Insurance in Portland might be the fight to end qualified immunity
Insurers balk at covering Portland businesses; brokers say downtown upheaval has made carriers wary
Eric Murfitt watched helplessly from a live security feed as looters trashed his downtown clothing store, Mercantile, during a riot on May 30. Murfitt said the business suffered $1 million in losses due to the break-in and had to file an insurance claim to stay afloat.
But in November, Murfitt was informed that his insurance carrier would not be renewing the store’s policy. Nearly a dozen other insurance companies declined to even offer Mercantile a quote.
The riots, protests, vandalism, looting, lack of policing, and general Leftist utopia disarray have made many business uninsurable and has left others with unaffordable premiums.
The Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office has declined to file charges in 70% of the protest-related cases that have been referred to them since May, although District Attorney Mike Schmidt has said he would pursue cases that involve “deliberate” property damage, theft or force against another person or threats of force.
He hasn’t.
The city government has made this happen. Their utter mismanagement has cost these businesses everything.
This is where qualified immunity needs to die. Every person in the city government needs to personally pay for making this happen.
This is beyond bad policy, this is malfeasance.
Politicians should be held personally accountable when their policies lead to the destruction of communities. More than losing an election and getting a cushy job at a lobbying agency or think tank. These politicians need to be rendered permanently destitute.