NSPM-7: Trump Names the Threat, Follows the Money, and Forces Justice
On September 25, President Trump issued National Security Presidential Memorandum 7, or NSPM-7, a sweeping directive that lays out a whole-of-government strategy for combating domestic terrorism. The headlines fixated on labels, but the directive itself rewires federal priorities and creates durable tools to fight political violence. This is not a paper policy; it is a blueprint for action that changes how the government thinks about threats at home.
Far from a media stunt, NSPM-7 is a strategic reset. It forces federal agencies to go beyond talk and into investigation, disruption, and prosecution. Conservatives should recognize a rare moment when policy and political will line up to protect everyday Americans.
Naming the enemy
For the first time in years, a presidential directive names threats with specificity instead of hiding behind euphemisms and platitudes. NSPM-7 calls out “the anti-fascist lie” as the framing that recasts basic American positions like border security and support for law enforcement as somehow “fascist” to justify violence. That kind of candid naming matters because you cannot fight what you will not honestly describe.
NSPM-7 marks a historic break with the old rules. It calls the threats by name, orders the government to follow the money, and strips the Justice Department of its wiggle room.
The memorandum also catalogs the ideology that fuels violent movements: anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, anti-Christianity, extremism on migration, race, and gender, and open hostility toward traditional views of family and morality. Political correctness and institutional timidity long tied the hands of investigators and prosecutors. NSPM-7 removes that language barrier and forces agencies to consider ideology as a driving factor when violence is organized around political aims.
This push to be blunt echoes President Trump’s old insistence on clear language when naming threats. As Trump said during his second debate with Clinton: “To solve a problem, you have to be able to state what the problem is or at least say the name.” That line matters because clarity is the first step toward a solution.
Following the money and enforcing the law
NSPM-7 does not stop at rhetoric; it orders action. The Treasury Department is explicitly tasked with identifying and disrupting financial networks that fund domestic terrorism and political violence, tracing illicit streams and coordinating with other agencies to choke off support. That kind of follow-the-money approach has been the missing piece in past administrations’ responses.
The memorandum also puts the IRS on notice to ensure no tax-exempt entity is indirectly or directly financing political violence, and it requires referrals to the Justice Department when those rules are violated. For years many Americans suspected well-funded institutions masked as nonprofits were underwriting street chaos while pleading ignorance. NSPM-7 gives investigators the mandate and the tools to test those suspicions and hold enablers accountable.
At the same time, the president mobilizes law enforcement resources: Joint Terrorism Task Forces get a fresh priority and domestic political violence is elevated as a national priority area. The attorney general receives a clear order to prosecute federal crimes tied to domestic terrorism “to the maximum extent permissible by law.” “All” means no discretion. If it can be charged, it must be charged. “Maximum extent” means no plea deals designed to make cases go away.
That prosecutorial clarity is a direct rebuke to selective enforcement and internal resistance inside the justice system. The memorandum is designed to undercut the old practice of letting politically sensitive cases languish or be watered down. It forces prosecutors to treat politically motivated violence the same way they would treat any other organized threat to public safety.
The test is practical and immediate: will the Justice Department and federal partners follow through at scale? Attorney General Pam Bondi and U.S. attorneys will be judged on results, not rhetoric, as they move from policy memos to indictments and prosecutions. If prosecutors follow NSPM-7 in letter and spirit, the deterrent effect could be swift and meaningful.
The left sees the danger because the memorandum exposes networks of funding and protection they count on, and they will fight this aggressively. Conservatives should see the opportunity to defend institutions and communities without apology. This is a chance to make law enforcement consistent, predictable, and firm again.
NSPM-7 treats domestic political violence not as a nuisance but as a national security problem worthy of sustained federal attention. It names the ideology, chases the ledger books, and orders prosecutors to act rather than plead convenience. Now the nation will find out if policy can overcome politics and whether enforcement will match the promise.
Darnell Thompkins is a Canadian-born American and conservative opinion writer who brings a unique perspective to political and cultural discussions. Passionate about traditional values and individual freedoms, Darnell’s commentary reflects his commitment to fostering meaningful dialogue. When he’s not writing, he enjoys watching hockey and celebrating the sport that connects his Canadian roots with his American journey.