Elizabeth Hovde of the Washington Policy Center addresses why the concept of one-man rule for policy decisions is a bad idea
Elizabeth Hovde
Washington Policy Center
“Today’s decision confirms that the best place to permanently address this issue is in the Legislature,” Washington state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler said of a Friday court ruling. That ruling overturned his decision prohibiting insurers from using credit scores to help set rates for auto, homeowner and renter insurance.

Ya think? Kreidler is singing our tune. One-man rule for policy decisions is a bad idea. Still, it’s happening because state leaders are taking advantage of allowances available to them in pandemic times.
Kreidler’s rule — made using emergency powers the commissioner had because of COVID-19 ongoings — caused many Washingtonians’ insurance rates to spike. Elderly people on fixed incomes were among those who had earned good-credit discounts and were monetarily harmed by the Kreidler rule.
The commissioner had been wanting a prohibition on credit scores for decades. And recent legislation to get that want into law failed. Shortly thereafter came the Kreidler overreach. Read more about the failed legislation, Kreidler’s rule and the market interference that caused premium increases in a Seattle Times’ opinion piece by Sen. Mark Mullet, D-Issaquah.
Mullet says none of this was ever an emergency. Judges agree it was a misuse of power.
The Kreidler rule was paused while legal proceedings continued, but that pause didn’t keep many people with good credit from seeing insurance-rate spikes. I wrote in October that an industry insider told KIRO 7 News not to expect corrective action until the insurance industry had more clarity on what tools it could use in determining insurance premiums. (See premium displacement charts from the Office of the Insurance Commissioner here.) Until then, there was “no need to jack people’s rates around again,” reported Jesse Jones.
I’m doubtful that Friday’s court decision will bring that clarity. After all, Kreidler said in reaction to the ruling that he’d be consulting with the state Attorney General’s Office on appropriate next steps — despite acknowledging that the “decision confirms that the best place to permanently address this issue is in the Legislature.”
Correlations exist between credit scores and insurance claims. The higher your credit score is, the lower the chances are that you’ll file a claim, study shows. It’s similar to teenage boys being charged higher insurance premiums due to their behavior on the road. Using credit scores or youth as a factor in insurance rating is complex, debatable and worthy of discussion. That’s what a Legislature made up of elected representatives can provide.
In September, a Senate Business, Financial Services & Trade Committee meeting allowed for quality discussion and real-world examples of the impact a government regulation can have on people. Alternate policy suggestions were also discussed.
Mullet once said of Kreidler, “I think it would be nice for him to answer questions directly now that we’ve realized the huge inconvenience his emergency order [has] caused [for] over a million people.” That’d be nice. Remarking that the Legislature is the place where a policy should be decided, however, is even better.
Elizabeth Hovde is a policy analyst and the director of the Centers for Health Care and Worker Rights at the Washington Policy Center. She is a Clark County resident.
Also read:
- Judges told Twitter was enforcing ‘Biden administration policy’ in censoring COVID dataJudges on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals are being told that Twitter – back in the day before it was turned over to new owner Elon Musk – actually was “enforcing the Biden administration’s policy” when it censored information about COVID-19.
- U.S. doctors group: Withdraw COVID shots from market now!‘Regulatory agencies are corrupted by conflicts of interest, lack of transparency, lack of accountability’
- Fauci, others suppressed Brit recommendation to use ivermectin against COVIDConclusion called for ‘immediate’ approval for use.
- RFK Jr.: Fauci developed ‘bioweapons’ for Pentagon for years!RFK Jr.: Fauci developed ‘bioweapons’ for Pentagon for years! Moved projects to Wuhan when Obama called moratorium based on threats.
- Opinion: Funding intensive tutoring is the best way to help students recover from COVID lockdown learning lossLiv Finne of the Washington Policy Center believes students should not have to suffer long-term learning loss because of Governor Inslee’s ‘insensitive’ decision to close schools for so long.
- Opinion: Coming to a hospital near you? A solution for patient access, caregiversElizabeth Hovde of the Washington Policy Center believes being able to hire qualified nurses licensed in other states to get to work immediately should be a welcome allowance.
- Congressman accuses Biden of purging conservatives from militaryA member of Congress has accused Joe Biden of having an ulterior motive for his Department of Defense agenda to continue attacking those military members who declined to take the COVID-19 shots.
- ‘Scared for my life’: O’Keefe reveals courageous Pfizer whistleblowerThe industry insider who was key to undercover videos by James O’Keefe that exposed a Pfizer company executive claiming his organization was mutating COVID-19 in order to sell more shots says that “fear” is what is being used to control people.