Major Push for SECURE Act Vote: Republicans Try a ‘Live UC’

Rob Portman, SECURE Act, Senate

Ohio Senator Rob Portman urges colleagues to pass the SECURE Act on the Senate floor Thursday

As the remaining days of 2019 wind down, pressure ramped up this week with repeated calls to get Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to bring the SECURE Act to the Senate floor for consideration (more on that below).

Many surmise the SECURE Act, though it enjoys thorough bipartisan support, is among proposed legislation frozen in the Senate largely as a result of impeachment proceedings in Washington.

Then Thursday on the Senate floor, U.S. Senator Rob Portman (R-Ohio) urged his Senate colleagues to pass the landmark retirement reform legislation, which he noted already passed the House of Representatives nearly six months ago by an overwhelming vote of 417-3.

“That’s right, 417-3. That never happens around here. So this is totally bipartisan,” Portman said during his speech on the Senate floor. “It’s one of these issues where we would have an opportunity to pass it and then send it directly to the president for his signature, and he has said he would sign it.”

Portman, who chairs the Finance subcommittee that handles retirement and pension issues, has been a strong proponent for passing the SECURE Act since the beginning. Right after the House passed it, the SECURE Act missed a shot at breezing through the Senate via “unanimous consent” after a handful of Senators placed “holds” on the bill over various concerns, and it has languished in McConnell’s legislative purgatory since.

A group of Republican Senators tried something different Nov. 7 in an attempt to break the SECURE Act out of that purgatory. Here’s how Portman spoke about it to his colleagues on the Senate floor:

“Today, what is called a ‘live UC’ was tried. It was an attempt to get a vote on the SECURE Act, this legislation I’m talking about, with five amendments on each side. I support that, and I supported my colleagues today who came forward to offer that. The amendments that they outlined as our five Republican amendments all make sense to me, and then to the Democrats we said, ‘you should offer five amendments also. You all pick them.’ Unfortunately it was objected to by the other side, and that didn’t surprise me because for the past five and a half months some of us have been trying to get this legislation done, and there have been concerns on both sides of the aisle. But we’re at a point now where we know, having raised this live UC, that we continue to have this stalemate. And after five and a half months, I think it’s time for us to move forward on these reforms.”

Portman went on to say he liked the amendments the Republicans proposed, but they shouldn’t prevent the SECURE Act from being passed as is.

“As an example, I agree that allowing 529 plans to be used for homeschooling expenses make sense and it’s a reform that Congress should take up. But this underlying bill that almost every Republican in the House supported, even without this provision, is one we also ought to take up,” Portman said. “So as difficult as it is for us to give up on amendments on both sides, if that can’t be done because it gets blocked, then let’s go ahead and move the underlying legislation, the SECURE Act. It’s a worthwhile piece of legislation. It helps in a category where we need the help badly and that’s small businesses.”

His remarks went on to outline the SECURE Act’s benefits for small business, including tax credits for starting a retirement plan and including auto-enrollment, the Open MEPs provision that estimates say would lead to 700,000 new retirement accounts for small business workers, raising the required minimum distribution age to 72, and crucially fixing a glitch that could cause 400,000 to have their DB plan benefits frozen at the end of the year.

“So let’s pass SECURE Act. It’s a bill that does a lot to put us on the right path. Does it do everything? No. Senator Cardin and I have introduced a more comprehensive bill called the Retirement Security and Savings Act. We go further in a lot of these regards we talked about today,” Portman said. “But that’s a bill that will require more hearings and a markup and more consideration. In the meantime let’s do what we can. Let’s provide more certainty, more flexibility and more retirement savings.”

Principal leader shares SECURE Act support

Dan Houston

Dan Houston, chairman, president and CEO at Principal, who also serves as the chair of the American Council of Life Insurers, provided the following statement to back up ACLI’s Nov. 5 letter urging McConnell and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to pass the SECURE Act:

Advisors from all states sign letter

On Nov. 7, financial advisors from all 50 states and the District of Columbia urged U.S. Senate leadership to pass the SECURE Act in a letter to McConnell and Schumer.

“Hopefully, the Senate will listen to the growing chorus of voices nationwide calling for passage of the SECURE Act,” said ACLI President and CEO Susan Neely. “The bill has so much support because it would give millions of Americans more tools to achieve financial security throughout retirement. The time is now for the Senate to put ‘out of many, one’ into action and pass SECURE.”

Earlier in the week, ACLI headed a coalition of 91 business and community leaders that sent a similar letter to McConnell and Schumer urging action.

Will all this week’s “urges” finally lead to Senate action next week? Stay tuned!

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