CALIFORNIA FOCUS5
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 15, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“FIRST ELECTED INSURANCE COMMISH WANTS INCUMBENT OUT”
Think back: When was the
last time you heard the former occupant of an important political office, state
or national, declaim publicly that a successor of the same political party
wasn’t doing the job well and ought to be ousted?
If your answer is never,
that would be correct. Jerry Brown has never criticized Gavin Newman. During
Donald Trump’s first term as president, neither George W. Bush nor his father
George H.W. Bush said much about his performance.
But John Garamendi has
changed that script. An eight-term Democratic congressman from a Central Valley
district and the original elected insurance commissioner (he served from 1991
to 1995), Garamendi is sickened by what he’s seeing from Ricardo Lara, the
fellow Democrat who now holds the office.
He looked on silently for
six years as Lara first took political contributions from the insurance
companies he regulated, then was forced to return them. He also said nothing
when Lara began kowtowing to those same companies by okaying extra-high premium
increases.
But he’s now had it. He’s
told a San Francisco Bay Area television station that Lara “should go” if he’s
unwilling to battle those same insurance companies.
And Lara is demonstrably
not willing to fight the hand that fed him, the hand he’s not supposed to hold
in any affectionate way so long as he’s in the office he now holds.
For example, when the
insurance rates on a building directly next to a fire station in the hilly town
of Portola Valley were raised 50 percent this year, Lara said nothing, did
nothing to prevent it, even though its very location makes that structure about
as fire-safe and risk-free as anyplace could be.
Garamendi pointed out that
Lara, when a candidate in 2018, pronounced himself “leery” of insurance rate
hikes unless customers were getting something in return, like more extensive
coverage or guarantees of renewal.
But that’s all gone by the
wayside. Lara has finalized a plan to allow insurance companies to assess
massive rate increases even in areas with no significant fire danger without
making the concessions he had promised to require.
For example, he promised
earlier this year that insurance companies would have to cover 85 percent of
homes in wildfire areas (where policy cancellations have lately been rampant)
in exchange for significantly higher rates. But the regulation he issued said
that companies can instead opt to cover only 5 percent more homeowners than
they do now.
“The commissioner lied,”
said the Consumer Watchdog advocacy group. “And companies don’t even have to
meet that 5 percent threshold; they can opt out…if they want,” added the
group’s president, Jamie Court.
Lara’s response was to say
new rates will “reflect the risks of where we’re living.” But that’s not true,
either, since all homeowners will be paying more, even if they don’t live in
fire areas. Said one Santa Monica policy holder who has never filed a fire
claim in more than 45 years of home ownership, “Any fire would have to cross an
awful lot of city before it got to me, but my rates are going up anyway.”
She is not alone.
Meanwhile, some owners of city properties in sections of San Francisco with
many older homes that have been remodeled in recent years (like Noe Valley and
the Mission District) have seen their policies cancelled even though few claims
have been made in those districts.
That led Garamendi to say,
“Over the last three years, I have observed that this commissioner is not
willing to take the hard task and the necessary task to stand up to the
insurance industry. If the commissioner is not willing to do that…then he’s not
doing his job and he should leave.”
In short, the pioneering
insurance regulator Garamendi is saying “Lara must go.”
But there’s no sign of
that. As a candidate, Lara said that he was running because “California needs a
strong defender, one who will stand up to bullies.” But his predecessor finds
he hasn’t come close to doing that.
Which leads to an almost
unprecedented political scene, with one Democratic party stalwart telling
another to depart.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book,
"The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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