The No Kings permit for St. Paul listed George Soros's Indivisible as lead organizer – filed in black and white.
Fox News pulled that permit and then followed the money to something far worse.
What they found embedded inside that protest will change how you see every march happening in America.
Soros Money, Communist Flags and a $3 Billion Machine
According to a copy of the official march permit, Indivisible served as the lead coordinator for Saturday's No Kings protest – the organization's third major national mobilization against President Trump.
Indivisible is no grassroots outfit.
Since 2017, George Soros's Open Society Foundations have funneled more than $7.6 million directly into the group.
A 2023 grant alone handed Indivisible $3 million specifically "to support social welfare activities" – the same activities that put hundreds of buses on American roads Saturday morning.
But Soros is only half the story.
Fox News Digital identified a parallel network of communist and socialist organizations – funded by American tech tycoon Neville Roy Singham – mobilizing inside the No Kings protests with a specific mission: revolution.
The night before the St. Paul march, members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation packed a car with bright red protest signs outside a Minneapolis shop called the Dream Shop.
The signs read: "NO KINGS. NO WAR. PARTY FOR SOCIALISM AND LIBERATION."
The money flows to a web of hard-left organizations: the People's Forum in New York, the ANSWER Coalition, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, and CodePink – whose co-founder Jodie Evans happens to be Singham's wife.
The Man Bankrolling America's Red Army
Neville Roy Singham is not a fringe character.
He sold his tech consulting firm ThoughtWorks for $785 million in 2017 and moved to Shanghai.
He now shares office space with a company whose stated mission is to "educate foreigners about the miracles that China has created on the world stage."
Fox News Digital traced $591 million flowing through 223 transactions across five continents – money Singham and Evans moved through their network of nonprofits, shell companies, and donor-advised funds between 2017 and 2025.
The FBI flagged Singham as potentially dangerous as far back as 1974 – the same year he was working as a Maoist organizer inside a Detroit auto plant.
He later spent seven years as a consultant for Huawei, the Chinese tech giant with documented ties to the Chinese Communist Party.
Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith has demanded records from the People's Forum, warning the group may be operating as an unregistered foreign agent of the CCP.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley has written to Attorney General Pam Bondi asking whether Singham's groups should be registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
Mao's Playbook, American Streets
The messaging these groups carried into Saturday's protests wasn't accidental.
In Denver, the Freedom Road Socialist Organization posted imagery referencing the Red Army Choir, Soviet symbols, and photographs of Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong.
In Detroit, activists from Anakbayan – aligned with communist movements in the Philippines – joined other Singham-network groups.
In Maine, organizers assembled a "Unified Leftist Contingent" standing against "imperialism, capitalism, and state violence."
Posts circulating within the network explained exactly why socialist groups were mobilizing inside the larger demonstrations: "It's the time to go out and join the people, get out our revolutionary message in front of them and turn a day of protest into long-term gains for the people's movement."
This is Mao Zedong's doctrine of the People's War – word for word.
Mao's strategy called for revolutionary movements to embed themselves inside broader political struggles and radicalize them from within.
Xi Van Fleet, a Chinese American who survived Mao's Cultural Revolution purge, told Fox News Digital exactly what she's watching: "Neville Roy Singham and his wife are bringing into the 21st century Mao's dream for a People's War."
She added: "They are bringing to the streets America's worst nightmare of a Red Army that is seeking to destroy the United States and make China more competitive on the world stage."
The 500 groups behind Saturday's protests carry a combined $3 billion in annual revenues.
They bused people into cities across the country, pre-printed thousands of signs, and issued coordinated messaging designed to look spontaneous.
And Tim Walz showed up in St. Paul – the flagship communist-organized march – and told the crowd his pledge: "We will never leave the side of our Somali Minnesotans."
Communist flags overhead, Mao's People's War strategy running underneath, and Minnesota's governor planting his flag with the crowd.
That's a politician telling you exactly whose side he's on.
Your neighbors carrying those No Kings signs this weekend didn't know any of this.
They thought they were standing up for democracy.
They were standing in a formation someone else built – funded by Soros, engineered in Shanghai, and designed to radicalize them from the inside out.
Send this to every person you know who was out there Saturday.
Sources:
- Asra Q. Nomani, "500 Groups with $3B in Revenues Are Behind the #NoKings Protests and Communist Call for 'Revolution'," Fox News, March 28, 2026.
- Fox News Digital, "Power Couple of Chaos: How a Tycoon and Activist Built a 'Revolutionary Base' at the House of Singham," Fox News, March 2026.
- Fox News Digital, "China's American Mao: Inside Singham's Blueprint to 'Wage War' for a 'New World Order'," Fox News, March 2026.
- Charlotte Hazard, "No Kings Protests Being Funded by Foundations Run by George Soros," The National Desk, October 17, 2025.
- Ways and Means Committee, "Chairman Smith Exposes U.S. Nonprofit as Likely CCP-Funded Propaganda Arm," U.S. House of Representatives, September 4, 2025.
- The Washington Times, "No Kings Protests Reportedly Funded by Socialist, Communist Groups," March 28, 2026.









