Never mind the actions coming from the White House: Advisors are preparing for the enforcement of the Department of Labor’s fiduciary rule.

On Tuesday, Boston-based Fidelity Institutional Asset Management released the results from a poll of 323 advisors conducted in January to determine how a postponement of the DOL fiduciary rule would impact their plans. Among the respondents of that poll, 44 percent said they were not going to slow down their plans, while another 19 percent indicated that they were proceeding with their compliance plans at a slightly slower pace.

On Friday, President Trump directed the Secretary of Labor to study the rule to find out if it harms the ability of Americans to obtain retirement information and financial advice.

Advisors are keeping a close eye on Congress and the Trump administration, according to additional research from the fourth quarter 2016 Fidelity Advisor Investment Pulse Survey released on Tuesday.

Almost one-third of that survey’s advisor respondents, 32 percent, said that topics relating to government and the economy are their top-of-mind areas of focus moving into 2017; followed by portfolio management, 26 percent; and a three-way tie between fixed income, interest rates and market volatility, each named by 11 percent of the respondents.

Government and the economy were a rising concern throughout the 2016 election year, named as a concern by 16 percent of the survey’s respondents in the first quarter, 21 percent in the second and 28 percent in the third.

The Fidelity Advisor Investment Pulse Survey is conducted among more than 250 advisors on Fidelity’s institutional investment platform quarterly and 1,000 advisors annually. The spot poll of 323 advisors was conducted from Jan. 17 to Jan. 19 among RIAs, broker-dealers, banks, wirehouses and insurance companies.