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Elections

Let’s bring honesty to the insurance commissioner’s office

Although it lacks the flash of the governor’s office, Georgia’s Insurance Commission has the ability to transform the lives of Georgians by protecting Georgia families and overseeing insurance corporations. The Insurance Commissioner chooses whether to help insurance companies to continue to rake in obscene profits by taking advantage of consumers or whether to help improve the safety, health and well-being of Georgia’s citizens. In the twenty years leading up to 2010, when Hudgens was elected,

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Goodbye, Ralph Hudgens: 8 years of failing taxpayers

Ralph Hudgens has allowed car insurance, homeowner’s insurance and health insurance to skyrocket in the nearly 8 years since he took office. He’s done nothing to protect ratepayers or push back against the companies that swindle them. We couldn’t be more thankful that he’s leaving. His entire tenure has been characterized by ratepayers being taken advantage of by insurance companies. Here are just a few terrible things he’s done, to jog your memory: He compared

Podcast Ep. 52: Interview with Cindy Zeldin

Today, we’re talking with Cindy Zeldin, the newly announced candidate for insurance commissioner in Georgia. We’re asking her about what she hopes to accomplish as a consumer advocate, how she plans to work with healthcare recipients, and her past successes in fighting for the rights of the residents of Georgia. You can Subscribe and Listen to the Podcast on iTunes, and be sure to leave us a Rating and Review! When you don’t listen to consumers and hear

Georgia Insurance Commissioner: It’s your fault.

Georgia Insurance Commissioner Ralph Hudgens wants anyone suffering from diabetes, asthma, cancer, genetic disorders, and other pre-existing medical conditions to know something: it’s your fault. His view of pre-existing conditions was captured on video while he spoke to the Republican Women’s Club in Evans: “But say you’re going along and you have a wreck. And it’s your fault. Well, a pre-existing condition would be you then calling up your insurance agent and saying, ‘I would