Ralph Hudgens

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GovernorNathan Deal
Preceded byJohn Oxendine
Succeeded byJim Beck
Preceded byMike Beatty[1]
Ralph Hudgens
Insurance Commissioner of Georgia
In office
January 10, 2011  January 14, 2019
GovernorNathan Deal
Preceded byJohn Oxendine
Succeeded byJim Beck
Member of the Georgia Senate
from the 47th district
In office
January 2003  January 2011
Preceded byMike Beatty[1]
Succeeded byFrank Ginn[2]
Member of the Georgia House of Representatives
from the 24th district
In office
January 1997  January 2003
Preceded byJohn Scoggins[3]
Succeeded byWarren Massey[4]
Personal details
Born (1942-11-21) November 21, 1942 (age 83)
Miami, Florida, U.S.
PartyRepublican
SpouseSuzanne Hudgens
EducationUniversity of Florida (BS)

Ralph Hudgens (born November 21, 1942) was the Commissioner of Insurance of the state of Georgia from January 10, 2011, to January 14, 2019. Hudgens served in the Georgia House of Representatives as well as the Georgia Senate. He has been a delegate to numerous Republican Party events. Hudgens defeated his Democratic opponent in the 2010 election with 53.8% of the vote. He was re-elected in 2014. He announced on July 17, 2017, that he would not run for re-election in 2018. Hudgens believed insurance rates should be allowed to increase based on competition and not regulation as did former regulatory favorable Commissioner John Oxendine. During Hudgens's time in office Georgia auto insurance rates greatly increased including one year Georgia experienced the highest increase in the United States.[5] Hudgens and his wife, Suzanne, have four children and twelve grandchildren.[6]

With regard to Obamacare, as the Georgia Insurance Commissioner, Hudgens has opposed the implementation of Affordable Care Act and vowed to be an "obstructionist" while speaking to a group of Republicans at the Tillman Hanger Rally in Floyd County, Georgia.[7] However, Hudgens later admitted "I spoke to a Republican group in Rome, Ga., and I said I was going to be an obstructionist, but I can’t be. I mean, I was talking to a Republican group and I was throwing them some red meat."[8]

At the CSRA Republican Women's Club meeting, he criticized the Affordable Care Act by likening the patients with preexisting condition to a car driver that has gotten in an accident and seeks car insurance post incident.[9] He has since retracted his remarks and stated, "I've had family members, I've had friends - who have pre-existing conditions. It's not the person's fault they have a pre-existing condition."[10]

Controversy

Electoral history

References

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