CCP Money Network EXPOSED Funding American Riots

House Republicans have uncovered a sprawling Chinese Communist Party-linked funding network funneling millions to far-left groups orchestrating riots and anti-American protests on U.S. soil, raising urgent questions about foreign infiltration of our nonprofit system.

Story Highlights

  • Congressional investigators target billionaire Neville Singham’s CCP-tied dark money network funding Code Pink and socialist groups behind LA riots
  • House Republicans demand DOJ probe potential Foreign Agents Registration Act violations by tax-exempt nonprofits spreading Chinese propaganda
  • Code Pink received 25% of donations from Singham-linked groups since 2017, shifting from criticizing China to defending its Uyghur abuses
  • Lawmakers threaten to revoke tax-exempt status for groups serving as conduits for Beijing’s strategy to sow discord in America

Congressional Probe Targets CCP-Funded Protest Network

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, alongside Chairwomen Anna Paulina Luna and Marjorie Taylor Greene, launched investigations into Neville Singham’s financial empire and its connections to violent Los Angeles riots. The billionaire tech executive, who relocated to Shanghai, has funneled hundreds of millions through a sophisticated dark money network to radical groups including Code Pink and the Party for Socialism and Liberation. Republican lawmakers sent formal demands to Singham and Attorney General Pam Bondi, seeking documentation on potential FARA violations and briefings on how tax-exempt organizations became vehicles for Chinese Communist Party propaganda operations on American soil.

Follow the Money Trail to Beijing

Singham’s elaborate funding scheme operates through entities like the United Community Fund and Justice Education Fund, which covertly channel resources to violent protest organizers aligned with Beijing’s documented “Strategy of Sowing Discord.” The New York Times exposed in July 2023 that Singham has poured over one hundred million dollars into pro-CCP organizations including Code Pink, PSL, ANSWER Coalition, and National Students for Justice in Palestine. House Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith escalated scrutiny by targeting Singham-funded outlets like BreakThrough News and Tricontinental as potential unregistered foreign agents. Smith warned that foreign actors are abusing America’s tax-exempt sector to bankroll chaos, declaring lawmakers must “follow the money” to protect taxpayers from subsidizing enemies.

Code Pink’s Suspicious Transformation

Code Pink’s dramatic ideological shift reveals the influence of foreign money on American activism. Co-founded by Medea Benjamin and Jodie Evans, who is married to Singham, the group originally positioned itself as anti-war critics of U.S. policy. After Singham-linked entities began providing a quarter of Code Pink’s donations starting in 2017, the organization stopped criticizing China’s human rights abuses and began defending Beijing’s oppression of Uyghurs. Code Pink activists stormed congressional hearings and protested CBS over China coverage, while Singham himself attended CCP propaganda workshops in 2023. His donations exceeding 1.8 million dollars support firms praising China’s authoritarian “miracles,” demonstrating how foreign influence corrupts organizations claiming to represent American progressive values.

National Security Implications and Next Steps

The investigations expose how Beijing weaponizes American freedoms against us, exploiting nonprofit tax exemptions to fund violent riots and divisive propaganda campaigns. Research from Israeli security analysts confirms Singham’s network maintains ideological ties to the CCP, coordinating with Chinese state media and covert cyber operations to amplify antisemitism and division around Israel-Hamas conflicts. Congressional probes threaten tax-exempt status revocation for compromised organizations, potentially disrupting the funding pipeline for anti-American activism. No FARA charges have been filed yet, but the Trump administration’s renewed focus on countering Chinese influence operations signals these investigations represent the opening salvo in exposing and dismantling Beijing’s infiltration networks embedded within American civil society institutions.

The broader implications extend beyond individual groups to reveal systemic vulnerabilities in nonprofit oversight that adversaries exploit to weaken American unity. Taxpayers unknowingly subsidize foreign propaganda through tax deductions for donations to compromised organizations, while communities suffer violence from CCP-funded riots. Stricter enforcement of foreign agent registration laws and enhanced scrutiny of nonprofit funding sources represent essential steps to protect constitutional freedoms from manipulation by hostile powers. As investigations continue, Americans deserve transparency about which activist groups genuinely represent grassroots movements versus which serve as fronts for Chinese Communist Party operations designed to destabilize our nation from within.

Sources:

Oversight Republicans Investigate Funding Behind Los Angeles Riots Linked to Chinese Communist Party

China’s Influence Operations Targeting the United States

What to Know About Tuesday’s House Hearing on Foreign Influence in American Nonprofits

House Hearing Raises Red Flags About Foreign Influence