex | Chris Walsh (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Middlesex | Jack Patrick Lewis: 9,286 |
Yolanda Greaves: 4,982 | Cliff Wilson: 740 (Ind.) |
| Eighth Middlesex | Carolyn Dykema (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Middlesex | Thomas Stanley: 12,654 (I) |
No candidate | Stacey Gallagher Tully: 7,164 (Ind.) |
| Tenth Middlesex | John Lawn (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Middlesex | Kay Khan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Middlesex | Ruth Balser (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirteenth Middlesex | Carmine Gentile (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Middlesex | Cory Atkins: 14,831 (I) |
Helen Brady: 8,950 | Danny Factor: 824 (Green-Rainbow) |
| Fifteenth Middlesex | Jay Kaufman (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixteenth Middlesex | Thomas Golden, Jr. (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventeenth Middlesex | David Nangle (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighteenth Middlesex | Rady Mom: 8,107 (I) |
Kamara Kay: 3,115 | |
| Nineteenth Middlesex | James Miceli (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twentieth Middlesex | No candidate | Bradley Jones, Jr. (I) |
|
| Twenty-first Middlesex | Kenneth I. Gordon: 13,476 (I) |
Paul Girouard, Jr.: 9,526 | |
| Twenty-second Middlesex | George J. Simolaris, Jr.: 8,671 | Marc Lombardo: 12,583 (I) |
|
| Twenty-third Middlesex | Sean Garballey (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-fourth Middlesex | David Rogers (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-fifth Middlesex | Marjorie Decker (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-sixth Middlesex | Mike Connolly |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-seventh Middlesex | Denise Provost: 18,409 (I) |
No candidate | Aaron James: 2,680 (Pirate) |
| Twenty-eighth Middlesex | Joseph McGonagle, Jr. (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-ninth Middlesex | Jonathan Hecht (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirtieth Middlesex | James Dwyer (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-first Middlesex | Michael Day: 14,528 (I) |
Caroline Colarusso: 10,163 | |
| Thirty-second Middlesex | Paul Brodeur (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-third Middlesex | Steven Ultrino (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-fourth Middlesex | Christine Barber (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-fifth Middlesex | Paul Donato, Sr. (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-sixth Middlesex | Colleen Garry (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-seventh Middlesex | Jennifer Benson (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Norfolk | Bruce Ayers (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Norfolk | Tackey Chan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Norfolk | Ronald Mariano (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Norfolk | James Murphy (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Norfolk | Mark Cusack (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Norfolk | William Galvin (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Norfolk | William J. Driscoll, Jr. |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Norfolk | Louis Kafka (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Norfolk | Brian Hamlin: 9,267 | Shawn C. Dooley: 14,427 (I) |
|
| Tenth Norfolk | Jeffrey Roy (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Norfolk | Paul McMurtry (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Norfolk | John Rogers: 14,534 (I) |
Tim Hempton: 7,486 | |
| Thirteenth Norfolk | Denise Garlick (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Norfolk | Alice Peisch (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Norfolk | Frank Smizik (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Plymouth | John T. Mahoney Jr.: 11,471 | Mathew Muratore: 11,873 (I) |
|
| Second Plymouth | Sarah G. Hewins: 8,692 | Susan Gifford: 11,894 (I) |
|
| Third Plymouth | Joan Meschino: 13,257 |
Kristen Arute: 11,285 | |
| Fourth Plymouth | James Cantwell: 17,388 (I) |
Michael White: 7,601 | |
| Fifth Plymouth | Kara L. Nyman: 11,790 | David DeCoste: 12,293 (I) |
|
| Sixth Plymouth | Josh Cutler: 15,290 (I) |
Vince Cogliano: 8,582 | |
| Seventh Plymouth | No candidate | Geoff Diehl (I) |
|
| Eighth Plymouth | No candidate | Angelo D'Emilia (I) |
|
| Ninth Plymouth | Gerry Cassidy: 10,346 (I) |
Danny J. Yoon: 1,745 | |
| Tenth Plymouth | Michelle DuBois (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Plymouth | Claire Cronin (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Plymouth | Thomas Calter, III: 13,908 (I) |
Peter J. Boncek: 9,297 | |
| First Suffolk | Adrian Madaro (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Suffolk | Daniel Joseph Ryan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Suffolk | Aaron Michlewitz (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Suffolk | Nick Collins (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Suffolk | Evandro C. Carvalho: 10,855 (I) |
Althea Garrison: 2,014 | |
| Sixth Suffolk | Russell Holmes (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Suffolk | Chynah Tyler |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Suffolk | Jay Livingstone (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Suffolk | Byron Rushing (I) |
No candidate | |
| Tenth Suffolk | Edward Coppinger (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Suffolk | Elizabeth Malia: 15,628 (I) |
No candidate | Stephen Bedell: 1,884 (New Progressive Leadership) |
| Twelfth Suffolk | Dan Cullinane (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirteenth Suffolk | Daniel J. Hunt (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Suffolk | Angelo Scaccia (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Suffolk | Jeffrey Sanchez (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixteenth Suffolk | RoseLee Vincent (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventeenth Suffolk | Kevin Honan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighteenth Suffolk | Michael Moran (I) |
No candidate | |
| Nineteenth Suffolk | Robert DeLeo (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Worcester | No candidate | Kimberly Ferguson (I) |
|
| Second Worcester | Jonathan Zlotnik (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Worcester | Stephan Hay (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Worcester | Natalie Higgins: 10,382 |
Thomas F. Ardinger: 8,426 | |
| Fifth Worcester | No candidate | Donald Berthiaume, Jr. (I) |
|
| Sixth Worcester | No candidate | Peter Durant (I) |
|
| Seventh Worcester | Terry Burke Dotson: 6,951 | Paul Frost: 13,691 (I) |
|
| Eighth Worcester | No candidate | Kevin Kuros (I) |
|
| Ninth Worcester | No candidate | David Muradian, Jr. (I) |
|
| Tenth Worcester | Brian W. Murray: 11,869 |
Sandra Biagetti: 9,708 | |
| Eleventh Worcester | No candidate | Hannah Kane (I) |
|
| Twelfth Worcester | Harold Naughton, Jr.: 15,976 (I) |
No candidate | Charlene R. DiCalogero: 3,916 (Green-Rainbow) |
| Thirteenth Worcester | John Mahoney (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Worcester | James O'Day (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Worcester | Mary S. Keefe: 8,039 (I) |
No candidate | Ralph Perez: 2,184 (Unenrolled) |
| Sixteenth Worcester | Daniel Donahue: 7,783 (I) |
No candidate | John Fresolo: 3,804 (United Independent) |
| Seventeenth Worcester | Moses S. Dixon: 6,671 | Kate Campanale: 8,011 (I) |
|
| Eighteenth Worcester | No candidate | Joseph McKenna (I) |
|
| Notes | • An (I) denotes an incumbent. | ||
| • Candidate lists can change frequently throughout an election season. Ballotpedia staff update this list monthly. To suggest changes, click here to email our State Legislature Project. | |||
| 2016 Massachusetts House primary candidates | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| District | Other | ||
| First Barnstable | No candidate | Timothy Whelan (I) |
|
| Second Barnstable | Aaron S. Kanzer: 1,753 Margaret M. Weber: 1,147 |
William L. Crocker, Jr. |
|
| Third Barnstable | Michael A. Blanton: 974 Matthew C. Patrick: 2,291 |
David Vieira (I) |
|
| Fourth Barnstable | Sarah Peake (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Barnstable | No candidate | Randy Hunt (I) |
|
| Barnstable, Dukes, Nantucket | Dylan A. Fernandes: 3,385 Michael G. Heylin: 500 T. Ewell Hopkins, Jr.: 2,454 Jessica G. Lambert: 296 Timothy M. Soverino: 359 |
No candidate | |
| First Berkshire | Gailanne Cariddi (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Berkshire | Paul Mark (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Berkshire | Tricia Farley-Bouvier (I): 2,692 Michael E. Bloomberg: 2,309 |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Berkshire | William Pignatelli (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Bristol | Michael E. Toole |
F. Jay Barrows (I) |
|
| Second Bristol | Paul Heroux (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Bristol | No candidate | Shaunna O'Connell (I) |
|
| Fourth Bristol | Paul W. Jacques |
Steven Howitt (I) |
|
| Fifth Bristol | Patricia Haddad (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Bristol | Carole Fiola (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Bristol | Alan Silvia (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Bristol | Paul Schmid III (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Bristol | Christopher Markey (I) |
No candidate | |
| Tenth Bristol | William Straus (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Bristol | Robert Koczera (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Bristol | No candidate | Keiko Orrall (I) |
|
| Thirteenth Bristol | Antonio Cabral (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Bristol | No candidate | Elizabeth Poirier (I) |
|
| First Essex | Brianna Sullivan |
James Kelcourse (I) |
|
| Second Essex | No candidate | Leonard Mirra (I) |
|
| Third Essex | Brian Dempsey (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Essex | No candidate | Bradford Hill (I) |
|
| Fifth Essex | Ann-Margaret Ferrante (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Essex | Jerry Parisella (I) |
No candidate | Daniel Fishman (United Independent Party) |
| Seventh Essex | Paul Tucker (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Essex | Lori Ehrlich (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Essex | Jen Migliore: 2,478 Saritin E. Rizzuto: 1,006 |
Donald Wong (I) |
|
| Tenth Essex | Dan Cahill (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Essex | Brendan Crighton (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Essex | Thomas Walsh (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirteenth Essex | Theodore Speliotis (I): 1,903 Robert A. Croce, Jr.: 1,088 |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Essex | Diana DiZoglio (I): 2,214 Phyllis Ann Jones: 251 |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Essex | Linda Dean Campbell (I): 1,517 Christopher James Katsoulis: 318 |
No candidate | |
| Sixteenth Essex | Marcos Devers (I): 1,457 Juana B. Matias: 1,772 Juan Pascual: 391 |
No candidate | |
| Seventeenth Essex | Frank Moran (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighteenth Essex | Oscar Camargo |
James Lyons, Jr. (I) |
|
| First Franklin | Stephen Kulik (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Franklin | Denise Andrews |
Susannah Whipps Lee (I) |
|
| First Hampden | No candidate | Todd Smola (I) |
|
| Second Hampden | Brian Ashe (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Hampden | No candidate | Nicholas Boldyga (I) |
|
| Fourth Hampden | John Velis (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Hampden | Aaron Vega (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Hampden | Michael Finn (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Hampden | Thomas Petrolati (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Hampden | Joseph Wagner (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Hampden | Jose Tosado (I) |
No candidate | |
| Tenth Hampden | Carlos Gonzalez (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Hampden | Ken Barnett: 286 Larry Lawson: 237 Benjamin Swan Jr.: 1,164 Bud L. Williams: 1,580 |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Hampden | Angelo Puppolo, Jr. (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Hampshire | Peter Kocot (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Hampshire | John Scibak (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Hampshire | Viraphanh Douangmany Cage: 693 Solomon Israel Goldstein-Rose: 1,788 Sarah C. LaCour: 973 Bonnie MacCracken: 371 Eric T. Nakajima: 1,209 Lawrence E. O'Brien: 192 |
No candidate | |
| First Middlesex | Matthew T. Meneghini |
Sheila Harrington (I) |
|
| Second Middlesex | James Arciero (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Middlesex | Kate Hogan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Middlesex | Danielle Gregoire (I): 887 Michael H. Ossing: 768 |
Paul R. Ferro |
|
| Fifth Middlesex | David Linsky (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Middlesex | Chris Walsh (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Middlesex | Philip C. Jack: 642 Jack Patrick Lewis: 825 Brett D. Walker: 761 |
Yolanda Greaves |
|
| Eighth Middlesex | Carolyn Dykema (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Middlesex | Thomas Stanley (I) |
No candidate | |
| Tenth Middlesex | John Lawn (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Middlesex | Kay Khan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Middlesex | Ruth Balser (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirteenth Middlesex | Carmine Gentile (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Middlesex | Cory Atkins (I) |
Helen Brady |
Danny Factor (Green-Rainbow) |
| Fifteenth Middlesex | Jay Kaufman (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixteenth Middlesex | Thomas Golden, Jr. (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventeenth Middlesex | David Nangle (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighteenth Middlesex | Rady Mom (I): 1,074 Cheth Khim: 402 David M. Ouellette: 615 |
Kamara Kay |
|
| Nineteenth Middlesex | James Miceli (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twentieth Middlesex | No candidate | Bradley Jones, Jr. (I) |
|
| Twenty-first Middlesex | Kenneth I. Gordon (I) |
Paul Girouard, Jr. |
|
| Twenty-second Middlesex | George J. Simolaris, Jr. |
Marc Lombardo (I) |
|
| Twenty-third Middlesex | Sean Garballey (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-fourth Middlesex | David Rogers (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-fifth Middlesex | Marjorie Decker (I): 2,797 Lesley Rebecca Phillips: 492 |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-sixth Middlesex | Timothy Toomey, Jr. (I): 2,539 Mike Connolly: 2,938 |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-seventh Middlesex | Denise Provost (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-eighth Middlesex | Joseph McGonagle, Jr. (I): 1,773 Gerly Adrien: 1,150 |
No candidate | |
| Twenty-ninth Middlesex | Jonathan Hecht (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirtieth Middlesex | James Dwyer (I): 1,414 John Patrick Devine: 227 |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-first Middlesex | Michael Day (I) |
Caroline Colarusso |
|
| Thirty-second Middlesex | Paul Brodeur (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-third Middlesex | Steven Ultrino (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-fourth Middlesex | Christine Barber (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-fifth Middlesex | Paul Donato, Sr. (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-sixth Middlesex | Colleen Garry (I) |
No candidate | |
| Thirty-seventh Middlesex | Jennifer Benson (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Norfolk | Bruce Ayers (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Norfolk | Tackey Chan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Norfolk | Ronald Mariano (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Norfolk | James Murphy (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Norfolk | Mark Cusack (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixth Norfolk | William Galvin (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Norfolk | Jason R. Adams: 555 James F. Burgess, Jr.: 1,016 William J. Driscoll, Jr.: 1,472 Tony Farrington: 1,125 Kerby Roberson: 720 Denise R. Swenson: 806 Michael F. Zullas: 1,195 |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Norfolk | Louis Kafka (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Norfolk | No candidate | Shawn C. Dooley (I) |
|
| Tenth Norfolk | Jeffrey Roy (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Norfolk | Paul McMurtry (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Norfolk | John Rogers (I) |
Tim Hempton |
|
| Thirteenth Norfolk | Denise Garlick (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Norfolk | Alice Peisch (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Norfolk | Frank Smizik (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Plymouth | John T. Mahoney Jr.: 1,075 Stephen Michael Palmer: 414 |
Mathew Muratore (I) |
|
| Second Plymouth | Sarah G. Hewins |
Susan Gifford (I) |
|
| Third Plymouth | No candidate[2] | No candidate | |
| Fourth Plymouth | James Cantwell (I) |
Michael White |
|
| Fifth Plymouth | Paul F. Moody, Jr.: 1,327 Kara L. Nyman: 1,520 |
David DeCoste (I) |
|
| Sixth Plymouth | Josh Cutler (I) |
Vince Cogliano |
|
| Seventh Plymouth | No candidate | Geoff Diehl (I) |
|
| Eighth Plymouth | No candidate | Angelo D'Emilia (I) |
|
| Ninth Plymouth | Gerry Cassidy (I) |
Danny J. Yoon |
|
| Tenth Plymouth | Michelle DuBois (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Plymouth | Claire Cronin (I) |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Plymouth | Thomas Calter, III (I) |
Peter J. Boncek: 678 Michael E. Cowett: 670 Ian F. Murphy: 147 |
|
| First Suffolk | Adrian Madaro (I) |
No candidate | |
| Second Suffolk | Daniel Joseph Ryan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Suffolk | Aaron Michlewitz (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Suffolk | Nick Collins (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifth Suffolk | Evandro C. Carvalho (I): 1,255 Melinda Stewart: 379 |
Althea Garrison |
|
| Sixth Suffolk | Russell Holmes (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventh Suffolk | Monica Cannon: 801 Marydith E. Tuitt: 369 Chynah Tyler: 905 |
No candidate | |
| Eighth Suffolk | Jay Livingstone (I) |
No candidate | |
| Ninth Suffolk | Byron Rushing (I) |
No candidate | |
| Tenth Suffolk | Edward Coppinger (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eleventh Suffolk | Elizabeth Malia (I): 2,186 Charles L. Clemons, Jr.: 892 |
No candidate | |
| Twelfth Suffolk | Dan Cullinane (I): 2,278 Jovan J. Lacet: 1,469 Carlotta M. Williams: 456 |
No candidate | |
| Thirteenth Suffolk | Daniel J. Hunt (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Suffolk | Angelo Scaccia (I): 2,070 Anthony J. Solimine: 232 Virak Uy: 972 |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Suffolk | Jeffrey Sanchez (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixteenth Suffolk | RoseLee Vincent (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventeenth Suffolk | Kevin Honan (I) |
No candidate | |
| Eighteenth Suffolk | Michael Moran (I) |
No candidate | |
| Nineteenth Suffolk | Robert DeLeo (I) |
No candidate | |
| First Worcester | No candidate | Kimberly Ferguson (I) |
|
| Second Worcester | Jonathan Zlotnik (I) |
No candidate | |
| Third Worcester | Stephan Hay (I): 1,409 Kimatra Maxwell: 659 |
No candidate | |
| Fourth Worcester | Natalie Higgins: 1,475 Richard M. Marchand: 1,438 |
Thomas F. Ardinger |
|
| Fifth Worcester | No candidate | Donald Berthiaume, Jr. (I) |
|
| Sixth Worcester | No candidate | Peter Durant (I) |
|
| Seventh Worcester | Terry Burke Dotson |
Paul Frost (I) |
|
| Eighth Worcester | No candidate | Kevin Kuros (I) |
|
| Ninth Worcester | No candidate | David Muradian, Jr. (I) |
|
| Tenth Worcester | Brian W. Murray |
Susan Edmondson |
|
| Eleventh Worcester | No candidate | Hannah Kane (I) |
|
| Twelfth Worcester | Harold Naughton, Jr. (I) |
No candidate | Charlene R. DiCalogero (Green-Rainbow) |
| Thirteenth Worcester | John Mahoney (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fourteenth Worcester | James O'Day (I) |
No candidate | |
| Fifteenth Worcester | Mary S. Keefe (I) |
No candidate | |
| Sixteenth Worcester | Daniel Donahue (I) |
No candidate | |
| Seventeenth Worcester | Douglas A. Belanger: 913 Moses S. Dixon: 1,623 |
Kate Campanale (I) |
|
| Eighteenth Worcester | No candidate | Joseph McKenna (I) |
|
| Notes | • An (I) denotes an incumbent. | ||
| • Candidate lists can change frequently throughout an election season. Ballotpedia staff update this list monthly. To suggest changes, click here to email our State Legislature Project. | |||
The average margin of victory for contested races in the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 2016 was lower than the national average. Out of 160 races in the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 2016, 44 were contested, meaning at least two candidates competed for that seat in the general election. The average margin of victory across these races was 28.7 percent. Across contested single-winner state legislative elections in 2016, the average margin of victory was 29.01 percent.[3]
| Democratic candidates in the Massachusetts House of Representatives saw larger margins of victory than Republican candidates in 2016. Democrats won 125 races. In the 26 races where a winning Democrat faced a challenger, the average margin of victory was 36.8 percent. Republicans won 35 races in 2016. In the 18 races where a winning Republican faced a challenger, the average margin of victory was 17.1 percent. |
| More Republican candidates than Democratic candidates saw margins of victory that were less than 10 percentage points. Eight of the 44 contested races in 2016—18.2 percent—saw margins of victory that were 10 percent or less. Two races saw margins of victory that were 5 percent or less. Republicans won seven races with margins of victory of 10 percent or less. |
| Massachusetts House of Representatives: 2016 Margins of Victory Less than 10 Percent | ||
|---|---|---|
| District | Winning Party | Margin of Victory |
| Second Barnstable District | R | 9.6 percent |
| Third Barnstable District | R | 5.9 percent |
| First Essex District | R | 8.1 percent |
| Ninth Essex District | R | 9.9 percent |
| First Plymouth District | R | 1.7 percent |
| Third Plymouth District | D | 8.0 percent |
| Fifth Plymouth District | R | 2.1 percent |
| Seventeenth Worcester District | R | 9.1 percent |
| The average margin of victory for incumbents in the Massachusetts House of Representatives who ran for re-election and won in 2016 was lower than the national average. One hundred forty-seven incumbents who ran for re-election in 2016 won. The average margin of victory for the 37 winning Massachusetts House of Representatives incumbents who faced a challenger in 2016 was 31.4 percent. The average margin of victory for all winning incumbents in contested single-winner state legislative elections in 2016 was 31.8 percent. |
| Democratic incumbents in the Massachusetts House of Representatives saw larger margins of victory than Republican incumbents. 114 Democratic incumbents won re-election. In the 21 races where a winning Democratic incumbent faced a challenger, the average margin of victory was 42.2 percent. 33 Republican incumbents won re-election. In the 16 races where a winning Republican incumbent faced a challenger, the average margin of victory was 17.3 percent. |
| Massachusetts House of Representatives: 2016 Margin of Victory Analysis | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Elections won | Average margin of victory[4] | Races with incumbent victories | Average margin of victory for incumbents[4] | Unopposed incumbents | Unopposed races | Percent unopposed |
| Democratic | 125 | 36.8 percent | 114 | 42.2 percent | 93 | 99 | 79.2 percent |
| Republican | 35 | 17.1 percent | 33 | 17.3 percent | 17 | 17 | 48.6 percent |
| Total | 160 | 28.7 percent | 147 | 31.4 percent | 110 | 116 | 72.5 percent |
Click [show] on the tables below to see the margin of victory in Massachusetts House of Representatives districts in 2016.
| Massachusetts House of Representatives: 2016 Margin of Victory by District | ||
|---|---|---|
| District | Winning Party | Margin of Victory |
| First Barnstable District | R | Unopposed |
| Second Barnstable District | R | 9.6 percent |
| Third Barnstable District | R | 5.9 percent |
| Fourth Barnstable District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifth Barnstable District | R | Unopposed |
| Barnstable, Dukes & Nantucket District | D | 13.6 percent |
| First Berkshire District | D | Unopposed |
| Second Berkshire District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Berkshire District | D | 32.8 percent |
| Fourth Berkshire District | D | Unopposed |
| First Bristol District | R | 20.1 percent |
| Second Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Bristol District | R | 17.3 percent |
| Fourth Bristol District | R | 24.5 percent |
| Fifth Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Sixth Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventh Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighth Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Ninth Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Tenth Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Eleventh Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Twelfth Bristol District | R | Unopposed |
| Thirteenth Bristol District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourteenth Bristol District | R | 41.0 percent |
| First Essex District | R | 8.1 percent |
| Second Essex District | R | Unopposed |
| Third Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourth Essex District | R | Unopposed |
| Fifth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Sixth Essex District | D | 49.7 percent |
| Seventh Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Ninth Essex District | R | 9.9 percent |
| Tenth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Eleventh Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twelfth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirteenth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourteenth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifteenth Essex District | D | 27.0 percent |
| Sixteenth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventeenth Essex District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighteenth Essex District | R | 19.3 percent |
| First Franklin District | D | Unopposed |
| Second Franklin District | R | Unopposed |
| First Hampden District | R | Unopposed |
| Second Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Hampden District | R | 20.0 percent |
| Fourth Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifth Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Sixth Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventh Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighth Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Ninth Hampden District | D | 61.3 percent |
| Tenth Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Eleventh Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| Twelfth Hampden District | D | Unopposed |
| First Hampshire District | D | Unopposed |
| Second Hampshire District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Hampshire District | D | Unopposed |
| First Middlesex District | R | 30.4 percent |
| Second Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourth Middlesex District | D | 19.3 percent |
| Fifth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Sixth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventh Middlesex District | D | 28.7 percent |
| Eighth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Ninth Middlesex District | D | 27.7 percent |
| Tenth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Eleventh Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twelfth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirteenth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourteenth Middlesex District | D | 23.9 percent |
| Fifteenth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Sixteenth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventeenth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighteenth Middlesex District | D | 44.5 percent |
| Nineteenth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twentieth Middlesex District | R | Unopposed |
| Twenty-first Middlesex District | D | 17.2 percent |
| Twenty-second Middlesex District | R | 18.4 percent |
| Twenty-third Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twenty-fourth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twenty-fifth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twenty-sixth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twenty-seventh Middlesex District | D | 74.6 percent |
| Twenty-eighth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Twenty-ninth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirtieth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirty-first Middlesex District | D | 17.7 percent |
| Thirty-second Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirty-third Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirty-fourth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirty-fifth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirty-sixth Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirty-seventh Middlesex District | D | Unopposed |
| First Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Second Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Sixth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventh Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Ninth Norfolk District | R | 21.8 percent |
| Tenth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Eleventh Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Twelfth Norfolk District | D | 32.0 percent |
| Thirteenth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourteenth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifteenth Norfolk District | D | Unopposed |
| First Plymouth District | R | 1.7 percent |
| Second Plymouth District | R | 15.6 percent |
| Third Plymouth District | D | 8.0 percent |
| Fourth Plymouth District | D | 39.2 percent |
| Fifth Plymouth District | R | 2.1 percent |
| Sixth Plymouth District | D | 28.1 percent |
| Seventh Plymouth District | R | Unopposed |
| Eighth Plymouth District | R | Unopposed |
| Ninth Plymouth District | D | 71.1 percent |
| Tenth Plymouth District | D | Unopposed |
| Eleventh Plymouth District | D | Unopposed |
| Twelfth Plymouth District | D | 19.9 percent |
| First Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Second Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifth Suffolk District | D | 68.7 percent |
| Sixth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventh Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Ninth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Tenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Eleventh Suffolk District | D | 78.5 percent |
| Twelfth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Thirteenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourteenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifteenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Sixteenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Seventeenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Eighteenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| Nineteenth Suffolk District | D | Unopposed |
| First Worcester District | R | Unopposed |
| Second Worcester District | D | Unopposed |
| Third Worcester District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourth Worcester District | D | 10.4 percent |
| Fifth Worcester District | R | Unopposed |
| Sixth Worcester District | R | Unopposed |
| Seventh Worcester District | R | 32.7 percent |
| Eighth Worcester District | R | Unopposed |
| Ninth Worcester District | R | Unopposed |
| Tenth Worcester District | D | 10.0 percent |
| Eleventh Worcester District | R | Unopposed |
| Twelfth Worcester District | D | 60.6 percent |
| Thirteenth Worcester District | D | Unopposed |
| Fourteenth Worcester District | D | Unopposed |
| Fifteenth Worcester District | D | 57.3 percent |
| Sixteenth Worcester District | D | 34.3 percent |
| Seventeenth Worcester District | R | 9.1 percent |
| Eighteenth Worcester District | R | Unopposed |
The calendar below lists important dates for political candidates in Massachusetts in 2016.
| Dates and requirements for candidates in 2016 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Deadline | Event type | Event description | |
| May 3, 2016 | Ballot access | Last day for party and non-party candidates for district and county offices to submit nomination papers to registrars of voters for signature certification | |
| May 10, 2016 | Ballot access | Last day for party candidates for federal and statewide offices candidates to submit nomination papers to registrars of voters for signature certification | |
| May 31, 2016 | Ballot access | Last day for party and non-party candidates for district and county offices to file nomination papers with the secretary of the commonwealth | |
| June 7, 2016 | Ballot access | Last day for party candidates for federal and statewide offices to file nomination papers with the secretary of the commonwealth | |
| August 2, 2016 | Ballot access | Last day for non-party candidates for federal and statewide offices candidates to submit nomination papers to registrars of voters for signature certification | |
| August 30, 2016 | Ballot access | Last day for non-party candidates for federal and statewide offices to file nomination papers with the secretary of the commonwealth | |
| September 8, 2016 | Election date | Primary election | |
| September 12, 2016 | Campaign finance | Pre-primary report due (covering January 1, 2016–September 2, 2016) | |
| October 31, 2016 | Campaign finance | Pre-election report due (covering September 3, 2016–October 21, 2016) | |
| November 8, 2016 | Election date | General election | |
| January 20, 2017 | Campaign finance | Year-end report due (covering October 22, 2016–December 31, 2016) | |
| Sources: Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance, "Filing Schedules," accessed June 30, 2015 Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth, "2016 Massachusetts State Primary and State Election Schedule," accessed June 30, 2015 | |||
In 131 (81.9%) of the 160 seats up for election in 2016, there was only one major party candidate running for election. A total of 111 Democrats and 20 Republicans were guaranteed election barring unforeseen circumstances.
Two major party candidates faced off in the general election in 29 (18.1%) of the 160 seats up for election.
Seventeen incumbents faced primary competition on September 8. Nine seats were open, leaving 134 incumbents who advanced past the primary without opposition.
Nine incumbent representatives did not run for re-election, while 151 ran for re-election. A list of those incumbents, nine Democrats, can be found above.
There were 6,057 seats in 87 chambers with elections in 2014. All three aspects of Ballotpedia's Competitiveness Index—the number of open seats, incumbents facing primary opposition, and general elections between partisan candidates—showed poor results compared to the prior election cycle. States with elections in 2014 held fewer general elections between partisan candidates. Additionally, fewer incumbents faced primary opposition and more incumbents ran for re-election than in recent years.
Since 2010, when the Competitiveness Index was established, there had not been an even-year election cycle to do statistically worse in any of the three categories. See the following chart for a breakdown of those scores between each year.
| Overall Competitiveness | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 2012 | 2014 | |
| Competitiveness Index | 36.2 | 35.8 | 31.4 |
| % Open Seats | 18.6% | 21.2% | 17.0% |
| % Incumbent with primary challenge | 22.7% | 24.6% | 20.1% |
| % Candidates with major party opposition | 67.3% | 61.7% | 57.0% |
The following table details Massachusetts' rates for open seats, incumbents that faced primary challenges and major party competition in the 2014 general election.
| Massachusetts General Court 2014 Competitiveness | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % Open Seats | % Incumbent with primary challenge | % Candidates with major party opposition | Competitiveness Index | Overall rank |
| 10.5% | 8.4% | 39.0% | 19.3 | 42 |
Uncontested elections: In 2014, 32.8 percent of Americans lived in states with an uncontested state senate election. Similarly, 40.4 percent of Americans lived in states with uncontested house elections. Primary elections were uncontested even more frequently, with 61 percent of people living in states with no contested primaries. Uncontested elections often occur in locations that are so politically one-sided that the result of an election would be a foregone conclusion regardless of whether it was contested or not.
Open seats: In most cases, an incumbent will run for re-election, which decreases the number of open seats available. In 2014, 83 percent of the 6,057 seats up for election saw the incumbent running for re-election. The states that impose term limits on their legislatures typically see a higher percentage of open seats in a given year because a portion of incumbents in each election are forced to leave office. Overall, the number of open seats decreased from 2012 to 2014, dropping from 21.2 percent in 2012 to 17.0 percent in 2014.
Incumbent win rates: Ballotpedia's competitiveness analysis of elections between 1972 and 2014 documented the high propensity for incumbents to win re-election in state legislative elections. In fact, since 1972, the win rate for incumbents had not dropped below 90 percent—with the exception of 1974, when 88 percent of incumbents were re-elected to their seats. Perhaps most importantly, the win rate for incumbents generally increased over time. In 2014, 96.5 percent of incumbents were able to retain their seats. Common convention holds that incumbents are able to leverage their office to maintain their seat. However, the high incumbent win rate may actually be a result of incumbents being more likely to hold seats in districts that are considered safe for their party.
Marginal primaries: Often, competitiveness is measured by examining the rate of elections that have been won by amounts that are considered marginal (5 percent or less). During the 2014 election, 90.1 percent of primary and general election races were won by margins higher than 5 percent. Interestingly, it is usually the case that only one of the two races—primary or general—will be competitive at a time. This means that if a district's general election is competitive, typically one or more of the district's primaries were won by more than 5 percent. The reverse is also true: If a district sees a competitive primary, it is unlikely that the general election for that district will be won by less than 5 percent. Primaries often see very low voter turnout in comparison to general elections. In 2014, there were only 27 million voters for state legislative primaries, but approximately 107 million voters for the state legislative general elections.
The following chart shows how many candidates ran for State House in Massachusetts in past years and the cumulative amount of campaign contributions in State House races, including contributions in both primary and general election contests.[5]
| Massachusetts House of Representatives Donations | ||
|---|---|---|
| Year | Candidates | Amount |
| 2014 | 315 | $13,382,742 |
| 2012 | 269 | $13,082,644 |
| 2010 | 336 | $13,653,096 |
| 2008 | 251 | $13,458,858 |
| 2006 | 365 | $12,680,948 |
The map below shows the average contributions to 2014 candidates for state houses. The average contributions raised by state house candidates in 2014 was $59,983. Massachusetts, at $42,485 per candidate, is ranked 24 of 45 for state house chambers with the highest average contributions. Hover your mouse over a state to see the average campaign contributions for that state’s house candidates in 2014.[5][6]
Article LXXI of the Massachusetts Constitution states: "Every representative, for one year at least immediately preceding his election, shall have been an inhabitant of the district for which he is chosen and shall cease to represent such district when he shall cease to be an inhabitant of the commonwealth."[7]
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Categories: [State House elections, 2016] [Massachusetts elections, 2016]
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