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$3 Billion Communist-Funded Network Orchestrates “No Kings” Protests, Pushing Explicit Calls for Revolution

At the core of the network is Neville Roy Singham, a U.S.-born tech billionaire who sold his company ThoughtWorks for nearly $785 million and relocated to Shanghai.

Tommy FlynnTommy Flynn
Neville Roy Singham (Background by Grok)
Neville Roy Singham (Background by Grok)

A coordinated network of roughly 500 activist organizations with combined annual revenues exceeding $3 billion organized the nationwide “No Kings” protests on March 28, 2026, according to a Fox News Digital investigation. The events, which drew crowds across more than 3,300 locations, featured open promotion of communist ideology and calls for revolutionary overthrow of the U.S. system.

The Funding Pipeline

At the core of the network is Neville Roy Singham, a U.S.-born tech billionaire who sold his company ThoughtWorks for nearly $785 million and relocated to Shanghai. Singham, an avowed Marxist, has funneled hundreds of millions of dollars over nearly a decade into far-left activist groups. His funding flows through dark-money channels, donor-advised funds, and shell entities, enabling the groups to maintain tax-exempt status while advancing pro-communist and pro-China messaging. Congressional investigators, including the House Ways and Means Committee and Senate Judiciary Committee, are probing potential Foreign Agents Registration Act violations tied to Singham’s network and its alleged links to Chinese Communist Party influence operations.

Key Organizations and Their Role

The protests prominently featured groups directly supported by Singham’s money:

  • The People’s Forum (New York): A central hub that has received over $20 million from Singham; it organized major rallies and provided logistical support.
  • Code Pink: Co-founded by Singham’s wife, Jodie Evans; the group has received substantial funding and specializes in anti-war and anti-U.S. foreign policy activism.
  • ANSWER Coalition and Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL): Both heavily subsidized by Singham; PSL members openly carried communist flags and chanted “There is only one solution — Communist Revolution” at multiple sites, including St. Paul, Minnesota.
  • Revolutionary Communist Party and allied socialist collectives: These groups used the platform to distribute literature calling for the violent dismantling of capitalism.

Indivisible, a Soros-linked progressive organization, served as the nominal lead coordinator for several large events, but the ideological and financial backbone came from Singham’s constellation of explicitly Marxist entities.

Revolutionary Themes at the Protests

Speakers and marchers repeatedly invoked communist rhetoric. Protesters chanted for “revolution,” displayed hammers-and-sickles, and praised socialist regimes. Organizers distributed materials framing the protests as the beginning of a broader uprising against “capitalist imperialism” and the Trump administration. In Minnesota, PSL activists packed cars with signs promoting systemic overthrow, while national messaging from the network explicitly urged socialists to treat the day as a mobilization for revolutionary change.

A Pattern of Funding Across Causes

This is not the first time Singham’s network has mobilized large-scale protests. The same groups and funding streams have repeatedly appeared behind demonstrations on disparate issues:

  • Pro-Palestine and anti-Israel campus encampments and street protests (2023–2025)
  • Anti-ICE and open-border rallies, including 2025–2026 actions in Minnesota and California
  • “Hands Off Venezuela” and “Hands Off Cuba” events
  • Anti-war protests opposing U.S. support for Ukraine and Israel
  • Demonstrations against police and “systemic racism” following high-profile incidents

Fox News and congressional probes have documented how Singham-funded entities move seamlessly between causes, using the same infrastructure, paid organizers, and messaging pipelines to create the appearance of widespread grassroots resistance. The network’s strategy is to amplify any issue that can be weaponized against U.S. interests or conservative governance, while promoting China-friendly narratives and socialist solutions.

Scale and Impact

The “No Kings” events were billed as organic and leaderless, yet the Fox investigation shows they were a highly coordinated astroturf operation backed by billions in revenue from tax-exempt nonprofits. Organizers touted total participation between 8 and 9 million people nationwide,, but independent analysis puts the number closer to half that. The protests occurred while Congress was in recess and amid ongoing government funding disputes, providing a public platform for radical voices to dominate the narrative.

Critics argue the funding model allows wealthy ideologues to purchase political disruption under the guise of nonprofit advocacy. House Republicans have launched multiple inquiries into Singham’s financial web, seeking to determine whether U.S. tax laws are being abused to subsidize foreign-influenced activism. Singham himself has not responded to requests for comment.

The “No Kings” protests represent the latest example of how a small number of ultra-wealthy donors with explicit Marxist commitments can underwrite large-scale public unrest. By routing funds through a network of interconnected 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) organizations, the operation maintains legal cover while advancing an ideological agenda that celebrates revolution and seeks to undermine core American institutions.