Whereโs the Trump phone? Weโre going to keep talking about it every week. This week, I wanted to see how Trump Mobile stacks up to its conservative carrier competition.
Trump Mobile isnโt unique. I mean, it is in some pretty specific senses โ itโs not every day the presidentโs family launches a phone company while heโs in office โ but itโs far from the first company to offer a mobile carrier targeted at the conservative crowd.
In fact, thereโs a rich history of smaller networks trying to make their money from patriots, Christians, and Republican voters. Like Trump Mobile, theyโre all MVNOs (mobile virtual network operators), carriers that donโt own their own network infrastructure, but instead lease capacity from AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon. And the key to any successful MVNO is to find your niche.
While the big carriers try to be all things to everybody, MVNOs are usually more focused. Some target veterans, seniors, or kids. Some prioritize customers on a budget, others those who want unlimited data but donโt care much for calls. Puppy Wireless was simply marketed toward anyone who likes cute pups โ Iโm not sure itโs even still operational, but it did outlast sister company Kitty Wireless, which shut off service in 2016. Score one for dog people, I guess.
At the risk of stating the obvious, Trump Mobile targets Trump fans. Itโs there in the name, in the logo, in the โ47 Planโ that nods at Trumpโs term as the 47th president. But it also leans into a vague sense of patriotism: It may no longer claim the T1 Phone is made in the USA, but it still calls the network โall-American,โ the phone โproudly American,โ and insists there are โAmerican hands behind every deviceโ โ not even mentioning the American flag emblazoned on the phoneโs rear. Believe it or not, that makes Trump Mobile one of the subtler conservative MVNOs around.
But I didnโt just want to know how hard these carriers push to win over the conservative crowd. I also wanted to understand if any of them actually offer value for money, so Iโve compared their cheapest plans to US Mobileโs $25 monthly unlimited offering. Letโs see how much it really costs to pair your phone with these particular politics.
Trump Mobileโs parent company is, like its golden spinoff, fairly restrained.
The name is an obvious nod, as is the Liberty Bell logo and slogan โLet Freedom Ring.โ But beyond that, this isnโt really any more openly political than US Mobile. Iโm mostly just skeptical about how functional it really is, given the website has a missing Phones page and nothing but lorem ipsum in its FAQ.
Value for money: At $17, its cheapest no-contract monthly plan is pretty affordable, especially since it claims to include international calling to over 60 countries. But that gets you a mere 1GB of high-speed data, while US Mobileโs $25 plan is unlimited.
Texas-based Patriot Mobile bills itself as โAmericaโs ONLY Christian conservative wireless provider,โ which Iโm afraid to say is blatantly untrue. Itโs branded with the stars and stripes, and its cheapest plan is named โFreedom of Speech.โ (Though, boringly, every other plan is just listed by its data allowance โ come on guys, arenโt there any other freedoms you could try and sell me?)
Patriot Mobile sells Charlie Kirk hoodies and phone cases with the thin blue line or Israeli flag graphics, and runs an affiliate marketing scheme specifically for churches. Last month it introduced Patriot Pals, childrenโs books teaching kids about digital safety with the help of Liberty, a bald eagle with star-spangled wings and a Patriot Mobile logo on its chest. I really wish I was making this up.
The real problem with Patriot Mobile is that it seems to put its money where its mouth is. The company says it โcontributes millions of dollars every year to those on the front lines,โ by which it means organizations including Turning Point USA, CPAC, and the National Association of Christian Lawmakers, while funding conservative candidates in elections across Texas.
Value for money: At $26 per month, the Freedom of Speech plan costs a dollar more than US Mobileโs unlimited plan but nets you only a single gigabyte of data. Who knew freedom was so expensive?
Radiant hasnโt actually launched yet, but it promises a grand debut on Easter Sunday. It claims to be the โfirst Christian wireless service in the world,โ our second outright lie of the day.
Nothing about Radiantโs marketing is explicitly political โ instead it calls itself โa groundbreaking fusion of faith, technology, and entertainment.โ Itโs partnered with Israeli security company Allot to provide โnetwork-level content filteringโ that blocks out pornography, gambling, and โharmful digital influences.โ
As for the entertainment part, it offers AI-generated retellings of biblical stories, some for adults, some for kids, some inexplicably narrated by AI Snow White. These appear to be part of a gamified app that promises โ as if itโs a good thing โ โmore screen time.โ
Value for money: Radiantโs cheapest plan is $29.99 per month. Itโs unlimited, but only 6GB of the data is โpremium,โ dropping to 2G speeds after. It also claims to have unlimited talk and text, but then says you only get 200 minutes and 200 texts. Either way, this isnโt a great deal.
PureTalk sounds innocuous enough, and its website looks that way too. Itโs generic, corporate, maybe a bit boring. But there are signs that itโs not quite so.
Scroll down the homepage and youโll see itโs โfamily first,โ that it believes โin creating jobs for Americans,โ that itโs โproudly veteran-led and pro-America.โ But theyโre yellow flags at worst.
Instead, you should judge PureTalk by its friends: Itโs been repeatedly endorsed by right-wing pundits including Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, and Ben Shapiro. They, and countless other conservative radio and talk show hosts, have run paid promotions describing PureTalk as an alternative to โwokeโ mainstream carriers.
โWhy do we keep giving our money to woke corporations like Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile, who care more about selling โwokenessโ than wireless?โ Shapiro asked in one ad. PureTalk still hosts a landing page offering discounted prices to Shapiro listeners.
Value for money: PureTalkโs cheapest plan is $20 a month for 3GB of data, arguably our best value yet. But jumping to $25 still only nets you 5GB each month, well short of US Mobileโs unlimited offering. Even the Ben Shapiro discount canโt make this good value for money.
Charityโฆ that sounds good, right? Unlessโฆ there was such a thing as a bad charity? That canโt be right. And Charity Mobile lets you decide which charity it donates to, so youโre in control anyway. Oh wait, let me look again. It donates 5 percent of your payment to โthe Pro-Life, Pro-Family charity of your choice.โ Ah.
In fairness, this isnโt exactly hidden in the small print. Charity Mobile proudly declares itself to be โthe Pro-Life phone company,โ and it wants to make sure you know it: Land on the homepage and youโll be met by a screen-filling fetus and told to โchoose life.โ You can probably guess what the companyโs Instagram looks like.
Value for money: $24.95 monthly will net you a sweet 5GB of data, which is beginning to feel like a bargain by this lotโs standards. Just to be clear, though: Itโs not.
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