The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No 3rd term for Ga. insurance commission­er

State official criticized for rising costs says he will not run in 2018.

- By James Salzer jsalzer@ajc.com

Georgia Insurance Commission­er Ralph Hudgens, who has faced criticism in recent years as auto coverage rates soared, announced Monday that he won’t seek a third term in 2018.

Hudgens served in the state House and Senate from the Athens area, rising to chairman of the Senate Insurance Committee, before running in 2010 to replace longtime Commission­er John Oxendine, who ran unsuccessf­ully for governor.

Besides handling insurance, the commission­er serves as the state fire marshal and regulates the small-loan industry.

Hudgens has been criticized by those who thought he took too much of a hands-off approach. Last year he issued a consumer alert when Allstate filed for an average rate hike of 25 percent, but the commission­er wound up saying there was nothing he could do to stop it because of a state law he supported when he served in the Senate.

Hudgens recently told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that he didn’t know at the time that the law would all but preclude the commission­er from stopping

massive rate increases.

Like some past commission­ers, he’s also faced criticism that he was too close to the industry he regulated, collecting hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributi­ons from insurance and small-loan businesses.

“I ran for insurance commission­er because I believed I could be an effective advocate for consumers,” Hudgens said in announcing that he wouldn’t run again. “My office has helped consumers get payments after insurance companies originally denied claims and has aggressive­ly pursued insurance fraud. I focused on those consumer protection­s while also working to make sure we had a competitiv­e marketplac­e.”

During his first term, he made waves when he declared he and his office “would do everything in our power to be an obstructio­nist” over the Affordable Care Act. He later walked back those comments and said he “can’t be” an obstructio­nist and still do his job.

During his 2014 re-election campaign, he expressed his distaste for Obamacare at every turn but acknowledg­ed his office had little power to stop the law. Instead, he focused his campaign on consumer protection issues, and pointed to $30 million his office claimed it won from insurers who initially refused to pay claims.

Hudgens’ agency was most recently in the news when the AJC reported that the department overspent its budget and had to lay off staffers and furlough employees.

The commission­er said Monday that he will remain active in politics, and he recently contribute­d $13,200 to the gubernator­ial campaign of Secretary of State Brian Kemp.

Deputy Commission­er Jay Florence, a former aide to Ga. Senate President Pro Tem David Shafer, R-Duluth, and fellow Republican Shane Mobley have already filed fundraisin­g paperwork to run for Hudgens’ job. So has Tomeka Kimbrough, a Democrat. Jim Beck, who has served as an aide in the Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commission­er and as president of the Georgia Christian Coalition, is considerin­g running as well.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D 2011 ?? Ralph Hudgens also regulates Ga.’s smallloan industry.
CONTRIBUTE­D 2011 Ralph Hudgens also regulates Ga.’s smallloan industry.

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