Exposed: Biden-Harris Staffers Orchestrated Conservative Debanking

Alina Nikitaeva

In a fiery new interview, President Donald Trump accused Biden-Harris staffers of orchestrating a behind-the-scenes campaign to debank him and other conservatives. Speaking to CNBC, Trump detailed how major banks—including JPMorganChase and Bank of America—suddenly turned on him, closing his accounts and forcing him to scramble for smaller banks just to safeguard his assets.

“[Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan] said, ‘We can’t do it,’” Trump recalled. “So I went to another one, another one, another one. I ended up going to small banks all over the place… I was putting $10 million here, $10 million there.”

Trump said JPMorganChase gave him just 20 days to relocate “hundreds of millions of dollars in cash,” a move he says was politically motivated. “The banks discriminated against me very badly… they discriminate against many conservatives,” he added.

Trump then pulled back the curtain, alleging that staffers in the Biden-Harris administration directed regulators to target him. He described it as a calculated attempt to “destroy Trump” by manipulating the banking system from within.

“I believe that Biden or Kamala—and I don’t think they’re smart enough to do it—but the people surrounding the beautiful Resolute Desk, the high-IQ radical left, told the banking regulators to destroy Trump. And that’s what they did,” he said.

These claims come just as Trump prepares to sign a new executive order aimed at stopping financial institutions from deplatforming conservatives and cryptocurrency companies. The order will reportedly instruct regulators to investigate banks accused of politically motivated discrimination and implement guardrails to protect Americans from being punished over their beliefs.

While JPMorganChase denied Trump’s accusations of political discrimination, the bank didn’t push back on the core issue. A spokeswoman told CNBC: “We don’t close accounts for political reasons… and we agree with President Trump that regulatory change is desperately needed.” She added that the bank supports “fair access to banking” and is working to stop the future politicization of the industry.

Even JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon admitted federal regulators pressure banks behind closed doors. “They put a lot of pressure on us… they tell us what is high-risk. If we don’t debank someone and something goes wrong, we can pay hundreds of millions in fines,” Dimon said. “So a lot of banks are guessing, like, ‘We should get rid of these people because if we don’t, we’ll be fined.’”

That pressure, Trump says, is not just a bureaucratic nuisance—it’s political warfare.

He has long warned that woke corporations and financial institutions have been weaponized against everyday Americans. He previously challenged banking leaders like Dimon at the World Economic Forum to stop blacklisting conservatives, saying, “You and Jamie and everybody, I hope you’re going to open your banks to conservatives, because what you’re doing is wrong.”

Trump’s latest accusations confirm what many on the right have suspected for years: that the financial system is being used as a tool to silence dissent and crush opposition. And this time, it wasn’t just Trump’s Twitter or YouTube channel being taken down—it was his bank accounts.

Now, with a new executive order on the table and a renewed focus on financial freedom, Trump is pushing to end the era of political discrimination by financial institutions—and he’s making it clear that no American should lose access to their money because of who they vote for.


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