The Pension Schemes Bill continued its passage through Parliament, undergoing a debate in the House of Lords in mid-March and a third reading on 26 March 20263. Points debated in the Lords included whether reforms would improve member outcomes while preserving trustee fiduciary duties. Peers scrutinised LGPS pooling and governance, alongside the Bill’s approach to DB surplus release, where many argued for stronger safeguards. For defined contribution (DC) schemes, debate covered the value-for-money framework, small-pot consolidation and wider concerns about consolidation’s impact on competition and consumer choice.
The Lords rejected a proposed government amendment intended to clarify the scope of trustees’ fiduciary duties. The amendment
would require the issuance of guidance on trustee investment duties within 12 months of that clause coming into force, and the
explanatory statement for the amendment suggested this could clarify concepts such as “financially material considerations”,
“environmental, social and governance considerations”, and the “best interests of members”.4 Concerns were raised by peers including that this could give policymakers undue influence over trustee decision-making.5
Notably, peers voted to strip the Bill of a proposed reserve power that would have allowed the government to mandate how some DC
pension schemes invest, if voluntary commitments under the Mansion House Accord were deemed insufficient. The government had
argued the power was intended only as a backstop.6
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3 Pension Schemes Bill: 3rd reading, 26 March 2026, UK Parliament. Information about the Pension Schemes Bill, including its progress
through Parliament, is available at: Pension Schemes Bill, UK Parliament.
4 Pages 20 and 21, Pension Schemes Bill: Third marshalled list of amendments to be moved on report (PDF), 20 March 2026, House of
Lords.
5 UK government hits obstacle in bid to clarify fiduciary duty and ESG, 30 March 2026, Responsible Investor.
6 House of Lords votes to remove mandation power from Pension Schemes Bill, 19 March 2026, Professional Pensions.
