

Republicans have declared war on middle class people trying to plan ahead for their Golden Years.

By Thom Hartmann
The Hartmann Report
Recently, a retired woman seeking advice wrote intoย MarketWatchโsย financial advisor, saying:
โI was โfinancially setโ after my husband died. But my current adviser lost $500,000 over the last few years, and then a new adviser said my portfolio was โa messโ and wants 1.25% to fix it. Whatโs my move?โ
She was the victim of an unethical financial advisor hustling decades of churning commission-based products that essentially transferred her money into his pocket. As she told MarketWatch, โThe adviser was paid per trade.โ
President Biden wants to do something about this.
โThis is about basic fairness,โ Bidenย saidย when announcing a new rule to protect people like her. โPeople are tired of being played for suckers.โ
He added:
โBad financial advice by unscrupulous financial advisers driven by their own self-interest can cost a retiree up to 1.2% per year in lost investment. That doesnโt sound like much but if youโre living long, itโs a lot of money. Over a lifetime, it can add up to 20% less money when they retire. For a middle-class household, that can amount to tens of thousands of dollars over time.โ
But Republicans have declared war on Biden and middle class people who want to save for retirement.
Odds are youโve never heard of their shock troops: Judge Jeremy Kernodle or Judge Reed OโConnor, both federal judges appointed to Texas districts by Donald Trump and George W. Bush respectively.
For reference, both are hard-core rightwingers: Kernodle was one of the 13 federal judges who pledged not to hire clerks from Columbia University after the student demonstrations there against Israelโs destruction of Gaza; OโConnor struck down the Gun Control Act of 1968 and tried to take down Obamaโs Affordable Care Act.
But even if youโve never heard of them, theyโre trying their best to have a huge impact on your ability to comfortably retire when the time comes, or on how you can live off your retirement funds if youโre already past 65.
Millions of Americans use investment advisors to manage their retirement funds; the total that could be affected by these judgesโ actions is, according to The Washington Postyesterday, more than $770 billion.
While thereโs a wide variety of companies and financial products (insurance, annuities, 401Ks, simple investment accounts, etc.) people use to invest their retirement funds, the advisors and brokers who handle them on your behalf basically fall into two categories: those whoโre looking out first and foremost for your interests and those whoโre looking out first and foremost for ways they can siphon off your funds into their own pockets.
Those advisors and brokers who are looking out for you are called โfiduciaries,โ an industry and legal term that requires them to put your interests ahead of their own. Typically, this means they donโt sell products that pay them a commission, but instead work on a simple and transparent fee basis. It also means they wonโt churn your account just to earn per-trade fees.
Most of those agents and companies that arenโt fiduciaries are working in what could be described as the wild west of finance: theyโre constrained by fraud and embezzlement rules but can easily shave off part of your savings with every transaction they make on your behalf simply by putting you into products that pay them a commission.
And those commissions arenโt chicken feed: just for Americans who put their money into annuities, if all brokers and agents selling them were required to act as fiduciaries, the people buying those annuities would save over $32 billion over the next decade.
Commissions on insurance-based products can run as high as 70% of the first yearโs payment, and can hit 10% on annuities. Advisors who churn your investments can drain your funds before you realize whatโs happened to you, and thereโs usually no recourse to get your money back.
It comes down to America having a regulated investment industry where itโs against the law to rip off its customers by hustling high commission products versus being a country where every American is at the mercy of unscrupulous investment advisors whoโre getting rich by shaving a few points in commissions off every trade or financial product bought or sold on our behalf.
To deal with this problem and make America a safe place for average citizens to save for retirement, the Biden Labor Department put into place earlier this year a set of rules that would require most investment advisors and insurance brokers to act as fiduciaries and put their customersโ interests first.
The industry immediately sued in the courtrooms of judges Kernodle and OโConnor, who, three weeks ago, put the DOL fiduciary rules on hold pending appeals.
Democrats, of course, are on the side of average American consumers and retirees, which is why the Biden Labor Department put those rules into place requiring a huge chunk of the investment industry to operate as fiduciaries.
Republicans, on the other hand โ including the two judges mentioned earlier โ claim to believe in a mythical so-called โfree marketโ where giant corporations and sleazy brokers can rob us of our retirement and then make campaign contributions to the GOP with some of that money.
Contributions, for example, to Representative Virginia Foxx (R-NC), whose top contributor according to opensecrets.org is Apollo Global Management and whoโs top two donating industries are โretiredโ and โsecurities and investment.โ Of the $2,938,046 in cash-on-hand Foxx has for her campaigns, a mere $38,896 came from individual under-$200 donors.
Foxx, in exchange for this retirement industry largesse, has sponsored legislation in the House of Representatives that would permanently bar the Labor Department from putting fiduciary requirements into law.
While shilling for the investment industry, she pretends sheโs defending the little guy โ a popular Republican scam โ saying that requiring investment advisors and brokers to put the customer first and not shave commissions off of their retirement funds would โeliminate options for working-class Americans, reduce their ability to retire and limit their access to financial advice.โ
And arguably thatโs at least partially true. Fiduciary requirements do โeliminateโ the option of buying products that rip you off and also โlimitโ your access to bad financial advice that will leave you poorer than when you started. But, to Foxxโs concern, they also prevent the industry from extracting that estimated $33 billion in fees and commissions from your pension, annuity, IRA, 401k, etc.
Republicans in the House are also going to try to zero out of the Labor Departmentโs budget any money that could be used to enforce the rules if they survive in the courts; expect that to be part of the GOPโs threat to shut down our government this fall if they donโt get their way.
Every day, it seems, brings new examples of the stark differences between Democrats and Republicans, this merely being the most recent.
Of course, there wonโt be a peep about this on Fox โNewsโ or rightwing hate radio, keeping GOP voters safely and quietly in their ignorant little bubble.
The rest of us, however, can see whatโs going on with Republican scams at every level from taxation to climate policy to protecting our retirements.
Published by Common Dreams, 08.13.2024, under the terms of a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.


