The Patriot Post® · Anti-Kings Protests Funded by Kings

By Samantha Koch ·
https://patriotpost.us/articles/126419-anti-kings-protests-funded-by-kings-2026-04-02

It’s that time again — “No Kings” protest season — and somehow it manages to be just as confusing as the last round. The whole premise is people flooding the streets to protest a king … in a country that quite literally fought a revolution to make sure we never had one. That alone should raise a few eyebrows. But what really makes you pause is watching the same crowds who are yelling against the control of a monarch, while simultaneously waving flags and chanting slogans that align with regimes that actually do operate under authoritarian rule.

That contradiction can’t be ignored, no matter how much the Left would like us to. On one hand, protesters claim they’re standing up against tyranny in America. On the other hand, you’ll see open support — or at the very least, soft sympathy — for governments like those in China or Iran, where dissent isn’t a weekend activity with signs and hashtags. In those countries, protesting leadership isn’t just discouraged — it’s punished, and often deadly.

Even more telling is how little clarity there seems to be about what these protests are actually trying to accomplish. Ask 10 people why they’re there, and you’ll likely get 10 different answers — if you get an answer at all.

Some say it’s about the economy, others throw around words like “fascism,” and some just admit they’re there because it “feels important.” That kind of vagueness isn’t exactly the foundation of a serious movement. National Review’s Jeffrey Blehar pointed out the same confusion, noting how little clarity or development there’s been since earlier protests. As he put it, “A ‘No Kings’ protest against — well, what? Deportations of illegals? The potential quagmire of an Iran war? Our cynically mercantilist adventure in Venezuela? That tacky White House ballroom?” This movement tries to take on everything at once, leaving it without a clear, defining cause. The only real consistency is the inconsistency — it doesn’t seem to matter what you’re upset about, as long as it’s something, anything, tied to President Donald Trump or his administration. Whether the grievance is legitimate or even grounded in truth doesn’t seem to matter — if you’re angry, you’re invited.

And then there’s the question of how “organic” any of this really is. Large-scale, coordinated protests don’t just materialize out of thin air. They require funding, logistics, promotion, and organization. That’s where things get even more interesting.

An investigative report by Fox News shed light on just how extensive the network behind these protests really is — and how much money is fueling them. According to the report, “A network of about 500 groups with an estimated $3 billion in combined annual revenues is behind the coordinated nationwide ‘No Kings’ protest.” That level of backing isn’t just symbolic — it funds everything from marketing and PR to materials, organizing efforts, and the creation of local subgroups across the country, each with its own messaging and targets.

Based in New York, one of the main organizing hubs, recently sent the left-wing group CodePink to Cuba, where they told locals that Trump posed a greater threat than the dictatorship they’ve lived under for nearly 70 years. The trip quickly drew criticism after videos surfaced showing the group attending a private concert and staying in private hotels, raising concerns that the resources used for their “humanitarian” trip may have strained an already limited electricity supply for the Cuban people.

Another group, the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, has also been tied to organizing and mobilizing protests in places like Minneapolis, where anti-ICE demonstrations have intensified. The group has openly called on supporters to join these efforts and has played a visible role in rallying activists around immigration enforcement issues.

Beyond that, the broader network of activism tied to these protests spans a wide range of causes and ideologies — some explicitly anti-Trump, others rooted in anti-capitalism, and, in some cases, openly sympathetic to groups like Hamas or to authoritarian leaders such as Nicolás Maduro, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, and Xi Jinping.

The irony of a “No Kings” protest is almost too perfect: demonstrations framed as anti-power, anti-elite movements, yet funded and amplified by some of the world’s most powerful and wealthy institutions.

With so many competing messages and influences pulling in different directions, it raises a bigger question about what’s really driving the movement — and who ultimately benefits from it. If the loudest “anti-elite” movements are being fueled by billionaire-backed networks, then what you’re looking at may not be grassroots frustration but something much more calculated.

Activists frame these protests as opportunities to bring people into broader movements — especially those rooted in anti-capitalist or socialist ideas. Many genuinely believe they’re pushing back against control and fighting for liberation, inviting others to join them along the way. The focus becomes growth and recruitment, building momentum in the streets with signs, chants, and coordinated messaging, all under the impression that they’re standing in the way of tyranny and making a meaningful difference.

When you step back and look at where the funding, messaging, and direction are coming from, though, it becomes clear that what activists think they’re doing and what they’re actually being used for may not be the same thing. When the resources and influence behind these efforts are tied to powerful global elites — all of whom want to achieve a global system rooted in restrictive, anti-freedom policies — the outcome is likely to differ from what participants believe they’re working toward.

But don’t try to tell them that.

Despite all the chaos, contradictions, and confusion, there’s one undeniable reality that cuts through it all. These protests are happening. Out in the open. Across cities. With people openly mocking, criticizing, and even caricaturing the president and the government, with zero real consequences.

That’s not what life looks like under a king.

In countries that actually operate under authoritarian rule, you don’t get a second chance after doing something like that. You don’t go home at the end of the day, scroll social media, and plan your next protest. You disappear. Or worse. As always, the “No Kings” protests end up proving the exact opposite of what participants claim. The ability to gather, protest, and speak freely — even irrationally — isn’t evidence of tyranny. It’s glaring evidence of absolute freedom.

Nothing demonstrates more clearly that America doesn’t have a king than the people standing in the streets, loudly criticizing their own government … and then going home without consequence.

As the movement grows, so does the irony: by fueling the ideas and influences behind it, these protesters are moving closer to the very kind of control they say they’re fighting — life under actual kings.