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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: December
2, 2004
Senate GOP Leader Welcomes Henry Policy
Shift on Tort Reform
• “If my particular bill were to
be passed, I would sign it. I was serious about that effort last
year." -- Gov. Brad Henry, discussing the possibility of
future lawsuit reform legislation in The Journal Record,
12/02/2004.
State Capitol, Oklahoma City – New Senate Republican Leader
Glenn Coffee,
R-Oklahoma City, said he welcomes comments by Gov. Brad Henry that
he would sign new lawsuit reform legislation in the next legislative
session.
“It is very welcome news that Gov. Henry now seems willing
to ignore his moratorium and support new lawsuit reform.
“I anticipate that Republican legislators in both the House
and Senate will craft new lawsuit reform bills modeled after the
comprehensive reform package that Gov. Henry proposed in early 2004,
but later abandoned. Republicans are eager to work with the governor
in a bipartisan fashion to bring ‘Texas-plus’ tort reform
to Oklahoma, and we will work hard to put just such a bill on his
desk in 2005,” Coffee said.
“For this bipartisan effort to work, the governor must convince
the Senate Democrat leadership to ignore the moratorium, too, so
that in 2005 we can enact the meaningful, Texas-plus lawsuit reform
that Gov. Henry promised us in 2004 but didn’t deliver,”
he stated.
The governor’s comments seemed to be a shift in policy for
the Henry Administration. During the 2004 legislative session, Gov.
Henry and his staff helped negotiate a side agreement between trial
lawyers and a few medical lobbying groups for a seven year moratorium
on future lawsuit reform. Prior to Henry’s statement, expectations
were that he would enforce the moratorium by vetoing any future
lawsuit reform bill that reached his desk.
Prior to the 2004 legislative session, the governor proposed a
comprehensive lawsuit reform bill, but later abandoned it in favor
of watered-down legislation supported by the trial lawyer lobby,
which is opposed to lawsuit reform.
“Putting an end to junk lawsuits is a key economic reform
our state needs to slow down spiraling insurance costs and to get
our economy moving again,” Coffee said.
For
more information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774

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