For Immediate Release: April 30, 2007
Henry Flip-Flops on Lawsuit Reform
“Those are my principles, and if you
don't like them... well, I have others.” – Groucho
Marx
Gov. Brad Henry flip-flopped on the issue of lawsuit
reform by vetoing Senate Bill 507, bipartisan legislation that
contains most of the areas of lawsuit reform the governor himself
called for in 2004.
“This is one of the biggest flip-flops in
Oklahoma political history. Today, the governor ignored his
own promises by vetoing the genuine reforms he called for in
2004,” stated Senate Co-President Pro Tem Glenn Coffee,
R-Oklahoma City. “To paraphrase Groucho Marx: If you don’t
like Brad Henry’s stated principles on an issue, don’t
worry, he has others,” he said.
“The governor missed a grand opportunity
to send a message to the nation that Oklahoma is pro-jobs, pro-doctor,
and pro-business,” Coffee continued. “Instead, he
sent a message that millionaire trial lawyers are still running
the show.”
In 2004 Henry promised to bring “Texas-Plus”
lawsuit reform to Oklahoma – and even campaigned in favor
of lawsuit reform during last year’s governor’s
race. SB 507 contained 18 of the 28 areas of lawsuit reform
Henry called for in 2004. Another 7 of those reforms have already
been enacted in previous years.
Henry’s Eleventh-Hour Effort to Water-Down
SB 507
Coffee commented on last-minute efforts by the
governor’s office to water-down key reforms in a follow-up
bill.
“Unfortunately, the governor waited until
the eleventh-hour to provide a list of specific changes he wanted
to make to the reforms in SB 507. Then, he kept adding to that
list over the course of a few hours until it reached about a
dozen areas he wanted to change,” Coffee said.
“Gov. Henry’s proposed changes to
caps, class actions, joint-and-several liability, and other
reforms would have unacceptably gutted the bill’s key
provisions,” Coffee stated.
“However, if the governor has a change of
heart and decides he wants to be a partner to enact real lawsuit
reform, we stand ready to negotiate with him. There is still
time this session to pass a meaningful lawsuit reform bill,”
he said.
For more information contact:
Senator Coffee's Office: (405) 521-5636