DOGE Has Arrived at the IRS
DOGE Is Kicking A** and Pete Hegseth Exceeds Expectations
State Attorney General Sues Starbucks Over DEI Practices
Disney Is Backing Away From DEI After Trump Executive Orders
Kash Patel Must Purge the FBI of Deep State Actors and Secure Justice...
Federal Judge Orders Trump Administration to Restore Foreign Aid Funding
Florida Now Has the 'Strongest' Illegal Immigration Enforcement Laws in the Nation
What Voters Think About Musk and DOGE
Ilhan Omar Isn't the Only 'Squad' Member Helping Illegals Avoid Deportation
Is This Why Planned Parenthood Scrubbed Their Instagram Account?
Ouch: ICE Brutally Fact-Checks Journos
Cops Thwarted a School Shooting Plot at an Indiana High School
'Pure Fake News': Did Vance Actually Threaten Russia With Sanctions?
Biden EPA Funneled Money to Leftists, Zeldin Finds
This Democrat Senator Will Not Seek Reelection
Tipsheet

Congress Launches New Investigations Into Debanking

AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File

During remarks at the World Economic Forum Thursday, President Donald Trump warned that debanking - whether done for political reasons or imposed by the former administration through regulation - must come to an end. 

Advertisement

Now, House Banking Committee Chairman James Comer has launched an investigation into the practice, specifically focusing on the debanking of new crypto currency companies. 

“Several tech leaders within the cryptocurrency space have been outspoken about their experience being debanked. In 2022, Uniswap Labs Founder and CEO Hayden Adams explained that his bank ‘closed my bank accounts with no notice or explanation,’ and that ‘I know many individuals and companies who have been similarly targeted simply for working in the crypto industry,’" Comer wrote in a letter to a number of tech entrepreneurs Friday. 

"Coinbase Co-Founder and CEO Brian Armstrong confirmed thirty tech founders were debanked, stating then-Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Gary Gensler, ‘tried to unlawfully kill our entire industry[.]’ Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer, Paul Grewal, said, ‘[f]inancial regulators have used multiple tools at their disposal to try to cripple the digital-asset industry.'” 

Advertisement

“These examples are startling, and the Committee is investigating whether this debanking practice originates from the financial institutions themselves or from either implicit or explicit pressure from government regulators,” Comer continued. “The Committee is interested in engaging individuals who have been debanked and, specifically, how these actions hurt innovation, entrepreneurs, and workers. Further, to better inform the Committee’s investigation, the Committee seeks to understand the financial institutions and regulators involved, the reasons tech founders were given as to why they were debanked, and how this overreach affected business operations.”

 The Senate Banking Committee is also getting in on the action and will hold a hearing investigating the issue on February 15. 

Advertisement

“Debanking is un-American – every legal business deserves to be treated the same regardless of their political beliefs. Unfortunately, under Operation Chokepoint 2.0, Biden regulators abused their power and forced financial institutions to cut off services to digital asset firms, political figures, and conservative-aligned businesses and individuals. This is unacceptable. As Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, I look forward to working with President Trump, industry leaders, and members of both parties to stop these abuses,” Chairman Tim Scott said Friday. 

Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase strongly deny debanking occurs for political reasons. 


 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement