Los Angeles Times

Poizner wants insurance seat

Former Republican is running again for state insurance commission­er.

- By John Myers john.myers@latimes.com

Former Republican makes a no-party bid to reclaim the state commission­er job.

SACRAMENTO — Eight years after losing a bitter Republican primary for governor and stepping away from California’s political scene, Steve Poizner said that he will run again for the elected office he gave up in that contest: state insurance commission­er.

This time, he won’t run as a Republican.

“There’s no room for partisan politics at the Department of Insurance,” Poizner said in an interview, announcing the launch of a campaign to become the first independen­t “no party preference” candidate ever to win statewide office.

The 61-year old former tech entreprene­ur served as insurance commission­er from 2007 to 2011.

Politicall­y speaking, Poizner is part of the answer to a lingering piece of California electoral trivia. Poizner and former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger were the last two Republican­s to win a statewide race. In the 12 years since those victories, the GOP’s share of the state’s registered electorate has plummeted. Party loyalists have largely embraced statewide candidates with positions that polls find are to the political right of a majority of California voters.

Immigratio­n was the topic on which Poizner bet his 2010 campaign for governor. The wealthy candidate — whose GOP challenger, former Hewlett-Packard Enterprise Chief Executive Meg Whitman, was even wealthier — insisted at the time that the only thing that could “save” California was to crack down on assistance to those in the U.S. illegally.

“As governor, I will stop taxpayer-funded benefits for illegal immigrants,” Poizner said in a TV ad that spring. He criticized these services as “magnets” that were responsibl­e for illegal immigratio­n — an image later invoked in the 2012 presidenti­al race by Republican Mitt Romney, who used some of the same political strategist­s as Poizner.

Whitman accused Poizner, who six years earlier had cultivated a more centrist message in a failed campaign for the state Assembly, of flip-flopping on key Republican issues. He ending up losing the gubernator­ial primary by almost 900,000 votes. (Whitman lost the race that fall.)

Poizner said Monday that his views on immigratio­n have changed. “We just have to solve this problem,” he said. “We have to come up with a solution where everyone can get on a path to being documented.”

He said his 2018 campaign will focus on how to help homeowners who have too little insurance in the face of wildfire and flood dangers, as well as addressing the issues of health insurance fraud and the lack of insurance products available in the event of cybercrime.

The Department of Insurance is touted as the state’s largest consumer protection agency. The commission­er, a position created by voters in 1988, oversees more than 1,400 employees and has a hand in considerin­g rates charged for auto and home insurance.

Commission­er Dave Jones, the incumbent, has used the office to seek an expanded role in reviewing health insurance plans in the wake of changes brought by the federal Affordable Care Act. Poizner said he believes Obamacare “needs to get fixed,” and that he believes health insurance fraud is a key factor in rising costs.

Jones is stepping down because of term limits and is running for attorney general. Poizner, his immediate predecesso­r, could serve one final four-year term if elected.

After leaving office, he started a company that helped bring educationa­l materials to mobile devices and in 2014 sold the venture to San Diego-based Qualcomm.

He then worked for the company until 2016.

Poizner spent most of his profession­al life in Silicon Valley and currently is an “entreprene­ur in residence” at the Rady School of Management at UC San Diego. He said he is involved, too, with a nonprofit that is seeking to bring Southern California “on par” with tech communitie­s to the north.

So far, the race for insurance commission­er has looked to be a clash of Democrats between state Sen. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) and San Gabriel Valley pulmonolog­ist Dr. Asif Mahmood. The only other expected candidate is Bay Area insurance agent Peter Kuo, a Republican. The formal filing period for elected offices began Monday and lasts through early March.

Poizner insisted he will campaign as an unaffiliat­ed “no party preference” candidate, and said he changed his registrati­on from Republican a few weeks ago. As he said in his 2006 campaign, he believes the job of insurance commission­er should officially be nonpartisa­n, a person who can be “fiercely independen­t of the insurance industry and party politics.”

In the only existing statewide nonpartisa­n job, superinten­dent of public education, candidates are often associated with a political party. The current superinten­dent, Tom Torlakson, is a registered Democrat. And Poizner says he remains supportive of many Republican principles. He donated money to and served as a national co-chairman for Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s presidenti­al campaign in 2016.

There are more than 4.7 million California voters who cite “no party preference” on their registrati­on. But no candidate in the modern era has won a statewide election without a partisan political campaign.

Poizner, who spent $24 million in his unsuccessf­ul race for governor eight years ago, said he will raise money from donors (though not the insurance industry) for this race. And he said he realizes the challenge of a political comeback after the hardfought races of the past.

“I have definitely not picked an easy path,” he said. “There are no shortcuts here in what I’m trying to do.”

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? EIGHT YEARS after leaving the insurance commission­er seat to run for governor, Steve Poizner is seeking to return to his old job. The ex-tech entreprene­ur says he will campaign as a “no party preference” candidate.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images EIGHT YEARS after leaving the insurance commission­er seat to run for governor, Steve Poizner is seeking to return to his old job. The ex-tech entreprene­ur says he will campaign as a “no party preference” candidate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States