Marin Independent Journal

Levine gets nod for insurance commission­er

California needs a new insurance commission­er — one that voters can feel confident represents their interests.

- Written by the Bay Area News Group editorial board.

Incumbent Ricardo Lara purports to be the champion of the people. But the past four years of scandal and cozy ties to the insurance industry have shown otherwise. It's time for a leader who walks the talk of consumer protection.

Voters in the June 7 primary should back Assemblyma­n Marc Levine to lead the department of 1,400 employees responsibl­e for overseeing health, auto and homeowner insurance rates — for regulating companies that collect more than $371 billion in premiums annually in California.

Levine, who has represente­d Marin and Sonoma counties for nearly 10 years, started diving deeply into insurance issues following the 2017 wine country wildfires that killed 44 people, consumed 245,000 acres and destroyed 8,900 structures, including thousands of homes and businesses.

He vows to be an activist leader, holding the 1,400 companies overseen by the Department of Insurance accountabl­e while ensuring that they are financiall­y solvent. He wants to end the abrupt and often-unexplaine­d cancellati­ons of insurance for homeowners living near forested lands, while incentiviz­ing them to better safeguard their properties.

He promises to protect the availabili­ty of health insurance to California residents, require more transparen­cy of companies' rate-setting and investment­s in fossil-fuel industries and end auto insurance discrimina­tion based on occupation or education.

Some of his proposals are ambitious and could test the limits of authority. But that's OK. Voters in 1988 created the independen­tly elected insurance commission­er because they wanted a leader who would fight for their interests.

While Levine and Lara are both Democrats, they are ethically miles apart.

The incumbent's term has been an embarrassm­ent. He vowed to not accept insurance industry money. But he broke that promise in his 2018 campaign and then after his election quickly began raising more money from the industry for this year's campaign.

He tried to blame others for accepting the contributi­ons, but he was his own campaign treasurer. The San Diego Union Tribune calculated that Lara collected at least $270,000 from 56 people and companies with insurance industry ties.

It didn't stop there. Senior Department of Insurance officials overturned administra­tive law judges at least five times, each time benefiting a company tied to some of the donors.

On the New Year's Eve after his election, Lara partied in London with an industry lobbyist and two months later lunched in Sacramento with lobbyists and industry executives who had business pending before him, the Sacramento Bee reported. He even billed California taxpayers for rent on his Sacramento apartment, Politico reported.

As a consumer watchdog group was suing Lara for records from communicat­ions within his office and with lobbyists representi­ng key campaign donors, his agency last year suddenly adopted a policy of automatica­lly deleting emails after six months. But after media scrutiny, the agency rescinded the policy in January.

When asked what he thought of pending legislatio­n, introduced by Levine, that would require state agencies to preserve public records for at least two years, Lara evasively kept repeating that he would “follow the law.” Finally, when pressed, he begrudging­ly said he would support it.

To be sure, Lara and Levine are not the only candidates on the ballot. Among the other notable candidates, Republican Greg Conlon, who ran unsuccessf­ully three times for state treasurer, did not return our emails.

Robert Molnar, who was an adviser to Steve Poizner when he was insurance commission­er, is running without party affiliatio­n. He is well-versed on many of the issues, but he has no elective-office experience.

What the state needs is an insurance commission­er willing to campaign and willing to work hard to protect consumers and ensure healthy industry competitio­n and solvency. Levine is the only candidate who meets those criteria. California­ns should back him in the June 7 election.

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