The Mandate
In 1988, California voters won the most expensive ballot fight in American history at the time, and wrote a rule so hard to change that it outlived the climate it was built for.
On November 8, 1988, California voters approved Proposition 103 by the narrowest of margins — 51.1 percent to 48.9 — after a campaign that, at the time, was the most expensive ballot fight in American history. The insurance industry spent the overwhelming majority of more than $200 million trying to defeat it. It lost, by about two percentage points.
This post is not about California's current insurance crisis. That comes in Posts IV and V. This post is about the law that crisis is now colliding with — a law built to solve a 1988 problem, written with a deliberate constitutional lock to make sure it couldn't be quietly undone, that has now outlasted the world it was designed for by nearly four decades.
Before Prop 103, California ran what regulators call an "open competition" system, in place since the 1947 McBride-Grunsky Insurance Regulatory Act: insurers set their own rates and simply filed them with the state, with no requirement for advance approval. Voters in 1988, angry at what they saw as unchecked premium increases, replaced that system entirely. Prop 103 rolled back rates by 20 percent immediately, made the previously gubernatorially appointed Insurance Commissioner an elected office, and — most consequentially for everything this series examines — instituted "prior approval": insurers would now need the Commissioner's sign-off before any rate change could take effect at all.
That supermajority lock is the single most important structural fact in this entire post, and it is worth understanding exactly what kind of choice it represents. The authors of Prop 103 knew, correctly, that an insurance industry which had just spent over $200 million trying to kill the law at the ballot box would spend whatever it took afterward to weaken it through the ordinary legislative process. Locking the law behind a supermajority requirement was a rational, foreseeable defense against exactly that. It also means the law has almost no mechanism for routine modernization — every adaptation requires either an extraordinary political consensus or another statewide vote, which is precisely why the catastrophe-modeling fight examined in Post I took the form it did: not a simple rule change, but a multi-year administrative rulemaking process specifically designed to work within Prop 103's existing text rather than amend it.
Insurance
Speed
"Deemer"
What gets converted here is a single, blunt regulatory tool into two entirely different outcomes depending on the line of insurance it's applied to — and that divergence is the actual finding this post wants to leave you with, not a verdict on which side is correct. Prior approval works straightforwardly well for a line like auto insurance, where loss costs are large in number, statistically stable, and reasonably predictable year to year. The same mechanism applied to wildfire-exposed homeowners insurance — where a single bad season can produce losses an order of magnitude larger than the historical average, and where the financial instruments backing that risk (examined in Posts I and II) reprice in real time — produces a structurally different result: a regulatory system built for predictable risk, governing a market that has become anything but.
What Prop 103 Got Right
It ended an "open competition" system that had, by the contemporary record, allowed real price-gouging with no regulatory check at all. It created public participation rights — the intervenor process — that gave ordinary consumers standing to challenge rate filings, something almost no other state offers in comparable form. Its auto insurance results, by the state's own data, are genuinely strong.
What It Didn't Anticipate
A regulatory text locked behind a supermajority amendment requirement, in an era before catastrophe models, before securitized reinsurance capital, and before climate-driven loss volatility reached its current scale. The law's rigidity wasn't a flaw in 1988. It became one as the world the law assumed stopped existing.
A law that takes a two-thirds vote or a statewide referendum to amend isn't broken because it's strict. It's exposed because strictness, applied to a market that didn't exist yet when the law was written, eventually stops being protection and starts being a mismatch nobody with the power to fix it is positioned to fix quickly.
The Underwriting of Everything · Series AnalysisThe insulation here is structural rather than secretive, and it's worth naming as its own category, distinct from every other insulation mechanism this archive has documented. Most of FSA's prior subjects survive through concealment or capture — a regulator that doesn't ask the right question, a contract clause nobody reads closely. Prop 103 survived through the opposite mechanism: total transparency about exactly how hard it would be to change, built into the law's own text, voted on directly by the public, and upheld by the California Supreme Court against every subsequent challenge.
That is, in its way, democracy working exactly as designed — durable, resistant to quiet erosion, answerable only to the people who voted for it in the first place. The cost of that durability, thirty-six years later, sat almost entirely on the other end of the chain examined in this series' next two posts: homeowners in wildfire zones, watching the world's most sophisticated catastrophe models price their risk in real time, governed by a regulatory text that, by design, could not move nearly as fast.
Sub Verbis · Vera.
Proposition 103's 1988 vote margin (51.1% to 48.9%), the $200 million-plus campaign spending figure, and the supermajority amendment requirement (Section 8(b)) are drawn from the Wikipedia entry "1988 California Proposition 103" and corroborated by Consumer Watchdog's own historical account of the measure it authored. The $154 billion savings figure and the auto-premium comparison data (California premiums falling 7% from 1989-2004 versus a 47% national increase) are drawn from a California Department of Insurance press release citing Consumer Federation of America analysis, 2018. The characterization of California's homeowners insurance filing delays (236-day five-year average, second-slowest nationally) and the "deemer" provision's practical neutralization through routine CDI waiver requests are drawn from two International Center for Law & Economics reports: "Rethinking Prop 103's Approach to Insurance Regulation" and "The Questionable Value of California's Rate Intervenors," both published by R.J. Lehmann and Ian Adams, 2024. Readers should note ICLE is a market-oriented policy research organization whose published recommendations favor Prop 103 reform or repeal; its factual findings on filing delays are nonetheless independently citable and are treated in this post as data rather than as a neutral source's overall conclusion. Consumer Watchdog is, similarly, an advocacy organization that authored and continues to defend Prop 103; its savings figures are sourced to Consumer Federation of America's independent analysis rather than to Consumer Watchdog's own modeling.



