Billboard lawyers are driving up costs for all of us.

Thanks to Governor Hochul for vetoing their agenda and tackling affordability issues in her 2026 State of the State address.

But there is more work to do.

Governor Kathy Hochul quote on staged crashes and higher auto insurance premiums in New York.
Image by Houses of the Oireachtas, licensed under CC BY 2.0, text added.
Infographic showing that 38% of auto insurance claimants report their attorney suggested or recommended medical treatments, according to a LexisNexis Risk Solutions report.
A graphic showing that since 2020, auto insurance premiums have increased by 24%, while wages have only risen by 13%, with a line chart and stacks of coins, and the phrase "Keep NY Affordable" at the bottom.
Text stating that more than 80% of Florida drivers saw auto insurance premiums decrease after the state enacted lawsuit abuse reforms. An icon of a money bill with "80%" is in the top right corner. The bottom has a slogan: Keep NY Affordable.
Text infographic indicating that auto insurance costs rose by up to 21% from 2022 to 2025, while overall inflation remained the same. The infographic includes a large percentage figure '21%' in brown and a note at the bottom says 'Keep NY Affordable'.
Albany New york capitol black and white

New York
is facing
an affordability crisis.

Graphic showing that auto insurance fraud and abuse inflate premiums by up to $300 per driver per year, with a money bag illustration and the text "Keep NY Affordable".
A graphic design representing a calendar with the message "Insurers have just 30 days to identify and report fraud (This is not enough time to stop bad claims)" and a call to action "Keep NY Affordable."
Infographic showing 38,270 suspected auto insurance fraud cases reported statewide in 2023, a record high, with text and an outline of a document or report.
Infographic showing that in 2023, New York recorded the second highest number of staged crashes in the nation, with 1,729 incidents, and includes text 'Keep NY Affordable'.
Historical cartoon from the June 18, 1887 issue of 'Judge' magazine depicting a courtroom scene where a woman, dressed as a witch, kicks a judge off a spinning record titled 'How Justice Slips Up.' The scene satirizes justice and legal issues of the time.

Families, small businesses, and healthcare providers are under increasing financial strain due to rising costs of housing, energy, insurance, and essential goods.

Lawsuits drive up costs for everything to the benefit of wealthy lawyers.

We can fix it.