In 2019, Congress passed and then-President Trump signed the SECURE Act, which instituted a range of changes to the country's retirement system. Now lawmakers are looking to move much quicker in following up with a retirement bill informally being called SECURE Act 2.0 making its way through Congress. The bill is “building on the success of the SECURE act,” said Rep. Richard Neal (D., Mass.), chairman of the House Ways and Means at a hearing on...