Texas does not require car insurance if you are not driving it. You will have to insure it when you decide to drive it again.
If a car is not being driven you do not need to keep it insured. However if your car is damaged while uninsured you will not be compensated.
No, the state of Texas does not require it as of the time of this answer. However, most Texas clients are financially savvy and are not likely to offer a contract or even accept a bid from an un-insured contractor. The first hallmark of a reputable contractor is that they come properly insured for the services being offered by contract bid. In other words, Your bid proposal should include documentation signifying that you are insured and that your coverage meets any minimum requirements of the bid as proffered. If your an un-insured contractor, you can't expect serious consideration of your bid. You also might not be invited to bid for that client again in the future. Proper insurance and required coverage limits are generally part of the bid requirement to begin with.
Unless you file a Certificate of Non-Operation that formally notifies the State that the car will nto be driven, yes you do. Note that filing a certificate of non-operation may mean that you need to get the car re-certified as driveable before re-registering the car (for instance, in California the car would require a smog check).
No. Added: Once they receive it they are then a fully licensed driver and legally responsible for their own actions behind the wheel. Insurance companies require that they be added to their parents policy (or get their own).
he was having a motorcade in Dallas Texas with governor John Connaly and his wife Jacqueline.
No. If you had broadform insurance he would be able to drive any vehical you own as long as you NAME him a driver. Broadform is nice for people with more then one vehical.
It depends on the laws of the State in which you reside, but typically no. However, whatever entity who performs the driving test will usually require the car in which the test is being taken to be insured.
In the state of Florida mope riders are not required to have Personal Injury Protection insurance. However, the state does recommend being well insured.
Providing you DO NOT live at the same address as the insured (in Massachusetts)
When you are chauffeur driven you are taken to a destination in a vehicle being driven by someone else. This person is paid to drive you where you wish to go.
The answer is "it depends." I know of no insurance companies that issue policies "to drive any vehicle" ... automobile insurance, at least in the USA, is based on the car being driven. In that case, the insurance is actually on the automobile, not on the driver. Therefore, an uninsured car would not be insured regardless of the driver. There may be exceptions, depending on the underwriter and the particular policy involved.
No but it is advised