DOL’s Ali Khawar Stepping Down Ahead of Trump Inauguration

The career Department of Labor official, appointed to his most recent post in the Biden administration, will not be there for a second Trump term.

Department of Labor official Ali Khawar will be stepping down as the next Donald Trump administration comes into office in 2025.

Khawar will be leaving his position as principal deputy assistant secretary with the DOL’s Employee Benefits and Security Administration effective January 20, 2025, a DOL spokesperson confirmed.

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Khawar was appointed to his most recent role by President Joe Biden, but had served at EBSA during the first Trump administration. He did not immediately respond to request for further comment.

Ali Khawar

The deputy assistant secretary will depart after working for the federal government since 2005 when he started as an Employee Retirement Income Security Act investigator. He later had roles including chief of staff and counselor to former Labor Secretary Thomas Perez, a Barack Obama appointee, and led EBSA on a temporary basis at the start of the Biden administration.

The deputy to EBSA head Lisa Gomez, who has also announced her departure when Trump takes office, Khawar was part of EBSA after Congress enacted two major retirement reform packages— the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement Act of 2019 and the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022. Those laws have been reverberating through the industry since passage and will continue to do so as mandates and provisions continue to take effect in coming years. He was also a participant in rulemaking and guidance around cybersecurity, fiduciary standards and environment, social and governance investing for retirement plans.

In the area of fiduciary obligations, Khawar worked on the DOL’s Retirement Security Rule, commonly known as the fiduciary rule. That regulation, which was finalized earlier this year, sought to enforce an ERISA standard on annuity sellers and those giving one-time individual retirement account rollover advice. He, along with Gomez and Tim Hauser, deputy assistant secretary for program operations of EBSA, had championed the rule as a reworked version of a proposal that had been stymied by the courts during the Obama administration.

The rule, however, hit legal issues again this year when two Texas courts stayed it in part on the grounds that it was similar to the prior amendment; an argument the DOL has refuted, say the latest version took into account the prior U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals decision. The DOL is appealing the court decisions, but now, with the Trump administration returning, ERISA experts have said the rule is unlikely to move forward.

Khawar was also part of the DOL’s final rule on prudence and loyalty, which sought to remove any obstacles to plan sponsors considering ESG factors when selecting employer-sponsored retirement plan investments. That so-called ESG rule overturned prior Trump DOL guidance that said fiduciaries should only consider investments based on “pecuniary factors.”

Republican attorney generals have also challenged that rule in court, with the case now under consideration by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. Meanwhile, Trump’s nominee for the new head of the DOL, Representative Lori Chavez-DeRemer, R-Oregon, supported a resolution seeking to overturn the Biden administration’s ESG rule.

Retirement Industry People Moves

The Standard names PEP sales director for retirement plans; Lincoln Financial names an industry veteran as VP of investment distribution and new hires to its retirement plan services team.

The Standard Names PEP Sales Director for Retirement Plans

Mark Christensen

The Standard announced that Mark Christensen will serve as the pooled employer plan sales director in retirement plans for the recordkeeper.

Christensen has 20 years of experience in financial services, most of which was in the retirement plan space. He previously held roles at Voya, Principal Financial Group and Sallus Retirement, a PEP startup.

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“Mark’s experience will help ensure all the resources at The Standard are available to our advisers as we grow our private label PEP business,” said Steven Chappell, vice president of distribution in retirement plan sales at The Standard, in a statement.

Lincoln Financial Hires VP of Investment Distribution

Tom Morelli

Lincoln Financial named industry veteran Tom Morelli as vice president of investment distribution. In this role, Morelli will focus on the distribution of Lincoln’s suite of more than 100 sub-advised variable insurance funds, mutual funds, model portfolios and other investment solutions.

He will report to John Kennedy, executive vice president, chief distribution and brand officer.

Prior to joining Lincoln, Morelli served as head of wealth management at T. Rowe Price, overseeing all aspects of home office and field sales. He brings more than 25 years of experience in the investment distribution space.

Lincoln Financial Adds 3 to Retirement Plan Services Team

Three new hires on Lincoln’s small market retirement plan services team were also announced last week.

Kara Kidney

Kara Kidney joined Lincoln Financial as assistant vice president and divisional sales manager overseeing the West Division. Kidney has more than 20 years of industry experience and will report to Joe Mrozek, vice president and national sales manager.

Additionally, George Webb and David Frost joined Lincoln as regional sales directors. Frost will report to Paul Rankin, divisional sales manager, and cover Maryland, southern Delaware and Washington D.C., and Webb will report to Vince Rainforth, divisional sales manager, and cover north Texas and Oklahoma. 

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