Editorial Elect Levine to end Lara’s scandals
Incumbent
Voters in the
Levine, who has represented
He vows to be an activist leader, holding the more than 1,400 companies overseen by the
He promises to protect the availability of health insurance to
Some of his proposals are ambitious and could test the limits of the authority of the insurance commissioner. But we’re OK with that. Voters in 1988 created the independently elected insurance commissioner because they wanted a leader who would fight for their interests, not the industry’s.
Lara an embarrassment
While Levine and Lara are both
The incumbent’s term has been an embarrassment reminiscent of the ignominious tenure of
After that debacle, California’s insurance commissioners turned away campaign contributions tied to the single industry they regulate — a recognition of the need for independent oversight untainted by political money.
That is, until Lara came along.
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.
It didn’t stop there.
On the New Year’s Eve after his election, Lara partied in
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
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