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Frank Baker (Boston politician)

American politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Frank Baker (Boston politician)
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Frank Baker (born 1968) is an American politician who represented District 3 on the Boston City Council until January 2024. He was first elected on November 8, 2011.[1][2]

Quick facts Member of the Boston City Council from the 3rd district, Preceded by ...
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Personal life

Baker is the 12th child of John and Eileen Baker, and was raised in Saint Margaret's Parish (now St. Teresa of Calcutta), which is better known as the Savin Hill section of Dorchester. He graduated in 1986 from Don Bosco Technical High School where he has studied printing trade. Between 1987 and 2010 he worked in the printing department at the City of Boston. He is a member of the CWA/Boston Typographical Union. He is married to his wife Today and they have two children.[1]

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Boston City Council

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Baker was first elected to the Boston City Council representing District 3 in 2011. Incumbent District 3 Council Maureen Feeney declined to run for reelection, and a large field of candidates ran to replace her. Baker faced John O'Toole in the general election, with Baker running out of the northern part of the district in Savin Hill, and O'Toole drawing his support from the southern part of the district in Adams Village and Neponset.[3] The race was widely seen at the time as a contest between then-Mayor Thomas Menino and State Representative and Boston Building Trades' chief Marty Walsh, with Menino backing O'Toole, and Walsh backing Baker.[4] Baker won, receiving 5,262 votes to O'Toole's 4,120.[5]

Baker is affiliated with the Democratic Party,[1] and was regarded to be one of the council's more conservative members.[6][7] He was a member of the council's de facto centrist/conservative voting bloc, which in the 2022–23 council term also included Michael F. Flaherty, Ed Flynn, and Erin Murphy.[8] He served as the chair of the Jobs, Wages, and Workforce Development Committee and the Special Committee on Charter Reform. He also served as vice chair of the Planning, Development and Transportation Committee; as well as a member of the committees on Census and Redistricting; City, Neighborhood Services and Veterans Affairs; Government Operations; Homelessness; Mental Health and Recovery; Housing and Community Development; and Ways and Means.[1]

In 2016, while chairing the Charter Reform Committee, Baker proposed that council members serve four year terms, not two year terms. His arguments include that the members running for reelection spent much of the second year running and not focusing on the Council[9] and that the city could save approximately $1.6 million by not having elections in low turn out years. The council vote 8–1 in favor but at the time, it was not clear what Mayor Marty Walsh thought about the proposal. He would need to sign off on the proposal and send it to the State House for a vote in order for it to take effect.[10][11]

In 2023, Baker and Murphy were the only two City Council members to vote against advancing a home rule petition asking the state to allow the city to implement proposals by Mayor Michelle Wu to reform the Boston Planning & Development Agency and to enact a form of rent control.[12]

Baker was one of four Boston City Councilors that voted against the council's redistricting map that was approved after the 2020 United States Census. The map made alterations to the shape of Baker's district and a neighboring district. To account for the population growth of the South Boston Waterfront, several white majority conservative precincts in his district were moved into a neighboring district. Baker took particular issue with the map's separation of precincts around Dorchester's Adams Village business area into different city council districts.[13] The map that Baker was against was ultimately prohibited by preliminary injunction from being used in the 2023 Boston City Council election after a ruling by Federal Judge Patti Saris.[14]

At a City Council meeting early October 2023, Baker and Sharon Durkan opposed holding an immediate vote on a resolution proposed at the meeting by Tania Fernandes Anderson related to the Gaza war. Unlike other resolutions related to the conflict that were being discussed at the meeting, Fernandes Anderson's resolution was not focused on condemning the October 7 Hamas-led attack on Israel, and instead centered on calling for a ceasefire.[15] Fernandes Anderson's resolution characterized the attack as a "military operation" rather than an act of terrorism.[16] The resolution was referred to the committee of the whole instead of being voted on.[15]

In December 2023, Baker voted against a home rule petition that would seek state approval for Boston to extend voting participation in municipal elections to non-citizen residents with legal status.[17]

In 2023, Baker announced that after six terms on city council that he would not be running for another term.[6] In 2025, he announced that he would be running to re-join the council, this time seeking an at-large seat.[7]

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Election Results

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2019

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[18][19]

2017

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2015

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2013

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2011

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References

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