Kemp-backed lawsuit overhaul seeks to limit large verdicts, but without explicit damages caps
After weeks of suspense,
At a jam-packed press conference Thursday, Kemp gathered state lawmakers and business leaders at
"If your neighborhood doesn't have a grocery store, if your hometown and surrounding counties don't have an OB/GYN, if the local family-owned restaurant is forced to raise prices again and again or go out of business altogether, if the child care facility your son or daughter attends has to close its doors, if your car insurance premium goes up just like it did last year, those are real jobs potentially gone forever," Kemp said. "Those are real costs that every single Georgian has to pay."
Proponents of overhauling
Kemp has touted the issue as his key priority for the 2025 legislative session, threatening to reconvene the state legislature for a special session if his proposed overhauls do not pass by the end of the session in early April. However, until now he had not released any specific policy proposals, garnering criticism from
At Thursday's press conference, Kemp outlined a nine-pronged approach aimed at limiting lawsuit awards, divided into two pieces of legislation. Senate Bill 68, sponsored by
Senate Bill 69, also authored by Kennedy, would increase regulations on third-party sources of funding for lawsuits, requiring any third-party entities to be registered with the
The two bills notably exclude any explicit caps on the damages that can be awarded to plaintiffs who file lawsuits. A previous legislative attempt to limit jury payouts passed in 2005 but was struck down by the
However, the legislation is still likely to face pushback from both
"There are very real issues that Georgians face when it comes to insurance," said Rep.
"The truth is, we're just being asked to take the insurance industry's word for it that so-called 'frivolous lawsuits' drive up rates. There is no transparency in how they set their rates, and they are not required to provide proof that restricting laws will lower premiums," she added.
Proponents of the proposed changes, including the
"It genuinely seems that they're not trying to just clamp down on lawsuits generally," Wingfield said. "They're trying to address some very specific problems with civil cases and I think bring it back into balance."
But members of the
"The bottom line is that it shifts the costs of the wrongdoing from the bad actors who did the wrongdoing to the victims — the innocent parties — who just so happen to have insurance," he said.
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