During a campaign speech in New Hampshire on Wednesday, Donald Trump made a reference to right-wing complaints about the U.S. banking system that may have flown under the radar or caused confusion for people who aren’t extremely online.
The issue in question — the financing of conservative extremism — has been a source of angst for far-right Republicans like conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer, who’s been in Trump’s orbit as of late.
So here’s a quick explainer.
During his speech in New Hampshire, Trump said: “We’re also going to place strong protections to stop banks and regulators from trying to debank you from your … your political beliefs, what they do.”
Trump: We’re going to place strong protections to stop banks and regulators from trying to debank you from your— your political beliefs what they do. They want to debank you. We’re going to debank— think of this. They want to take away your country. Electric cars pic.twitter.com/eJpPyuosG8
— Acyn (@Acyn) January 18, 2024
Trump appears to be referring to members of the far right who’ve been kicked off payment platforms in recent years — including Loomer, who has been banned from PayPal, Venmo and GoFundMe (something she wears like a badge of honor). And civil rights groups have continued scrutiny of the financial ecosystem used by far-right extremists, as evidenced by this report from the Anti-Defamation League.
So when Trump says he’d “stop banks and regulators” from trying to “debank” people, he seems to be saying he’d stop companies and federal officials from trying to sever extremists from financial resources they can use to survive or thrive. After all, these right-wingers aren’t being “debanked” merely because of their “political beliefs.” As for their extremism? That’s a different story.








