Contact: Naomi Seligman, 310.392.0522, ext. 318; or Doug Heller, 310.392.0522, ext. 309
Consumer Advocate Challenges Insurance Executive Behind Prop 17 to Debate Initiative at Legislative Hearing
Harvey Rosenfield to Mercury Insurance Chairman: Put Your Mouth Where Your Money Is
Santa Monica, CA — The founder of Consumer Watchdog today challenged George Joseph, the founder and chair of Mercury Insurance, to show up to a legislative hearing in Sacramento to publicly defend his ballot initiative, Proposition 17. Prop 17, which would allow insurance companies to raise premiums on drivers based on their history of buying auto insurance, is 99% funded by Mercury and a particular focus of Joseph’s decades long effort to evade accountability to consumers.
Harvey Rosenfield wrote to Joseph today urging him to stop hiding behind his public relations flacks, front groups and radio ads and attend next Wednesday’s joint hearing of the California Assembly Insurance Committee and Senate Banking, Finance and Insurance Committee to explain why voters in California should trust Mercury Insurance and its quest to enact Prop 17.
In his letter to Joseph, Rosenfield points out that the insurance executive has privately defended his initiative in recent calls to several people who have spoken out against Prop 17. Now Joseph has an obligation to come forward and publicly defend this culmination of a decade-long attack on state consumer protections, Rosenfield writes.
“The time has come for you to stop hiding behind your paid surrogates and defend your Captain Ahab-like quest to surcharge and discriminate against motorists before the public…This is not like one of those legislative hearings where you can do your dirty work through lobbyists and donations to the politicians. Will you be there to defend publicly what you are saying privately, or will it be another one of your flunkies who does your bidding?
“I’ll be waiting to see if you have the courage to face me and our publicly elected officials. If you don’t, sir, you have no business sponsoring a ballot measure in this state.”
In the letter, which can be found at http://bit.ly/bDUl7s, Rosenfield notes state agency reports on Mercury’s history of discrimination, fines by state regulators and that Mercury ranks at the bottom of the most recent JD Power customer satisfaction survey: 27th of 32 large auto insurers.
Rosenfield suggests that Joseph fears voters will not trust his campaign to pass Prop 17 if Californians learned more about the company funding the initiative.
“Are you hiding because you are concerned that your sorry record might actually affect the public’s view of your initiative?…Come out from behind the gilded boardroom doors and let’s have an honest and thorough public discussion about Prop 17.”
Proposition 17 would create an insurance surcharge on drivers, including soldiers and seniors, who have had a lapse in car insurance coverage for virtually any reason during the past five years, or who missed a payment. Under the measure, people who stopped driving and didn’t need insurance for a time would be required to pay up to a thousand dollars more for car insurance when they sought to restart coverage. Currently, insurance companies are prohibited from imposing the surcharge in California.
The initiative is opposed by consumer and citizen groups including Consumers Union, Consumer Watchdog, Consumer Federation of California, California Alliance of Retired Americans and VoteVets.org.
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For more information, please visit: http://StopProp17.org – or find us on twitter at: http://twitter.com/stopmercury and facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/stopprop17