Auto insurance initiative ballot statements are upheld by judge - Los Angeles Times
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Auto insurance initiative ballot statements are upheld by judge

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SACRAMENTO -- An attempt by backers of an automobile insurance initiative to rewrite the title, summary and opponents’ arguments on the November ballot has failed.

Late Thursday, a Sacramento Superior Court judge denied a request from the campaign for Proposition 33, alleging the description of the measure for the ballot pamphlet written by the attorney general’s office is “prejudicial.â€

The proponents, mainly financed with an $8.3-million contribution from Mercury General insurance Chairman George Joseph, complained that as written, the ballot information is misleading by giving the idea that insurance companies unilaterally can change rates.

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Rates must be approved by the state’s insurance commissioner before they can be imposed, proponents said.

The initiative would allow insured motorists to switch insurance companies and continue to receive a so-called loyalty discount they previously got from their former insurance company. The measure is similar to one that was defeated by voters in November 2010.

Opponents, led by Consumer Watchdog, a Santa Monica activist group, counter that giving the discount to some drivers would harm low-income and new motorists by making it more expensive for them to buy coverage for the first time.

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Proposition 103, a successful 1988 initiative, mandates that auto insurance rates be based primarily on a driver’s record, number of years behind the wheel and miles driven annually.

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