Today my goal is to prove that the U.S. Department of Labor's forthcoming fiduciary rule should regulate talk radio show host Dave Ramsey and other finance entertainers like him as fiduciaries.
They should be regulated, right? Or would doing so violate Ramsey's First Amendment right to free speech?
As I wrestled with these questions before writing this column, countless hours evaporated in front of my computer. I stared at a blank monitor that seemed to mock me with each blinking pulse. Like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, I found myself torn between two opposites.
Also by this writer: Debunked: Dave Ramsey's cash value life insurance advice
Either Ramsey and his ilk of wealth-driven advice columnists and broadcast hosts should be allowed to say whatever they'd like to say in the name of free speech, or their advice should be censored, i.e. regulated, in the name of the common good.
The problem is, most of Ramsey's advice isn't financial advice, it's just "get out of debt" common sense.
That means I'm either pro-Bill of Rights and free speech, or I'm anti-American.
Then, in the midst of my writer's block arrived the glimmer of an idea. That spark was my recollection of Lowe v. Securites and Exchange Commission, the 1985 Supreme Court decision that created a meter for measuring whether financial advice is protected under the First Amendment.
What is the nature of the advice?
In case you're unfamiliar with Lowe v. SEC, here's a quick breakdown:
Christopher Lowe was a convicted felon. He was found guilty of stealing from a bank, pocketing a client's money, and trying to cover it up. After serving his time in prison, Lowe decided that providing investment advice was still his calling, and penned several investment-related newsletters. The problem was, the SEC had banned him permanently from the industry. Lowe fought the SEC's decision based on his First Amendment rights.
Let's breakdown to resulting court battle like rounds in a boxing bout:
Round One: District court. Victor: Lowe.
Round Two: Appellate court. Victor: SEC.
Round Three: Supreme Court. The decision went to Lowe in a unanimous 8-0 vote.
The Supreme Court ruled that Lowe's constitutionally guaranteed right to free speech was protected as long as his actions adhered to a three-pronged test.
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- His newsletter is of a general and impersonal nature.
- His newsletter is of a bona fide and genuine nature.
- His newsletter is published in general and regular circulation.
Ironically, this ruling created the ability to regulate Dave Ramsey. But it also happens to violate the spirit of the new Labor Department fiduciary standard.
Questions around the advice given out by financial entertainers press the issue of whether the Department of Labor's fiduciary standard bumps up against a 1985 Supreme Court ruling. (Photo: iStock)
The step-by-step
Getting back to my original questions …
First, let's take up the issue of whether the Labor Department rule should regulate financial entertainers including Dave Ramsey? Next, we'll move on to the question of whether Lowe V. SEC applies to Ramsey? Finally, we'll consider whether the Supreme Court decision contradicts the Labor Department's fiduciary rule.
Also by this writer: Dave Ramsey: Negligent, incompetent or simply naive?
The Labor Department has specifically stated that regulating entertainers such as Ramsey was not their intent for the new fiduciary rule. (Of course, under the Affordable Care Act, the Obama administration said it wasn't their intent to force Americans to give up their primary care physicians, a statement now believed about as widely as Lance Armstrong's early claim that he never took performance enhancing drugs.)
Even if it's not the Labor Department's intent to regulate financial entertainers, the new fiduciary rule gives that agency the ability to do so. But is that simply a problem waiting to happen?
Earlier this year, Forbes columnist John Berlau took up these issues in a column that published under the headline "How Fiduciary Rule May Censor Financial Broadcasters like Dave Ramsey."