The Wall Street Journal and Washington Post recently published articles casting a negative light on the lawsuit brought by NAIFA, ACLI, and others to stop the Department of Labor’s misguided fiduciary-only rule. These articles mischaracterize what we hope to achieve and largely ignore the arguments laid out in our court filings.
1 min read
NAIFA's Lawsuit Aims to Protect Consumers and the Financial Professionals Who Serve Them
By Kevin Mayeux on 8/15/24 4:08 PM
Topics: Legislation & Regulations Standard of Care & Consumer Protection DOL
2 min read
A Win for NAIFA Is a Win for Insurance and Financial Professionals
By NAIFA on 8/2/24 9:07 AM
NAIFA along with the American Council of Life Insurers and other advocacy partners recently notched a major win in our lawsuit opposing the Department of Labor’s fiduciary-only rule. As we shared with you last week, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas granted a stay in the lawsuit that prevents the DOL rule from going into effect September 23.
Topics: Webinar Standard of Care & Consumer Protection Federal Advocacy DOL
1 min read
Update: Court Grants a Stay in NAIFA's Lawsuit Against the DOL
By NAIFA on 7/27/24 10:29 AM
The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas has granted a request by NAIFA, ACLI, several NAIFA chapters, and other advocacy partners to stay the Department of Labor's fiduciary-only rule, stating that our case is "virtually certain to succeed on the merits." The action follows a similar stay issued Thursday by a different federal court in a similar case.
Topics: Standard of Care & Consumer Protection Press Release DOL Fiduciary
3 min read
Federal Court in Texas Halts the DOL's Fiduciary-Only Rule
By NAIFA on 7/26/24 4:15 PM
On July 25, 2024, a federal court in the Eastern District of Texas issued a stay barring the enforcement of the DOL fiduciary-only rule (and amendments to PTE 84-24) while the case in FACC v. DOL is pending. An appeal of the stay to the 5th Circuit is likely.
Meanwhile, NAIFA’s challenge to the fiduciary-only rule, brought with ACLI and other industry groups, is under review in the Northern District of Texas, where we seek a preliminary injunction and stay against enforcement of the fiduciary-only rule and amendments to PTE 84-24 and 2020-02.
Topics: Federal Advocacy DOL Fiduciary
3 min read
U.S. House Appropriations Subcommittee Advances Legislation Blocking Funding for Fiduciary-Only Regulation
By NAIFA on 6/28/24 12:25 PM
Washington, D.C.—The American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI), National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors (NAIFA), Finseca, Insured Retirement Institute (IRI) and National Association for Fixed Annuities (NAFA) issued the following statement on legislation advanced today by the U.S. House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, HHS, Education, and Related Agencies that would block funding for the Labor Department’s fiduciary-only regulation:
Topics: Advocacy Press Release DOL Fiduciary
2 min read
Insurance Associations File Legal Action Challenging U.S. Department of Labor’s Fiduciary-Only Regulation
By NAIFA on 5/24/24 4:21 PM
Nine insurance trade associations filed a lawsuit today against the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) to overturn a regulation limiting consumers' choice of financial professional and their access to retirement products that deliver protected lifetime income.
The American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI), National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors (NAIFA), NAIFA-Texas, NAIFA-Dallas, NAIFA-Fort Worth, NAIFA-POET, Finseca, Insured Retirement Institute (IRI), and National Association for Fixed Annuities (NAFA) issued the following comments on their challenge to the DOL's harmful intervention in the retirement savings marketplace and its one-size-fits-all fiduciary standard obligation on effectively every financial professional who sells retirement products:
Topics: Standard of Care & Consumer Protection Press Release DOL
1 min read
Mayeux Thanks Lawmakers for CRA Resolution Disapproving of the DOL’s Fiduciary-Only Rule
By NAIFA on 5/15/24 12:07 PM
NAIFA supports the newly introduced Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution disapproving the DOL’s final fiduciary-only rule that will negatively impact and impose new costs on middle- and low-income savers, as well as financial services professionals. CEO Kevin Mayeux, CAE, sent letters personally thanking Representative Rick Allen and Senators Roger Marshall, Joe Manchin, Ted Budd, and Bill Cassidy for introducing the resolution in the House and Senate, respectively. ACLI, NAIFA, Finseca, IRI and NAFA also issued a joint release supporting the CRA review.
Topics: Legislation & Regulations Standard of Care & Consumer Protection Federal Advocacy DOL
1 min read
Please Take NAIFA’s Survey on the DOL Fiduciary-Only Rule
By NAIFA on 5/12/24 8:26 PM
An ongoing survey of NAIFA members will provide updated data to help NAIFA and our industry partners in future actions on the Department of Labor’s final fiduciary-only rule. The results will help us educate policymakers – and potentially the courts – on how the proposal will impact consumers and your business.
Topics: Legislation & Regulations Federal Advocacy DOL Fiduciary
1 min read
How the DOL Fiduciary-Only Rule Will Impact Financial Professionals and Consumers
By NAIFA on 4/27/24 1:30 PM
A NAIFA Advocacy Webinar
May 2 | 2 pm eastern
The U.S. Department of Labor‘s final fiduciary-only rule will force the vast majority of financial professionals offering retirement planning services and products into a fee-for-service model, unless Congress or the courts intervene. It will deprive many consumers of the valuable option of working with professionals operating under alternative models, including those with commission-based compensation, that may better meet their needs.
Topics: Legislation & Regulations Standard of Care & Consumer Protection DOL Fiduciary
3 min read
NAIFA Responds to DOL Release of Fast-Tracked Fiduciary-Only Rule
By NAIFA on 4/23/24 1:40 PM
The Department of Labor and the White House have released a final fiduciary-only rule after an astonishingly brief regulatory and review process and in spite of grave concerns expressed by NAIFA, members of Congress, and other stakeholders. Unless Congress or the courts intervene, the rule will force the vast majority of financial professionals offering retirement planning services and products into a fee-for-service model. It will deprive consumers of the valuable option of working with professionals operating under alternative models that may better meet their needs.