By ABT News Investigative Desk
WASHINGTON D.C. — The level of corruption in the current U.S. regime appears to be absolutely off the charts, and a shocking new revelation has just blown the doors off what might be the most brazen pay-to-play scheme in modern American history.
According to explosive new reports, President Donald Trump is allegedly demanding that elite Wall Street firms pay his private company a staggering $100,000 per month in exchange for “fast access” to his social media posts before they hit the public feed.
You read that correctly: the sitting President of the United States is essentially putting a premium price tag on market-moving presidential communications.
The bombshell was highlighted in a rapidly circulating post on X by geopolitical journalist Benjamin Norton, which has ignited a firestorm of outrage across the political and financial spectrums. Critics are already labeling the operation exactly what it appears to be: White House-sponsored, pay-to-play insider trading.
How the Alleged Scheme Works
In the high-stakes world of global finance, milliseconds matter. A single presidential social media post regarding tariffs, foreign policy, or domestic regulations can send markets skyrocketing or plummeting in the blink of an eye.
By offering a VIP “fast access” tier for $100,000 a month, Trump’s platform is allegedly giving Wall Street hedge funds and mega-banks the ultimate cheat code. These firms receive the President’s thoughts moments before the general public does, granting them a highly lucrative head start to execute trades, dump stock, or buy up assets before the rest of the world even knows what the President has said.
“Off the Charts” Corruption
“This isn’t just a conflict of interest; it’s a direct pipeline from the Oval Office to Wall Street wallets, with a massive toll booth set up in the middle,” one financial watchdog told ABT News.
The implications are staggering. By monetizing the release of presidential statements, the administration effectively creates a two-tiered system of information: one for the ultra-wealthy who can afford the $1.2 million annual subscription fee, and one for the everyday American public left dealing with the market fallout.
As the digital ink dries on this breaking scandal, Congress and federal regulators are facing intense public pressure to intervene. But with the lines between the President’s private business empire and his public office completely erased, the question remains: is anyone left in Washington with the power to stop it?
Keep checking www.abtnews.net for continuous updates as this massive story develops.

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