When the No Kings rally ended in Minnesota, protest organizers dumped American flags in the trash.
The man who organized that event just announced the next move – and it makes trashing the flag look mild.
Democrats and communists left that Capitol lawn with one shared plan to create chaos.
What the No Kings Protest in St. Paul Was Really About
The mainstream media covered last Saturday's No Kings rally like a civics lesson.
Fox News Digital reporter Asra Nomani was on the ground.
Vendors sold Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto yards from the main stage.
Iran, Cuba, and Venezuela flags flew in the middle of the lawn next to the banner of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization – a self-described Marxist group.
Members of the Revolutionary Communists of America chanted in Times Square: "There is only one solution – communist revolution."
Back in St. Paul, Minnesota one activist championed the teachings of the Revolutionary Communists of America while a nearby vendor sold copies of Socialist Alternative, a publication pushing a "democratic, socialist society."
This wasn't a protest that got infiltrated.
The Party for Socialism and Liberation, the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, and local chapters of the Communist Party USA were listed organizers – part of a network of roughly 500 groups with a combined estimated annual revenue of $3 billion coordinating the demonstrations.
Indivisible Founder Ezra Levin Called for a May Day General Strike From the Main Stage
Ezra Levin is the co-founder of Indivisible – the organization that runs the No Kings protest infrastructure.
With communist flags visible behind him, Levin stepped to the microphone and endorsed the central demand of every socialist group in that crowd.
"On May 1, on May Day, we are saying, 'No business as usual,'" Levin told the crowd. "No work, no school, no shopping."
May Day is not an accident.
It has been the international communist holiday since the 19th century – the day socialist and Marxist movements worldwide use as their signature show of force.
Levin called it "a tactical goal, an escalation" and an "economic show of force."
The Chicago Teachers Union has already signed on.
The American Federation of Teachers, the NEA, and Starbucks Workers United are mobilizing.
At least 23% of Minnesota voters said they or a loved one participated in the state's January general strike, according to a survey conducted for the May Day Strong coalition.
Neville Roy Singham and George Soros Are the Money Behind the Communist Groups in That Crowd
Several of the openly communist organizations marching alongside Democrats Saturday are connected to a global activist network funded by Neville Roy Singham – an American-born tech tycoon who sold his company for approximately $800 million in 2017 and moved to Shanghai, China.
Singham has funneled $22.4 million to the People's Forum, $1.3 million to CodePink, and $1.1 million to BreakThrough News.
Those organizations work alongside the ANSWER Coalition and the Party for Socialism and Liberation.
The House Ways and Means Committee, the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the House Oversight Committee are all investigating whether Singham is funding American protests at the direction of the Chinese Communist Party.
House Oversight Chairman James Comer formally requested that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent evaluate whether Singham's assets should be frozen under federal sanctions law.
The committee's letter cited the Chinese Communist Party's documented "Strategy of Sowing Discord" – defined as making internal disputes among enemies "so deep that they become distracted from conflict."
Brandy Shufutinsky of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies noted identical protest signs appearing at demonstrations from Minnesota to Los Angeles to Philadelphia – all bearing ANSWER Coalition logos with interchangeable messages.
"These aren't grassroots protests," she said. "They're coordinated, they're orchestrated, and there's a playbook."
Indivisible – Levin's organization, the one that called for the May Day strike from that stage – has received over $8 million from George Soros's Open Society Foundations since 2017.
This Is the Pattern You Need to Recognize
The 1934 Minneapolis general strike – the one the Left now uses as its organizing blueprint – was led by Trotskyists.
They didn't hide it then either.
What's different now is the money behind it.
Soros funds Indivisible, which runs the protest logistics and calls the May Day strike from the main stage.
Singham – living in Shanghai, under congressional investigation for alleged CCP ties – funds the communist street organizations that fill the crowd and fly the enemy-state flags.
The CCP's own strategy documents describe this exact arrangement: use American activists to generate internal discord while the United States is focused elsewhere.
Iran flags and Cuba flags flew over a Minnesota state capitol lawn while the co-founder of a Soros-funded organization announced a national economic shutdown timed to the international communist holiday.
Democrat Party leaders lost in 2024 running against Trump.
Now they're sharing stages with communists, marching under Iran flags, and calling for a May Day shutdown.
Someone should tell them losing an election usually prompts a different response.
Sources:
- Asra Q. Nomani, "Communists, Democrats use #NoKings rally to call for May Day strike: 'Shut it down,'" Fox News Digital, March 30, 2026.
- "Comer and Luna Ramp Up Probe into CCP-Linked Funding Fueling Civil Unrest in the United States," House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, September 15, 2025.
- "Chairman Smith Exposes U.S. Nonprofit as Likely CCP-Funded Propaganda Arm Operating Under Tax-Exempt Status," House Ways and Means Committee, September 4, 2025.
- "Congress investigates billionaire's alleged funding of anti-ICE protests," NewsNation, January 31, 2026.
- "Shanghai sabotage: Inside Singham's secret strategy to demonize America," Fox News Digital, March 25, 2026.
- Mike Elk, "No Kings Organizers and Indivisible Pivot to May Day General Strike," Payday Report, March 28, 2026.
- "The Indivisible Project," InfluenceWatch, updated January 2026.

