Billionaire-Backed Revolutionary Protests EXPOSED

Man speaking at Brussels Economic Forum podium

A Fox News investigation exposes that the supposedly grassroots “No Kings” protests against President Trump are orchestrated by 500 organizations commanding $3 billion in annual revenues, with billionaire George Soros and China-based tech tycoon Neville Roy Singham bankrolling radical socialist groups openly calling for “revolution” under the guise of mainstream demonstrations.

Story Snapshot

  • Over 3,000 nationwide protests on March 28, 2026, were coordinated by a $3 billion network of organizations, not organic grassroots movements
  • George Soros-funded Indivisible led the flagship St. Paul march while radical socialist groups funded by Neville Roy Singham embedded revolutionary messaging
  • Communist organizations like the Party for Socialism and Liberation, CodePink, and People’s Forum used the protests to recruit and spread anti-American, anti-imperialist agendas
  • The White House dismissed the demonstrations as “Trump Derangement Therapy Sessions” amid concerns about foreign-funded subversion

Billionaire-Funded Network Behind Protests

The March 28 “No Kings” demonstrations across all 50 states were coordinated by approximately 500 organizations with combined annual revenues reaching $3 billion, according to investigative reporting. Indivisible, a Democratic advocacy group funded by billionaire George Soros, held the permit for the flagship St. Paul, Minnesota march expecting 100,000 attendees. Meanwhile, U.S. tech tycoon Neville Roy Singham, who operates from China, financed the radical socialist contingent including the Party for Socialism and Liberation, People’s Forum, ANSWER Coalition, and CodePink. His wife, Jodie Evans, co-founded CodePink. This financial backing contradicts the portrayal of spontaneous grassroots activism and reveals a well-funded operation blending mainstream Democratic resistance with revolutionary communist ideology.

Revolutionary Messaging Embedded in Mainstream Events

Socialist organizations explicitly used the protests as recruitment opportunities and platforms for revolutionary calls. The Party for Socialism and Liberation packed signs reading “NO KINGS. NO WAR.” in Minneapolis on March 27, while organizing a “Socialist Contingent” for Washington D.C. demonstrations. Internal messaging from these groups emphasized that “now is the time to get our revolutionary message in front of them” and highlighted opportunities to “spread messaging, recruit, and build momentum” by embedding radicals within larger mainstream protests. The Freedom Road Socialist Organization coordinated an “Anti-Trump Contingent” in Grand Rapids. This strategy of piggybacking on Democratic-led events allows communist organizations to access massive audiences while maintaining plausible deniability about their true objectives.

Targeting Trump Administration Amid Iran War

The protests focused on multiple grievances against President Trump’s second-term policies, particularly the ongoing war with Iran, immigration enforcement operations, and what organizers termed “imperialism.” CodePink participated in multiple cities including Washington, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, and New York, with actress Jane Fonda joining the St. Paul event. The demonstrations occurred amid heightened tensions over Operation Metro Surge in Minnesota and the shooting deaths of U.S. citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti by ICE agents in Minneapolis earlier in 2026. Socialist groups tied their anti-Trump messaging to international issues including Cuba, Venezuela, and Palestine, framing their opposition as resistance to American foreign policy. For many Trump supporters who backed the president specifically to avoid new wars, this Iran conflict represents a broken promise that these leftist groups are exploiting.

Astroturfing Concerns and Foreign Influence

The involvement of Singham, a U.S. citizen operating from China while funding American communist organizations, raises serious questions about foreign influence in domestic protests. His network has previously sent People’s Forum members on trips to defend Cuba’s regime, demonstrating alignment with authoritarian governments hostile to American interests. Experts noted that these socialist groups employ a deliberate strategy of infiltrating larger protests to gain visibility and legitimacy they couldn’t achieve independently. The $3 billion in combined organizational revenues starkly contrasts with genuine grassroots movements that lack such financial infrastructure. The White House response dismissing these as “Trump Derangement Therapy Sessions” suggests administration officials recognize the orchestrated nature of the demonstrations and view them as ineffective political theater rather than authentic public sentiment.

This exposure of well-funded astroturfing masquerading as organic protest should concern all Americans who value transparency in political activism. When billionaires like Soros and foreign-connected figures like Singham can coordinate thousands of demonstrations to advance revolutionary communist agendas while claiming grassroots legitimacy, it undermines genuine civic engagement and manipulates public discourse. For conservatives already frustrated with endless regime change wars and broken promises about keeping America out of conflicts, these protests represent another layer of deception—foreign-funded radicals exploiting legitimate concerns about the Iran war to advance anti-American revolutionary goals that have nothing to do with protecting American interests or constitutional values.

Sources:

500 groups with $3B in revenues are behind the #NoKings protests and communist call for ‘revolution’

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