As the Republican candidate for president explained, Trump saw that the majority of his NFT trading cards minted on Ethereum scaling network Polygon were being purchased with cryptocurrency—and that his supporters were excited about his entry into the space.
“So many people paid this way,” Trump said. “If they would have been paying in dollars, I would have said that’s standard, I would have assumed—and I was blown away.”
Before the launch of his first NFT collection in December 2022, Trump admitted that he wasn’t interested in crypto. In fact, he had previously slammed Bitcoin during his first presidential term, saying he was “not a fan.” In 2021, after leaving the White House, he said in an interview that Bitcoin “just seems like a scam.”
But that’s no longer the case, and seeing the use of crypto to purchase his NFTs apparently helped change his mind.
“I did ask what percentage was taken between Bitcoin and all of the other things, but with crypto, and it was a massive majority,” he said, noting his surprise at the number of people willing to spend their crypto on his digital cards.
“I was a little surprised by that, and that was a while ago now—and it opened my eyes,” he said. “But I think my children opened my eyes more than anything else.”
Edited by Andrew Hayward