
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has denied debanking customers based on their religious or political affiliation and stated that he has actually been working to change the rules surrounding debanking for over a decade.Â
During an interview with Fox Newsâ âSunday Morning Futuresâ on Sunday, Dimon said his bank has cut off services to people from all walks of life, but political affiliations have never been a factor.
Devin Nunes, the chair of the Presidentâs intelligence advisory board and CEO of Trump Media, alleges the company was debanked by JPMorgan and that it was among more than 400 Trumpâlinked individuals and organizations that had banking records subpoenaed by special counsel Jack Smith as part of an investigation.
Jack Mallers, the CEO of the Bitcoin Lightning Network payments company Strike, also accused JPMorgan of closing his personal accounts without explanation last month, which sparked concerns about another Operation Chokepoint 2.0.
Houston Morgan, the head of marketing at non-custodial crypto trading platform ShapeShift, shared a similar story in November.Â
âPeople have to grow up here, OK, and stop making up things and stuff like that,â Dimon said. âI canât talk about an individual account. We do not debank people for religious or political affiliations.
âWe do debank them. They have religious or political affiliations. We debank people who are Democrats. We debank people who are Republicans. We have debanked different religious folks. Never was that for that reason.â
Dimon said he wants debanking rules to change
Crypto firms have been facing account closures and denials of banking services for years, and many in the industry have stated that these actions are part of a policy-driven effort to suppress the digital assets sector.
However, Dimon said he doesnât like debanking and wants the rules around reporting requirements that can lead to debanking to change.
âI actually applaud the Trump administration, whoâs trying to say that debanking is bad and we should change the rules. Well, damn it, I have been asking to change the rules now for 15 years. So change the rules.â
âIt is really customer unfriendly, and weâre debanking people because of suspected things, or negative media, or all these various things,â Dimon added.
In August, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing banking regulators to investigate claims of debanking made by the crypto sector and conservatives.
JPMorgan made recommendations to curb debanking: DimonÂ
Dimon said one of the rules banks are required to follow is sharing information with the government when subpoenaed, but he also claims JPMorgan has provided recommendations to reduce reporting and instances of debanking.
Related: Republicans urge action on market structure bill over debanking claims
âWe donât give information to the government just because they ask. Weâre subpoenaed. We are required by court to give it to the government. And I have been following subpoenas with this administration, the last administration, the administration before that and the one before that. And I donât agree with a lot of it,â Dimon said.
âThe government does a lot of things that can anger banks. So, letâs just take a deep breath and fix the problems, as opposed to, like, blame someone whoâs put in that position,â he added.
At the same time, Dimon said both sides of politics are equal offenders when it comes to leaning on banks.
âDemocratic and Republican governments have come after us both; letâs not act like this is just one side doing this. This has been going on for a long time. And we should stop militarizing the government that kind of way.â
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