The "No Kings" protests have significant institutional backing worth examining.
A Fox News Digital investigation identified roughly 500 organizations with a combined $3 billion in annual revenues behind the coordinated nationwide demonstrations. To be clear, that's the total revenue of the groups involved, not money earmarked specifically for these protests. But it reveals the scale of the infrastructure supporting them.
Indivisible, a Democratic political advocacy organization, is the lead coordinator. That's confirmed by the official permit for the flagship march in St. Paul, Minnesota. Indivisible has received millions in grants from George Soros's Open Society Foundations over the years, including a reported $3 million in one two-year grant for "social welfare activities."
A separate network of socialist and communist organizations funded by Neville Roy Singham, an American tech tycoon and avowed communist living in China, are also confirmed participants. That includes the People's Forum, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the ANSWER Coalition, and CodePink, whose co-founder Jodie Evans is married to Singham.
Internal posts from some of these groups are explicit about their goals. One message circulating among activist networks read: "People everywhere are becoming increasingly hostile to the Trump agenda, and more sympathetic to revolution. Now is not the time to sit on the sidelines. It's the time to go out and join the people, get our revolutionary message in front of them, and turn a day of protest into long-term gains for the people's movements."
That said, these factions don't represent every participant. Hundreds of thousands attended across the country, many with no ties to any organization. Large protests on both sides of the political spectrum typically blend genuine public sentiment with organizational infrastructure. Neither purely spontaneous nor fully manufactured.
The Open Society Foundations says it does not pay, train, or coordinate protesters and that its grants were not earmarked for No Kings specifically. The funding flows through intermediaries, which is standard in nonprofit advocacy across the political spectrum.
The facts are public. The interpretation is up to you.

A Fox News Digital investigation identified roughly 500 organizations with a combined $3 billion in annual revenues behind the coordinated nationwide demonstrations. To be clear, that's the total revenue of the groups involved, not money earmarked specifically for these protests. But it reveals the scale of the infrastructure supporting them.
Indivisible, a Democratic political advocacy organization, is the lead coordinator. That's confirmed by the official permit for the flagship march in St. Paul, Minnesota. Indivisible has received millions in grants from George Soros's Open Society Foundations over the years, including a reported $3 million in one two-year grant for "social welfare activities."
A separate network of socialist and communist organizations funded by Neville Roy Singham, an American tech tycoon and avowed communist living in China, are also confirmed participants. That includes the People's Forum, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the ANSWER Coalition, and CodePink, whose co-founder Jodie Evans is married to Singham.
Internal posts from some of these groups are explicit about their goals. One message circulating among activist networks read: "People everywhere are becoming increasingly hostile to the Trump agenda, and more sympathetic to revolution. Now is not the time to sit on the sidelines. It's the time to go out and join the people, get our revolutionary message in front of them, and turn a day of protest into long-term gains for the people's movements."
That said, these factions don't represent every participant. Hundreds of thousands attended across the country, many with no ties to any organization. Large protests on both sides of the political spectrum typically blend genuine public sentiment with organizational infrastructure. Neither purely spontaneous nor fully manufactured.
The Open Society Foundations says it does not pay, train, or coordinate protesters and that its grants were not earmarked for No Kings specifically. The funding flows through intermediaries, which is standard in nonprofit advocacy across the political spectrum.
The facts are public. The interpretation is up to you.

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