It's Finally Comes Out: The Biden Regime Coordinated with Banking Giants to Debank Trump After J6
“It is unacceptable for banks to discriminate against customers or prospective customers based on political or religious beliefs..."
The fallout from January 6 was absolutely scary. It was a perilous moment in the nation’s history — not so much for the actions of far-right protesters (none of them wielding firearms or committing homicide) — but more because of the federal government’s extreme response.
If we leave aside the myriad of unresolved questions about exactly how the Federal Bureau of Investigation infiltrated the radical groups that showed up, such as the Proud Boys and the Oathkeepers, and yet failed to stop them or adequately alert capitol security to ensure that National Guard troops would stop them, what followed the rioting was the closest America has come to naked authoritarianism.
The President of the United States was deplatformed in an obviously coordinated effort by Big Tech platforms to prevent the American people from seeing that Donald Trump had actually called for peace.
This is what Donald Trump had posted before the nation’s elected leader was booted off of social media: “Go in peace.”
Instead, they accused Donald Trump of inciting an “insurrection” because he had dared to exercise his constitutionally protected right to contest an election that millions of his fellow Americans thought was far from “above board.” Trump had done this legally — both by exercising his free speech to criticize the election (let’s not forget Hillary Clinton’s rampant denials of the 2016 election results) but also through legal action in a court of law.
There is no question that Trump had acted within his constitutional rights.
If you leave aside the various anomalies that had Trump supporters questioning how Biden could win 18/19 bellwether counties and get a voter turnout that dwarfed Obama’s, a number of states had actually changed their election laws unconstitutionally to allow for millions of hard-to-trace mail-in ballots to flood into their elections.
The fix was in. Americans knew it. And that made the elites nervous.
But it went far beyond social media censorship and years of draconian assaults on free speech, freedom of assembly, and freedom of religion. It also led to an assault on Americans’ ability to freely engage in commerce. And that included Donald Trump.
A new report shows that Trump was debanked in a coordinated effort by banking giants and the incoming Biden regime to punish its political enemies.
It was an open assault on everything that America stood for. And Biden’s cronies did it brazenly and gleefully.
Two of America’s biggest banks allegedly cut ties with then-private citizen Donald Trump after January 6—under pressure from Biden administration banking regulators—according to sources inside the institutions.
JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America both refused services to the former president shortly after he left office in 2021, despite his longstanding relationships with both banks and significant account balances, multiple sources told The Post.
The moves reportedly came after federal regulators warned financial institutions that continuing to serve Trump could constitute a "reputational risk"—a vague and easily politicized designation increasingly used during the Biden administration to discourage banking for politically disfavored individuals or groups.
“They made it clear we shouldn’t do business with him,” said one JPMorgan executive. “The regulators put the fear of God in you if you did.”
This shift in regulatory posture—driven by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the FDIC, and the Federal Reserve—expanded the use of "reputational risk" beyond criminal threats like money laundering or drug trafficking to include political activity, specifically targeting those associated with the January 6 protests.
Trump, now in his second term as president, confirmed during a CNBC interview that he had been “debanked” and promised swift action. His administration is preparing an executive order to ban politically motivated debanking and restore access to banking for all Americans regardless of their views.
“I had many accounts with hundreds of millions in them,” Trump said. “They told me, ‘You have 20 days to get out.’ I said, ‘You’ve got to be kidding. I’ve been with you for 35, 40 years.’”
After JPMorgan shut his accounts, Trump said Bank of America also refused him service. He specifically called out CEOs Jamie Dimon and Brian Moynihan for failing to stand up against what he described as politicized enforcement.
“Banks used to compete for customers like this,” said one source familiar with the situation. “But the environment under Biden turned politically radioactive.”
JPMorgan declined to deny the allegations directly but offered a carefully worded response: “We don’t close accounts for political reasons, and we agree with President Trump that regulatory change is desperately needed. We commend the White House for addressing this issue and look forward to working with them to get this right.”
The move to correct course is already underway. Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) is pushing legislation to outlaw debanking based on political or religious views. And new Comptroller of the Currency Jonathan V. Gould made clear in a statement to The Post that things are changing:
“It is unacceptable for banks to discriminate against customers or prospective customers based on political or religious beliefs... We will take appropriate action to depoliticize the federal banking system and ensure banks provide fair access to financial services as required by law.”
Trump’s executive order, expected soon, aims to ensure that no future administration can use financial leverage to punish political opponents.
Reps for the Federal Reserve and FDIC declined to comment to the New York Post about the blockbuster report.
I pulled out of BoA the minute I heard they were tracking transactions to arrest supporters.
You didn’t dig deep enough.